Hello, March! A new month, a quiet reset. The first stretch of the year is already behind us, and here we are, offering another chance to begin again, refine what’s not working, and build gently on what is. March feels like a bridge month. Not quite the rush of January, not yet the fullness of mid-year. Just enough space to recalibrate. May this month bring steadier energy, clearer focus, and little but meaningful progress. No dramatic reinvention required. Just consistency, intention, and a little courage to keep going.
And that’s exactly what I am feeling. Everything will work out way better than you thought it would. Once you let go of the need to control every outcome, you automatically align with the flow of life. And this unlocks a level of abundance beyond anything you could have planned. Free yourself from the burden of analysing every twist and turn; it was never yours to carry anyway. Support can come from unexpected places, and opportunities that seem ordinary at first may hold more potential than you realise. Trust in what’s to come. A positive belief is what transforms uncertainty into a space full of possibilities.
Attributed to a fictional character from the 2002 comedy film National Lampoon’s Van Wilder, Van Wilder, portrayed by actor Ryan Reynolds, the character was known for his laid-back attitude and humorous observations about life, often delivering lighthearted lines that carry surprisingly relatable wisdom beneath the comedy.
Today’s quote uses humour to deliver a practical truth. A rocking chair moves constantly, but it never actually changes location. In the same way, worrying can feel active and productive. Your mind is busy. You’re thinking through scenarios, replaying conversations, predicting outcomes. It feels like you’re addressing the problem. But in reality, you’re staying in the same place. Worry often masquerades as preparation. We tell ourselves that if we think about an issue long enough, we’ll prevent it or solve it. But most worry is repetitive rather than constructive. It circles the same fears without leading to clear decisions or action. Instead of moving forward, we expend emotional energy and remain stuck.
The quote doesn’t suggest ignoring problems. There’s a difference between thoughtful planning and unproductive worrying. Planning identifies specific steps you can take. Worry, on the other hand, tends to focus on what might go wrong without identifying what can be done. The key shift is from rumination to action. Once you ask, “What can I actually control here?” the rocking chair stops, and real movement begins. There’s also a gentle reminder about perspective. Much of what we worry about never happens, and when challenges do arise, we’re often more capable of handling them than we expected. Worry drains the present moment for the sake of a future that hasn’t arrived.
Today’s verse from the Bhagavad Gita is about clarity. There are seasons when clarity feels distant. When the next step is unclear. When motivation is thin. This verse doesn’t ask for brilliance. It asks for movement. Action, Krishna says, is better than inaction. Not because action guarantees success, but because stillness born of avoidance slowly erodes confidence. When we delay too long, doubt grows heavier than effort ever was. We sometimes imagine that we must wait for the perfect plan, the perfect mood, the perfect assurance. But life rarely arranges itself so neatly. Often, clarity arrives after the first step, not before it. Even survival, the verse reminds us gently, depends on action. To eat, to work, to care, to show up—these are not grand gestures. They are daily acts of participation in life. This is not a call to frantic productivity. It is a reminder that engagement, however small, keeps us aligned with purpose. Sometimes the bravest thing is simply to begin. Just something to carry into the week ahead.
I am super excited for this month and wish you all the same! Sending all of you loads of positive energy, positivity, and good fortune! Here’s to an exciting month and the rest of 2026!

