
When we move through a transition, whether in our life, our work, or the deeper spaces where identity shifts, it’s natural to wonder if we’re navigating it well. If we’re honoring who we’re becoming. If we’re serving the purpose that’s calling to us now.
Last year was that time for me, and it became a sabbatical, a season of prayer and listening, and a time of recalibration.
My writing gave me a place to think out loud, to explore what’s unfolding, and to clarify where I’m being led. That clarity and a new path emerged because I finally gave myself the space to see them.
My work is evolving into helping small business founders and solopreneurs build lives and businesses that honor who they are and what they value. It’s writing stories that matter and creating frameworks that help people choose with clarity and lead with intention.
And it’s about my own growth too, living inside the tension and the beauty of my own becoming.
Which is why I’m spending this season thinking so deeply about RESOLVE and why it matters so much for the future we’re creating.
In my last post, we talked about the moment resolve becomes real and the shift from “I can” to “I will.”
As a reminder, this is the overall framework we are exploring together:
The Framework of RESOLVE
R – Reality
Begin with truth. See where you actually are before deciding where to go.
E – Expectation
Set clear, honest standards for what “true” and “done” look like.
S – Structure
Build the supports that make resolve sustainable.
O – Ownership
Take responsibility for choices, results, and adjustments.
L – Learning
Learn what you need to know—and notice what helps or hinders your follow-through.
V – Values
Let your priorities reflect what truly matters.
E – Embodiment
Live your promises until they become who you are.
Now we’re moving to the following two parts of our framework: Structure and Ownership.
Because wanting something, even wanting it deeply, doesn’t make it happen.
The third facet of resolve (To remain steadfast in what you’ve chosen) lives in the gap between desire and follow-through, and the only way across that gap is to build a bridge strong enough to carry your intentions into action.
That bridge is our next exploration:
Structure and Ownership
And just like any real bridge, it requires design, support, and your willingness to take the first step.

Together, those parts of our framework turn your promises into the promises you keep.
STRUCTURE: The Support That Makes Resolve Sustainable

We’ve all been told that willpower is the secret to success. But willpower is unreliable. It’s emotional. It fluctuates. It depends on how much sleep you got or what crisis arrived in your inbox.
Structure is different.
Structure is steady.
Structure protects your resolve from the exhaustion of constant decision-making.
James Clear said it best:
“You do not rise to the level of your goals.
You fall to the level of your systems.”
— James Clear, Atomic Habits
Resolve collapses when we rely solely on willpower.
But when we build routines, boundaries, supports, and rhythms that hold our intentions in place, resolve becomes sustainable.
Benjamin Hardy takes it even further:
“You don’t get what you want —
You get what you design for.”
— Benjamin Hardy, Willpower Doesn’t Work
Design beats desire every time.
Structure is how we design our lives around the promises that matter.
It’s not restrictive.
It’s liberating.
It frees your willpower from having to carry the entire load.
Reflection:
What structure do I need to support what I’ve said I want?
What would make follow-through easier instead of harder?
Structure gives your resolve something solid to stand on, but structure alone can’t move you forward. That’s where our second segment comes into play.
For that, you need ownership.
Structure supports the bridge, but ownership is what compels you to cross it.
OWNERSHIP — Where Resolve Becomes Identity

If structure gives resolve stability, ownership gives it strength.
And ownership isn’t a switch we flip. It’s a puzzle we assemble over time.
Each choice we make, each habit we reinforce, each moment we stop outsourcing blame – these become the pieces that fit together and reveal the shape of the future we’re creating.
In other words, ownership isn’t a single “yes,” or even a single “no.” It’s the ongoing practice of aligning one piece after another with who we say we want to become.
In his book, The Power of No, James Altucher wrote:
“Each day you choose your future, or you choose your past.”
That’s ownership at its core.
It’s not about perfection or force.
It’s not about guilt or pressure.
It’s about self-leadership and staying conscious of the choices you make and those you avoid.
It’s about noticing the pieces that no longer fit.
The patterns that no longer align.
The excuses that erode trust.
And, perhaps most importantly, fully owning the reality that every time you say “yes” to one thing, you are saying “no” to something else.
When we treat ownership as a puzzle instead of a once-and-done contract, something powerful happens. We stop expecting ourselves to be perfect and start expecting ourselves to be honest. We build trust with ourselves piece by piece. Not because the path is flawless, but because our direction is true.
Reflection:
What pieces of my own leadership am I willing to pick up today?
Where am I avoiding responsibility, and what would it look like to take that piece back into my hands?
Ownership is this daily agreement you make with yourself:
“I am responsible for the life I’m creating.”
Not in a heavy, punishing way, but in a liberating one. Because when you take ownership, you no longer wait for conditions to be perfect, for motivation to strike, or for circumstances to shift in your favor.
You stop negotiating with your future and start participating in it. And piece by piece, your actions begin to reflect your intentions.
That’s the moment resolve becomes identity.
Continue to Build the Bridge
Structure builds a path.
Ownership gives you the strength to walk it.
Together, they turn “I can” into “I will.”
They create the bridge between who you’ve been and who you’re becoming.
The more we keep our promises to ourselves, the more we begin to believe that what we decide can become what we do. And once that happens, everything changes.
An Invitation
If you’re ready to build your own bridge from intention to follow-through in your work, your goals, your business, or your next chapter, this is the work I do with founders, solopreneurs, and those stepping into a new season with purpose.
If you want support, clarity, or partnership in that process, reach out.
Let’s explore what you’re building now and what it’s making possible for your next chapter.

