Permission to Change Your Mind

At some point, you’ll feel it:
The pull to pivot.
The quiet discomfort with something that once felt certain.
The project, the medium, the style, the pace—it just doesn’t fit like it used to.

And maybe the hardest part isn’t the shift itself.
It’s giving yourself permission to follow it.

What Once Served You May Not Always

You don’t have to keep doing what once worked.
Just because a project started with one vision doesn’t mean it has to stay there.
Just because you once loved a certain style doesn’t mean you owe it loyalty now.

Art is not a contract.
It’s a conversation—
and conversations evolve.

Changing your mind doesn’t mean you were wrong.
It means you’re listening.

Growth Is Not Betrayal

We’re taught to equate consistency with credibility.
To stick to a path. Stay in a lane. Build a “brand.”

But creative growth doesn’t move in straight lines.
It loops. Doubles back. Splits. Rebuilds.

You’re allowed to outgrow what you once believed in.
You’re allowed to leave a project unfinished.
You’re allowed to say, This no longer feels like me.

And still be proud of where it started.

Follow the Shift

Change doesn’t always arrive with clarity.
Sometimes it just feels like restlessness.
Or disinterest. Or an idea that keeps knocking from the edges.

Start listening to that feeling.
It might not give you the next steps right away—
but it will always point you toward something truer.

To Carry With You

Think of a project, idea, or identity you’ve been holding onto—
even if it no longer feels like you.

Now ask:

  1. What about this no longer feels aligned?

  2. What are you afraid will happen if you let it change?

  3. What new direction has quietly been asking for your attention?

You don’t need a plan.
Just permission.

Let the shift begin.

— Endeoh
Collaborate. Elevate. Inspire.

Previous
Previous

You Don’t Need to Be Original

Next
Next

Let the Work Change You