We live in a time when many professionals realize, sometimes quietly and sometimes urgently, that change is needed. This awareness may be driven by external changes – evolving industries, new expectations, or roles that no longer seem stable or sustainable. As is often the case, it comes from within: a growing recognition that something important no longer fits in your career and leadership journey, or a pull toward something more meaningful, broader, or aligned.
In these moments, the tendency is often to jump into action immediately. People update their resumes, start looking for new opportunities, or say “yes” to roles that look promising on the surface. Yet what I have observed in nearly two decades of working closely with professionals and leaders across a variety of industries and sectors is that the success of any change is less about taking that step and more about what shapes and underlying that step.
When we don’t fully understand the internal forces influencing our decisions—or who we are at our core and how that identity may now change—even well-intentioned choices can lead us back to situations that feel just as limiting or wrong as the ones we’re trying to leave behind. What is lacking is not effort, planning or ability, but clarity at a deeper level.
I’ve experienced this many times in my professional life – especially during my corporate years, and right after the layoffs in the days after 9/11, when I decided to pursue a master’s degree in marriage and family therapy and become a therapist (before discovering career and leadership coaching).
That step into therapy training was extremely positive and life-changing for me, and I am continually grateful for it. But looking back, I can also see that there were parts of that journey where I overlooked some deeper introspection and self-awareness that would have been important—and shaped some of the choices I made going forward.
Meaningful and sustainable change begins not with strategy, but with understanding ourselves fully and clearly. This means looking beyond surface level goals and ideas and examining the underlying patterns, experiences, and motivations that have shaped your path so far. In my coaching and consulting work, I help clients finally feel fully seen – through the simultaneous exploration of four interconnected dimensions that I refer to as Identity, Security, Direction and Expression.
Once you recognize your deepest strengths and unique abilities, they can become your superpower in moving you toward your ultimate goals.
These are not abstract ideas, but living, evolving dimensions of who you are and how you operate in your work and life.
Identification – It reflects both how you were formed and who you are at your core. It includes the accumulation of your experiences, successes, challenges, traumas, trigger moments, and expectations you have internalized over time. It also involves something deeper – your values, your natural inclinations, and the powerful talents and qualities that feel most authentic to you.
At certain points in life, this identity may evolve and change. When this happens, there is often a gap between the life or work you have built and the person you are becoming. If that change is not recognized, it can lead to choices that appear appropriate externally but feel bad (or worse) internally.
Security – Talks about the attitudes, mindsets, and behaviors you have learned to adopt in order to stay “safe” within that identity. Over time, each of us develops patterns that we believe help us deal with risk and pain, achieve acceptance, and succeed in the environments we are a part of. These patterns are often subtle and deeply ingrained, and we often don’t recognize them in ourselves. They influence what we seek, what we avoid, how we communicate, our limits, and what we believe is possible for us.
Although they may be necessary to thrive in a specific environment, over time, they can begin to limit growth. Without realizing it, we may continue to operate in ways that protect us from fear and discomfort but also prevent us from moving forward and stepping into what we really want.
Direction – It reflects the path you have made so far in your life and work, as well as the directions you may now feel like exploring. Many professionals have followed trajectories that made sense to them at the time, shaped by opportunity, practicality, or expectation. Yet there are often times when moving forward doesn’t seem like the right answer.
The more meaningful question is whether the direction still aligns with who you are. True direction is not just about opportunity; It’s about alignment between your evolving identity, strengths, values, and what you want to represent your work and life in the years to come.
Expression – It focuses on how you express and embody who you are. It reflects how you are showing up in your life and work and in your families and other relationships, what you stand for, and how fully you are living in alignment with what you want to create, contribute, and build.
Expression is not just about communication or visibility. It’s about energy and whether your outer life reflects your inner truth and values. In times of change, this becomes especially important because often what is needed is not just a different role or environment, but a different way of being.
When the external world is changing rapidly, it tends to amplify whatever is unresolved or unclear internally. Decisions may feel more difficult, choices less certain, and the path forward more fragmented.
But when you begin to understand how identity, security, direction, and expression are at work in your life, some important changes occur. You gain deeper insight into who you uniquely are and why certain choices have been difficult, what is influencing your decisions beneath the surface, and what changes and replacements may be needed.
From that place, your next steps not only become clearer, but you become more grounded and aligned with who you are at your best and highest level. Instead of reacting to external pressure or uncertainty, you are able to move forward with intention, clarity, and confidence.
If you’re moving toward change now and want to better understand what is shaping your situation and what you want for your future, a powerful step is to stop and reflect more deeply on your own patterns, choices, values, and aspirations.
To support that process, over the past 15 years, I have created the 13-page Career Path Self-Assessment, which has been taken by over 120,000 people, designed to help you understand yourself in a lively and deep way. Many people find that simply completing this qualitative survey brings meaningful clarity and reveals important forces that are influencing their decisions in ways they had not fully recognized before.
You can access a free assessment here:
Kathy’s Career Path Self-Assessment Survey
By seeing what people have achieved by answering these important questions and talking about them together – and how it changes their view of themselves, what they want next, and what they see is possible – I believe every professional would benefit from such reflection before taking any significant steps.
If, after answering these questions, you would like deeper support in interpreting what you are seeing and identifying a clear, strategic path forward, I would love to support you through my focused 60 Minute Career Breakthrough Counselling.
In that session, we take a close look at what’s emerging for you, uncover what’s keeping you from achieving your most fulfilled goals, and define important next steps to help you move forward with greater clarity, confidence, and alignment.
You can learn more here:
Career Breakthrough Counseling (60 minutes)
A successful change or transition is often seen as finding the right opportunity. In fact, I’ve found that it’s often about preparation in advance: understanding yourself more deeply and completely – getting clear on what is shaping you today, what you want to continue and what you don’t, and how you want to structure the next chapter of your life and career.
When this becomes clear, the path forward doesn’t just become visible – it becomes something you can step into fully with purpose and confidence.
If you’re ready for positive success in your career or leadership, you can check out Kathy 1:1 coaching program or his you are the most powerful Video courses. For speaking activities or workshops that support your organization or community, you can join them kathy here.
For concise, focused career guidance, book a call through Kathy hubble platform.
