

When life breaks open, there are moments when everything falls apart, when the world goes strangely quiet. The initial shock has passed. The messages slow down. People assume you’re “doing better.” But internally, something deeper is happening. You are standing in a space between who you were and who you are becoming. And this is the part no one really prepares you for.
Not the grief itself, burnout, divorce, diagnosis or the identity collapse.
But what comes after? The quiet rebuilding.
When life breaks open, the first phase is often survival.
You move through the days as best as you can. Doing what needs to be done. You carry responsibilities even when your energy feels depleted. But eventually, something shifts. The world continues to move, and slowly you begin to notice deeper questions rising within.
Questions that are impossible to ignore, for example:
What does my life look like now?
Who am I becoming?
What truly matters to me now? And how do I move forward?
These are not surface-level questions. They are identity questions; they signal the beginning of a new season.
Many women describe this phase as a feeling of being suspended between two lives. The old life has ended. But the new one hasn’t fully taken shape yet. You are no longer the woman who existed before the loss, the burnout, the divorce, or the diagnosis. Yet you are still rediscovering who you are now.
It can feel unsettling. Sometimes lonely. But it is also deeply transformative.
This period can take up to a few years everyone is different, because in this in-between space, something powerful happens:
You begin to see your life more clearly.
The expectations you once carried. The roles you played. The pace you lived at. The capabilities you had. You start questioning things that once felt normal. And slowly, almost quietly, your priorities begin to shift.
In the world we live in today, there is often pressure to “bounce back.”
To move forward quickly, rebuild life exactly as it was before. To carry on as life goes on. But the real transformation rarely works that way. When life breaks open, it often reveals parts of our lives that were misaligned long before the crisis occurred.
Burnout may expose years of overgiving.
Divorce may reveal unmet needs.
Grief may bring clarity about what truly matters.
These realisations take time to integrate. And yet this slower season is often where the most meaningful growth occurs. Not through dramatic reinvention. But through quiet reflection. Through asking better questions. Through allowing yourself the space to evolve.
Our homes are reflections of who we are and the lives that we have lived. These environments take on a new significance for those of us who are coping with grief through the loss of a loved one, divorce, unexpected diagnosis, or a significant life change, as we are surrounded by objects and spaces that retain the memories of a former time. However, redesigning our home can be a powerful and hopeful step that helps us transition into a new season of life, as we move through the healing process.
After my husband passed away, I realised something that many women overlook. The way we had been living no longer reflected the life I was stepping into. The rhythms of the home belonged to a different chapter. The spaces held memories of a life that had changed forever.
Our homes are not neutral spaces. And as someone who had spent years designing living and working spaces for clients, I knew the important role that environments play in our daily lives. They influence how we feel. How we think. How we process change. During major life transitions, our environment can either support our healing or quietly hold us in the past. Sometimes the smallest shifts can recreate space for something new. I see my home as my silent partner in my healing process, and I hope you do too.
Rearranging furniture in a room. A corner redesigned. A new rhythm within the home. These are not just aesthetic changes; they are symbolic ones for your sacred space. They signal that life is evolving and that we are allowed to evolve with it. I share this in my 1:1 coaching sessions, where I guide driven, high-achieving women to intentionally redesign their homes to support the season they are in, and to intentionally develop sustainable strategies for their lives and businesses.
One of the ideas that has shaped my thinking the most is this: Life is seasonal. Just as nature moves through cycles of winter, spring, summer, and autumn, our lives also move through seasons of expansion, rest, loss, and renewal. Yet many of us try to live as though everything should remain constant. We build lives designed for stability. But growth rarely follows a straight line. There are seasons of deep clarity. And seasons of uncertainty. Seasons where everything feels aligned. And seasons where life quietly dismantles what no longer serves us. None of these seasons is a mistake. They are part of the human experience.
When life breaks open, it often invites us to rebuild with greater intention.
Not by recreating the past. But by designing a life that supports who we are now. For some, this might mean redefining success. Changing how you spend your time. Letting go of roles that no longer fit. Or creating an environment that nurtures the life you are rebuilding. These shifts rarely happen overnight. But over time, when you prioritise your well-being, something beautiful begins to emerge:
Clarity. Confidence. Strength. A deeper understanding of what truly matters. And perhaps most importantly, a quieter but more grounded sense of self.
If you find yourself in the in-between season right now, the space where life has broken open but the future still feels uncertain, know that you are not alone. This phase is not a sign that you are lost. It is often the very place where transformation begins.
In recent years, talking to other women and my own experiences led me to create The Seasons of Life Home Method™, a framework that explores how our environments and lives can evolve alongside the seasons we move through. Because when we learn to honour the season we are in, something shifts. We stop rushing. We stop comparing our timeline to others. And we begin to rebuild our lives in ways that are more intentional, more supportive, and more aligned with who we are becoming.
Sometimes life breaks open in ways we never expected. But within that opening lies the possibility of a life aligned and designed with deeper meaning. A life shaped not by circumstance alone, but by conscious choice. And that may be the beginning of something far more powerful than we ever imagined.
Discover more...
Mindset
Nutrition
science
wellbeing
View all articles
Sign up now to grab your free Habit Hacks guide & take your performance to the NEXT LEVEL!
Subscribe to the waiting list for my highly anticipated personal well-being masterclass.
You have successfully joined our newsletter list.
Eunice De Campi is a multi-passionate founder and creative dedicated to helping women rebuild their lives and businesses after adversity. Based in the UK, works internationally.
Copyright @ 2026 Eunice De Campi International
Terms | cookie policy | disclaimer | Privacy | brand & site by lhc
Sign up and get inspiration, practical tips, and exclusive resources delivered to your inbox every month.