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The world is not subtly shifting. It is shaking visibly, audibly, and in real time. Violence is erupting, opinions are colliding, history feels exposed, and fear is no longer hidden beneath the surface. Everything feels present and immediate.
In the middle of all of this, I noticed something unexpected in myself.
Not calm. Not serenity.
But a steady alertness that feels deeply aligned.
Peace as Wakefulness, Not Escape
I don’t feel anxious. I feel awake.
That distinction matters. What I’m experiencing doesn’t feel accidental or circumstantial. It feels earned. Built over years of paying attention, strengthening capacity, and learning how to stay present without collapsing or hardening. This isn’t luck. It’s inner architecture.
Something in me is saying: pay attention.
Holidays often mark personal thresholds, but this year the threshold feels collective and visible. Rather than pulling me inward toward quiet or retreat, this season is calling me toward engagement a grounded presence that stays with reality instead of softening it.
The peace I’m experiencing right now doesn’t arrive after disturbance.
It rises within it.
It has movement.
It has heat.
It’s alive.
And at first, that realization startled me.
When Peace Doesn’t Match the Story We Were Told
I grew up believing peace looked like stillness. Quiet mornings. Resolution. The absence of friction.
This peace doesn’t look like that.
Last week, I sat with my father, who at ninety carries his wisdom with a clarity I trust. I told him something was stirring in me that I couldn’t yet name. He listened, then said simply:
“To thine own self be true.”
Then he added something practical: sometimes the best decision is no decision at all. Waiting can still contain movement. Sitting with something doesn’t mean nothing is happening.
That landed deeply.
The restlessness I feel isn’t something to fix. It’s a signal. Something in me is stretching toward deeper alignment. Something wants more voice. More truth.
And I’m hearing echoes of this everywhere.
The Early Language of Change
Others are naming it too the questioning, the discomfort that feels purposeful rather than chaotic. This doesn’t feel like random noise. It feels like the early language of change.
As the year closes, I’m letting myself stay with the signal. I’m letting peace move rather than settle. I’m letting it stay alive rather than forcing it into silence.
If you’re feeling something rising—something clarifying or nudging or rearranging—I hope you let yourself notice it. Not to rush into urgency. Not to force a decision.
But to consider this possibility:
Peace may not look tranquil in this season of life.
The Peace We Build Together
After reflecting on peace as something alive within me, I started paying closer attention to how peace forms between people.
What I keep noticing is this: inner peace and outer peace are not separate experiences. They shape each other. They unsettle each other. They make each other possible.
Research on co-regulation shows that our nervous systems respond to one another. We calm in the presence of regulated systems and activate around activated ones. Inner and outer peace aren’t just philosophically connected they are neurobiologically braided.
When I feel steady inside myself, I show up differently with others.
And when I experience genuine connection, my inner steadiness deepens.
Peace Is About Contact, Not Performance
This season can create pressure to feel grateful, joyful, inspired, calm. It can also create pressure to appear peaceful, even when what we’re holding is complex.
I’m not interested in appearances this year.
I’m interested in contact.
If peace is alive and evolving within us, then outer peace must be alive too. It shows up in how we speak and listen, how we stay present when discomfort or difference enters the room. It shows up in how much truth we allow.
I see something emerging right now a desire to live more honestly, to stop smoothing ourselves into outdated expectations. There is energy in that. Integrity in that.
There is peace in that.
Peace as Practice, Not Destination
This moment isn’t only about reflection. It’s about orientation. It’s asking us how we want to be in a relationship with ourselves, with each other, with the world as it is.
So instead of offering direction, I want to offer space.
Peace is shaped in the space between us.
We learn it there.
We practice there.
Outer peace isn’t a performance.
It’s a practice.
As we step into a new year, I’m not expecting peace to arrive as stillness.
I’m expecting it to arrive as a movement.
Inner peace and outer peace are braided.
This may not be universal.
It’s simply what feels true right now.
Love + wholeness

Jen Karofsky | Thought Partner & Coach for Visionary Leaders & Significance Seekers
Jen Karofsky collaborates with leaders who are ready to disrupt the status quo and craft a life of legacy, deep connection, and purposeful impact. Through intentional coaching and bold thought partnership, Jen helps you align your work, your values, and your vision to create transformational change in your world.
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