Aligned & Awake: The Day I Drove Home Using the Sun and Delusion
A dead phone, the Wicklow Mountains, and learning to trust what I already know
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.
My phone dies somewhere in the Wicklow Mountains.
I’m driving along, feeling very modern and organized, when the screen goes black and stays that way. No maps. No signal. Just me, a car, and an unreasonable amount of green.
I’m not worried.
I’m prepared.
I pull in, reach into my bag, and pull out my portable charger with the quiet confidence of a woman who has done this before. I even nod at myself. Smug. Responsible. Borderline impressive.
Then I look for the cable.
I check the bag again. The side pocket. The other pocket is full of receipts, lip balm, and vague optimism.
No cable.
I sit there, holding the charger like it’s personally betrayed me. A fully powered brick of false hope. I laugh because, of course, this is how it goes. Not unprepared. Incorrectly prepared.
“Right,” I say. Out loud. To the wind.
“Lock it in, Tanya.”
I know one thing. I need to get back to Tullamore. West. The sun is doing its slow descent, which means if I keep it straight ahead or on my right, I’m not completely making a show of myself. This is the level of strategy we’re working with now. Solar navigation. Pioneer chic.
I start driving.
Ireland has never trusted a straight road. Everything bends. Everything rises. Everything feels like a suggestion. What looks like a road becomes a lane. What looks like a lane becomes a private driveway. There are moments where I’m fairly sure I’m about to arrive in someone’s kitchen.
The signs offer very little comfort. Town names slide past that feel familiar in the way faces do in dreams. I squint at them, as if recognition might unlock something useful. It doesn’t.
I keep going.
Every junction asks a question. I answer with instinct and a deep belief in past me. Past me knew things. Past me was raised by a woman who can still point north without hesitation.
The sun stays straight ahead.
Mostly.
The road dips. Climbs. Doubles back on itself like it’s had a few pints. I start laughing because this feels aggressively on theme. I’m navigating by instinct. I’m watching the light. I’m reading the land. I’m mildly convinced I’ve time-travelled.
The drive was meant to take an hour and a bit.
I know this because I checked earlier, smugly, while my phone was still alive.
At some point, that information stops mattering.
The light shifts again. My shoulders drop without asking permission. I’ve been at this a while now. Long enough that the noise settles. Long enough that I stop negotiating and start noticing.
Then something shifts.
A sign I know. A bend that registers in the body before it reaches the brain. That quiet internal, Ah. Here.
The road opens. The light changes. I don’t announce it. I feel it.
I get home before dark. Thank the baby Jesus!
Later, standing in the kitchen with my shoes still on, it lands properly. The lesson arrives as a sensation.
I wasn’t searching.
I was listening.
That’s been the work lately. Not finding my way back. Not locating some earlier version of myself with a clearer plan and fewer feelings. I’m changing as I move. Learning by motion. Adjusting in real time.
Some days the direction is obvious. Some days it’s a best guess and a steady grip on the wheel. Both still count.
I don’t have a map for this life. I have awareness. I have curiosity. I have a nervous system that reacts faster than logic and usually tells the truth first.
So I keep going. Watching the light. Reading the signs when they show up. Laughing when the road gets ridiculous.
And somehow, often enough to trust it, I arrive.
Before dark.
Solar-powered and emotionally unsupervised.
Tell me…
Have you ever trusted yourself without a map?
Tell me where you ended up.




Lovely, Tanya! I can so relate to this!
The one thing I can trust about me is that my sense of direction is off and I always pick the wrong way! My dad says gps was invented for me, and I have to say I think he is right. My friend Stacie and I tested my sense of direction in Europe once, and the verdict was, "always do the opposite!" :-).