Aligned & Awake: I Didn’t Want to Heal Like This
What choosing compassion taught me during a divorce, and why grace, not rage, became my sharpest weapon.
Aligned & Awake
My reflections on life through travel, human design, energy, astrology, and emotional clarity. Not as a guru. Just one person figuring it out in real time.
At the time of writing this, we have a new moon entering Cancer, the sign of inner truth, emotional waves, and crying at commercials you don’t even like. (Although, to be fair, that could also be perimenopause.)
I’ve been learning to pay attention to the stars. Not for answers, but as mirrors.
Because down here, under this sky, I’m navigating the slow, awkward disassembly of a marriage.
The spreadsheets are brutal.
The dividing of assets is bureaucratic heartbreak.
And compassion, of all things, keeps leaking in through the cracks.
Like water through concrete. Like it’s been waiting.
The Power Move No One Talks About
Compassion.
Not for myself (though yes, her too).
But for him.
The man who lied.
Who cheated.
Who broke the sacred contract, and then the silence that followed was somehow worse.
And yet.
There’s a softness in me that won’t completely shut the door.
And honestly? I find that infuriating.
I don’t want to feel compassion.
I want to feel victorious. Right. Preferably smug.
I want to punch a pillow, eat a croissant, and yell “I’m over it!” at the top of my lungs, while picking crumbs out of my bra.
But the truth?
I’m not.
And also, I’m not shattered.
Because here’s what I’m starting to realize:
Compassion isn’t weakness.
It’s a flex.
A quiet one. A rooted one. A fuck-you-but-I’m-still-rising kind of one.
Compassion doesn’t erase what happened.
It doesn’t restore trust, rewrite the timeline, or hand out second chances like lollipops at a dentist’s office.
It’s not a peace offering.
It’s a power move.
Because the moment I choose compassion, I win.
Not him.
Not the story.
Me.
I win because I am no longer letting someone else’s behaviour dictate the terms of my healing.
I win because I get to feel proud of who I am becoming, not haunted by what they did.
I win because I get to live with myself, 24/7, and frankly, that’s the only roommate whose opinion actually matters.
And let me be clear, this is not spiritual bypassing.
This is not "bless and release" while secretly rage-texting your best friend.
This is the hard-won, teeth-gritted, deep-breathing choice to not let someone else's shadows snuff out my light.
Because I choose light.
I choose integrity.
I choose to be someone I respect, even when it’s hard.
And yeah, sometimes I still want to punch him in the throat.
(Spiritually, of course. Metaphorically. Ok…maybe just once. Softly.)
But that doesn't get me what I want.
Compassion gets me clarity.
It gets me peace.
It gets me my life back.
This Isn’t About Him
It’s not about them. It never was.
It’s about how I get to feel.
How I get to heal.
How I get to lead my life with purpose and softness, not just because it’s noble but because it’s freeing.
And under this moon, this soft Cancer moon, this invitation to feel all of it, I’m not rushing. I’m not bypassing. I’m not pretending this doesn’t hurt.
But I am tending to the roots of my future.
And I want those roots to grow in truth, not in bitterness.
So no, I’m not doing it for him.
I’m doing it for me.
Because I’m the one who has to live with me.
And I’d rather be someone who chooses grace over grudge.
Even if it takes time.
Even if it’s messy.
Even if I have to scream into a bath towel first.
Because at the end of the day?
That’s the kind of woman I want to be.
Not right. Not smug. Not untouched.
Just real.
Grace with a side of grit is still grace.
And messy doesn’t mean weak, it means true.
And I’d rather be true than perform strength I don’t feel.
And maybe that’s the gift of this Cancer new moon, not a clean slate, but a softer one.
An invitation to begin again, not from perfection, but from presence.
From compassion.
For him, yes, but mostly for me.
Because I’m the one I have to come home to.
And I want to do it with clarity. With courage.
And maybe… with a croissant in one hand and my whole damn heart in the other.
xo,
Tanya
Now you:
When was a time you chose compassion, even when you didn’t want to? What did it give you?
Hit reply, leave a comment, or whisper it into the void (but if you do, tag me, I love a good story with teeth).



Powerful lesson in true compassion. So good to have taken care of yourself by applying compassion. Well done and well said.
You write with such beautiful clarity; grace mixed with pain is hard to put on paper but you have done it. Thank you Tanya.