When Life Doesn't Go According to Plan, a new evolution path is coming

Recently, I was sitting with Roxi in a coaching conversation. On the surface, we were talking about a visa rejection. However, as often happens in coaching, the visa was never really the topic.

The deeper conversation was about disappointment—the kind that arrives when life refuses to follow the path we carefully imagined.

Many of us know this feeling. We prepare, plan, research, and do everything within our control. We invest our energy, our attention, and often our hopes. Then something unexpected happens. A door closes. An application is rejected. A relationship changes. An opportunity disappears.

Life quietly says, "Not this way."

What struck me during the conversation was how quickly the mind tries to make meaning out of disappointment. Perhaps I should have done more. Perhaps I missed something. Perhaps I need to try again. Perhaps I simply need to push harder.

This is especially true for capable people. Leaders, founders, professionals, and high achievers are often rewarded for persistence. We learn that effort creates results. We learn that determination overcomes obstacles. Over time, we begin to believe that if we simply try hard enough, every door should eventually open.

Yet life does not always operate according to that equation.

At one point, Roxi said something that felt both simple and profound: "There is nothing more I could have done."

There was no resignation in her voice. No self-pity. Just a recognition of reality. The application had been submitted. The decision had been made. The outcome already existed. No amount of replaying the story or blaming herself would change what had happened.

Sometimes we spend more energy arguing with reality than seeing it. We continue running after trains that have already left the station. We replay conversations that are over. We revisit decisions that cannot be undone. We imagine alternative versions of the past, hoping that somehow they might change the present.

Yet healing often begins when we stop negotiating with what has already happened.

As our conversation continued, another insight emerged. The visa that mattered most had already been approved. The opportunity that truly aligned with Roxi's long-term goals had already arrived. Yet her attention remained drawn toward the door that had closed.

How human that is.

A hundred things can go right, and one thing goes differently than expected. Suddenly, the closed door becomes the center of our attention. We become so focused on what we did not receive that we lose sight of what is already present.

Perhaps this is one of the quiet habits of the human mind. We naturally scan for what is missing. We focus on what remains unresolved. We notice the gap more easily than the gift.

What Roxi was grieving was not only a visa. She was grieving an imagined future. She had already pictured the mountains she wanted to hike, the landscapes she wanted to explore, and the experiences she hoped to have. The disappointment came not only from losing an opportunity but from losing a story she had already begun living internally.

This is true far beyond travel.

Many disappointments in life involve the loss of an imagined future. We grieve the business we hoped to build, the relationship we thought would last, the role we expected to receive, or the version of ourselves we thought we would become by now.

Sometimes what hurts most is not reality itself but the story we created around reality.

Yet life has a remarkable way of inviting us toward experiences we would never have chosen for ourselves. Sometimes a closed door redirects us toward a place, a person, or a lesson we could not yet see. Not because every disappointment is secretly wonderful, but because meaning often reveals itself later rather than immediately.

One of the most honest moments in our conversation came when Roxi spoke about how exhausting it can feel to always have to overcome obstacles. There was a deeper fatigue beneath the visa rejection—a weariness that many people carry. The feeling of constantly needing to prove yourself, navigate another challenge, solve another problem, or overcome another barrier.

Many leaders know this feeling well.

Not because life is necessarily difficult, but because they have become so accustomed to effort that they forget ease is also allowed. They forget that not every season requires pushing. Some seasons invite receiving. Some invite trusting. Some invite slowing down long enough to appreciate what is already here.

Perhaps that was the deeper invitation hidden inside this experience.

Not a lesson about visas.

Not a lesson about travel.

A lesson about compassion.

Compassion for the disappointed part of ourselves. Compassion for the frustrated part. Compassion for the part that wishes life had unfolded differently.

Every part of us wants to be seen. Not only the successful part, the grateful part, or the confident part. The disappointed part wants to belong too.

By the end of the conversation, nothing external had changed. The rejection remained. The circumstances remained. The facts remained.

Yet something inside had shifted.

There was less resistance.

Less self-blame.

Less urgency to force a different outcome.

In its place came a quieter energy: acceptance, perspective, appreciation, and trust.

Perhaps that is what growth often looks like. Not changing the situation itself, but changing our relationship with the situation.

Life will not always follow our plans. Doors will close. Expectations will be disrupted. Some dreams will unfold differently than we imagined. Yet every experience invites us to choose the story we carry forward.

We can continue fighting the river, or we can learn to flow with it.

And perhaps one of the deepest forms of rebirth is discovering that life is not rejecting us. It may simply be guiding us toward a path we cannot yet understand.

Reflection

What part of your life are you still trying to force?

And what might become possible if you trusted that life is not rejecting you, but gently inviting you somewhere different?