I remember what it felt like to look busy on the outside but feel uncertain on the inside. I loved God and wanted to do the right thing, yet I kept asking, “What am I supposed to be doing in this season?” The more I tried to force an answer, the more stuck I felt.
For a long time, I treated purpose like a destination I had to reach quickly. I said yes to things that looked good, sounded responsible, or made other people comfortable. But deep down, I knew I was drifting, moving, but not truly aligned.
Eventually, I hit a point where I couldn’t ignore the tension anymore. I realized I didn’t need more pressure; I needed more clarity. I began to slow down, pray differently, and pay attention to what brought peace versus what brought anxiety.
That shift changed everything. I started to see that purpose unfolds in seasons, and that God often reveals the next step before He reveals the whole staircase. Instead of demanding certainty, I learned to practice discernment and take faithful action one step at a time.
As I gained clarity, my confidence grew, not because life became perfect, but because my decisions became aligned. I learned how to set boundaries without guilt and how to choose what mattered most without constantly explaining myself. Peace became a guide, not a reward.
People began to notice the difference and started asking how I got unstuck. I found myself having the same conversations again and again, helping others name what they wanted, what they valued, and what they felt God was inviting them into. Those conversations became the seed of what I do today.
That’s why I created Faith to AIM, LLC. I wanted a space where people could be honest about confusion, doubt, and transition, without shame. A place where faith and practical strategy work together so you can move forward with confidence.
Now, I get to walk with clients as they trade wandering for direction. We uncover what’s true, what’s next, and what needs to change so they can live on purpose. And every time someone takes a brave, aligned step forward, I’m reminded: clarity doesn’t just change plans, it changes lives.