Nothing left to wait for
You don't choose the moment your hand gets forced. You only choose what you do once it has.
I had a plan for how this would go.
Not a detailed one. But somewhere in my head there was a version of the story where I get to choose the moment. I finish building the thing properly, on my own schedule, and then, when it’s ready and I’m ready, I step away from the old work and into the new one. Clean. Deliberate. Mine to time.
That isn’t how it’s going.
A conversation arrived sooner than expected and turned a future decision into a present one.
Something outside my control moved first. Not dramatically, not all at once, but enough to take the choice of timing out of my hands. The decision I had been quietly circling for months, the one I assumed I’d make when I felt ready, got made for me instead. Faster than I wanted. Sooner than I’d planned.
Here is the part I didn’t expect.
I thought the loss of control would feel like failure. Like the story going wrong. Instead it felt almost like relief, underneath the panic. Because I had been circling that decision for a long time without landing on it, and some part of me knew exactly why. I was waiting to feel ready. I was waiting for the plan to be airtight. I was waiting, if I’m honest, for permission I was never going to grant myself in time.
The floor moving first didn’t create the decision. It just removed my ability to keep postponing it.
I think this is more common than anyone admits out loud.
The women I talk to are not usually waiting for courage. Most of them have done difficult things their entire lives. What I hadn’t fully named, until this week, is what they’re actually waiting for instead: the right moment, arriving on schedule, chosen by them.
It rarely works that way. The moment doesn’t ask permission to arrive. A contract ends. A company restructures. A parent’s health shifts. A marriage changes shape. The floor moves, and the decision you’d been rehearsing in private suddenly has a deadline you didn’t set.
You can spend years building the case for why you’re not ready yet. The floor doesn’t read the case. It just moves.
I want to be careful here, because this isn’t a tidy lesson about how everything happens for a reason. Some of what’s underneath this is genuinely frightening. There is less runway than I would have chosen. There is less certainty than I’d have liked to have lined up first.
But there’s something else underneath the fear that I keep coming back to, which is this: the version of me that was waiting for the perfect, self-chosen moment was never going to arrive at one. I have watched myself do this before. Take another course. Build another plan. Wait until it felt completely safe. It never did, and it never was going to.
So when the floor moved, it didn’t hand me a crisis out of nowhere. It handed me the deadline I had been quietly avoiding setting for myself.
This is where the work I wrote about last time actually gets used, rather than just admired.
Trust rebuilt slowly, in small decisions nobody else witnessed, is easy to value in theory. It’s a different thing to spend it. To stand at the edge of a forced timeline and ask whether the judgement you’ve been rebuilding for years is solid enough to hold real weight, right now, with less preparation than you wanted.
I don’t know yet how this chapter ends. I’m not writing this from the other side of it, with a neat conclusion to hand you. I’m writing it from inside the moving floor, while it’s still moving.
What I do know is that I’m not waiting anymore. There’s nothing left to wait for. The choice that was mine to make eventually is now mine to make now, and that turns out to be a strange kind of mercy, dressed up as a crisis.
Has the floor ever moved under you, before you’d chosen to move it yourself? What did you do with the decision once it stopped being optional?
Hit reply and tell me. I read every one.
Warmly,
Pia
The Strategic Second Act is where I work with women who are ready to stop waiting and start building, on their own terms, with the experience they have spent decades accumulating.
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“The floor doesn’t read the case. It just moves.”
So many women are not waiting because they lack courage. They are waiting for the timing to feel clean, safe, chosen, and under their control. But life rarely hands us that kind of doorway.
Sometimes the crisis is not the thing that creates the decision. It is the thing that finally stops us from postponing the decision we already knew was coming.