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Oct 29, 2025

When The Plan Changes

 

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© Jane Pollak 2025

After a wonderful visit with my daughter in Pasadena last January 2024, I set my sights on returning for a month-long visit for January 2025. I even began planning what art project to bring along for my 4 weeks away – daily creativity, family dinners, and outings in a warmer climate. I happily told friends of my plan thinking, Look how cool my life is!

The Airbnb I’d stayed in was comfortable and reasonably priced, especially for a longer off-season stay. But, when I reached out in October to confirm and offer a deposit, my messages went unanswered. Around the same time, my daughter’s earlier enthusiasm began to fade as the reality of having her mom nearby for 30 days set in.

In my mind, it was a gem of an idea – creative focus, sunshine, and proximity to family. By early December, I’d let it go and booked a trip to Mexico instead. Still, I wondered, why didn’t this go according to plan?

There’s that old saying, “Man plans, God laughs.”  I do believe in things happening for a reason. When, on January 7, the catastrophic wildfires hit the Greater Los Angeles region, I realized there may have been Divine Wisdom at play. I was deeply grateful not to be in the evacuation zone. 

Fast-forward to today. After all my excitement about the signs and greenlights around selling my apartment (last month’s newsletter topic), the potential buyer backed out. I’m again at Square One. My awesome apartment is still for sale. I’m still moving to a CCRC in New Jersey (1/4 mile from my son), but the timetable has shifted from soon to ‘unknown.’

So has my mood. I loved it when everything was flowing in the right direction. I felt like the heroine in my own saga. It’s easy to go with the flow when you’re in control (an illusion). But now, momentum has shifted, and I’m wondering:  What might be happening FOR me that I can’t yet see?

This is when I turn to my inner and outer support systems.

I keep an essay in my Coaching Resources folder called Fear of Transformation.

It describes life as a series of trapeze swings – you must release one bar before you can grasp the next. My current trapeze bar is entitled New Yorker. The next one, CCRC/Family is swinging toward me.

For now – let’s call it now – I’m suspended between the two. I can’t make someone buy my apartment. I can’t change interest rates or world events. I’m hurtling through space, trusting that the Universe has this.

My job is to be in the moment and, in Cheryl Sandberg’s words (Lean In), “Don’t leave before you leave.”

During a recent check-in call, I told my action partner that my art is keeping me alive, grounded and present. I love color, texture, and pattern, and I’m working four to six hours a day creating beauty, passionately and willingly living my life as I allow Divine Timing its due. This is one area of my life that is within my control. 

The Social Committee I started recently in my co-op meets at my place Sunday night to plan future events – a pot luck, a holiday party, a movie night.

I’m surrounded by friends saying:

“It will sell!”

“Your place is great!”

“Don’t worry!”

I’m trusting that this in-between time – this ‘transition’ – is where real change occurs. I remember my own most vivid experience of transition: childbirth. After the contractions and before the pushing, the infant is in the birth canal, and the pain is off the charts. It’s the hardest part.

But then – the baby! Oh, the baby! She’s now 51 and I don’t regret a second of that passage.

I’m willing to go through this same pain of uncertainty, this leap of faith, to reach that next step in my growth. And, hanging out in my comfortable space here in NYC suits me just fine.

I’m still a work in progress, grateful for every gentle – and not-so-gentle – nudge toward growth. I hope these takeaways can serve as a safety net when you find yourself in between.

  1. Stay present where you are, even when part of you is already reaching for what’s next.
  2. Trust the timing as Divine.
  3. Work with the beauty in the not-knowing.

I’m always available to hear where you are in your travels. Please do be in touch!
jane@janepollak.com



Fear of Transformation

From the Essene Book of Days

 Sometimes I feel that my life is a series of trapeze swings. I’m either hanging on to a trapeze bar or swinging along or, for a few moments in my life, I’m hurtling across space in between trapeze bars. Most of the time, I spend my life hanging on for dear life to my trapeze-bar- of-the-moment. It carries me along a certain steady rate of swing and I have the feeling that I’m in control of my life. I know most of the right questions and even some of the right answers. But once in a while, as I’m merrily (or not so merrily) swinging along, I look ahead of me into the distance, and what do I see? I see another trapeze bar swinging toward me. It’s empty, and I know, in that place in me that knows, that this new trapeze bar has my name on it. It is my next step, my growth, my aliveness coming to get me. In my heart- of-hearts, I know that for me to grow, I must release my grip on the present, well-know bar to move to the new one.

Each time it happens to me, I hope (no, I pray) that I won’t have to grab the new one. But in my knowing place, I know that I must totally release my grasp on my old bar, and for some moment in time, I must hurtle across space before I can grab onto the new bar. Each time I am filled with terror. It doesn’t matter that in all my previous hurtles across the void of unknowing, I have always made it. Each time I am afraid I will miss, that I will be crushed on unseen rocks in the bottomless chasm between the bars. But I do it anyway. Perhaps this is the essence of what the mystics call the faith experience. No guarantee, no net, no insurance policy, but you do it anyway because somehow, to keep hanging onto that old bar is no longer on the list of alternatives. And so for an eternity that can last a microsecond or a thousand lifetimes, I soar across the dark void of “the past is gone, the future is not yet here.” Its called transition. I have come to believe that it is the only place that real change occurs. I mean real change, not the pseudo-change that only lasts until the next time my old buttons get punched.

I have noticed that, in our culture, this transition zone is looked upon as “nothing”, a no-place between places. Sure the old trapeze-bar was real, and that new coming towards me, I hope, that’s real, too. But the void in between? That’s just a scary, confusing, disorienting “nowhere” that must be gotten through as fast and as unconsciously as possible. What a waste! I have a sneaking suspicion that the transition zone is the only real thing, and the bars are illusions we dream up to avoid the void, where the real change, the real growth occurs for us. Whether or not my hunch is true, it remains that the transition zones in our lives are incredibly rich places. They should be honored, even savored. Yes, with all the pain and fear and feelings of being out-of-control that can (but necessarily) accompany transitions, they are still the most alive, most growth-filled, passionate, expansive moments in our lives.
And so, transformation of fear may have nothing to do with making fear go away, but rather with giving ourselves permission to hang out” in the transition between the trapeze bars. Transforming our need to grab that new bar, any bar, is allowing ourselves to dwell in the only place where change really happens. It can be terrifying. It can be enlightening, in the true sense of the word. Hurtling through the void, we just may learn how to fly.

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