The Founder of WHOLE
Rooted in Research, Experience, and Meaning
Rooted in Research, Experience, and Meaning
A Commitment to Your Growth, Fulfilment, and Inner Power
The Founder of WHOLE
Rooted in Research, Experience, and Meaning
Rooted in Research, Experience, and Meaning
A Commitment to Your Growth, Fulfilment, and Inner Power
Living WHOLE: How to Live in Alignment with Your Whole Self
A WHOLE Coaching Guide to Sustainable Change and Deep Wellbeing
“So any man with a feeling and deeper insight for the workings of the Whole will find some pleasure in almost every aspect of their disposition.”
— Marcus Aurelius, Meditations 8.51
Walking Away from the Edge of Transformation
Have you ever begun a path, a relationship, a goal, a project, or even a new version of yourself, and through fear, self-sabotage, or outdated self-stories, failed to experience the wholeness of that endeavour?
To experience the wholeness of an endeavour means to move through the full arc of personal growth — the ease, difficulty, joys and challenges — without retreating when things become uncomfortable. It is the process of full immersion and surrender, allowing the experience to shape you, and emerging transformed. This is Living Whole: a path to lasting change and deep alignment with your whole self.
The Little Things: How Presence Shapes a Life
Do you enjoy a morning coffee? I love it — yet some mornings it just “evaporates” into kitten memes. How often do you eat a delicious meal or sit with someone you love while your attention is elsewhere?
Bringing ourselves fully into the present moment is embodied living. When we don’t attend to little moments, years can pass before we realise we’re not where we hoped to be. Big goals get deferred for easy tasks that give the illusion of progress. If you dodge the big thing and feel unfulfilled, read on…
Micro-practice
The “When I” Trap: Why We Postpone Our Deepest Goals
Why can’t we start the things that make our souls sing — the book, album, catering business, cheesemaking on the Hebrides? That’s the self who is most aligned with values and strengths. It may excite or frighten you — but it’s the self to befriend.
What stops wholehearted commitment to the waves of any worthwhile endeavour? The very pursuits most linked with fulfilment (Csikszentmihalyi; Deci & Ryan; Seligman) often trigger avoidance precisely because they matter.
Common Delays
The Lure of Avoidance and Hedonic Goals
“I’ll be happy when…” — thinner, richer, better car, postcode, more followers. These are hedonic goals. They rarely yield durable happiness and often trigger social comparison. Values-based, self-concordant goals sustain wellbeing because they’re aligned with who we are.
What Stops Us from Living Whole?
Energy leaks away from self-concordant goals to dodge inevitable challenge. We start strong, hit the midpoint lull, then reach for shortcuts. As Ayelet Fishbach notes, the midpoint is peak temptation — and it erodes self-trust.
How Avoidance Reinforces Limiting Self-Stories
“Not ready” sounds reasonable, but avoidance isn’t neutral. Each unfinished effort subtly shifts identity toward disappointment and diminished self-trust — often reinforcing childhood stories that were never true, only rehearsed.
You’re Not Stuck — You’re Evolving
You may believe you’re lazy, not clever enough, too shy, disorganised — or simply “wired” that way. Ask: are you the same person you were at seven? Values, knowledge, capacities evolve — and so can identity and habits.
Quick Reframes
What Neuroscience and Personality Research Reveal About Change
Brains remain plastic throughout life. Personality traits also shift with events and contexts. Meta-analyses show increases in conscientiousness and emotional stability across adulthood; life events can nudge traits by reshaping thoughts, feelings, and behaviours.
Case Study: How Changing the Story Changes the Brain
The Practice of Living Whole
Building New Stories Through Action
Recognise the pattern, define a truer direction, reduce stress, and practice adaptive challenges.
The old grip loosens; feedback becomes fuel; resilience grows.
How Growth Happens Through Challenge
Where Are You Not Living Whole?
Reflective Questions for Your Journey
Theoretical Foundations That Support This Work
These frameworks are lived through this work. They offer structure for navigating uncertainty, resisting avoidance, and cultivating deliberate alignment.
The Good News: Resilience, Not Perfection
Committing to wholeness isn’t perfectionism. It’s staying the course through pain, fear, and uncertainty. Resilience — showing up when it’s hard — predicts thriving.
Ready to Begin Your Whole Life?
WHOLE Coaching helps you live in alignment rather than avoidance. Let’s begin.
References
[i] Fishbach, A. (2022). Get it Done: Surprising Lessons from the Science of Motivation. Little, Brown Spark.
[ii] Roberts, B. W., Walton, K. E., & Viechtbauer, W. (2006). Patterns of Mean-Level Change in Personality Traits Across the Life Course: A Meta-Analysis of Longitudinal Studies. Psychological Bulletin, 132, 1–25. https://doi.org/10.1037/0033-2909.132.1.1
[iii] Buehler, J. L., Orth, U., Bleidorn, W., Weber, E., Kretzschmar, A., Scheling, L., & Hopwood, C. (2023). Life events and personality change: A systematic review and meta-analysis. European Journal of Personality, 38. https://doi.org/10.1177/08902070231190219



