Last week, I shared that finding out I have a pituitary tumor completely “rocked my world.” Looking back, I believe it was the breakthrough I needed to keep making radical changes in my life.
The week before I got my diagnosis, I started a 7-day anti-sabotage challenge. The reason? I wanted to see if I could push past resistance, that moment when it feels easier to quit, and actually follow through on what I said I would do.
This post is all about what happened during those seven days: the lessons, the obstacles, and the ways I surprised myself by showing up differently.
✨ Why I Do These Challenges
These challenges are my way of pushing through the uncomfortable phase. The space where I know I need and want to change, but my old self tries to drag me back into old habits.
Growth isn’t always pretty. Sometimes it feels like a tug-of-war between who I used to be and who I’m becoming. That’s why I keep coming back to this practice, to remind myself that I can choose me, even when it’s hard.
💡 What the 7-Day Anti-Sabotage Challenge Is
The anti-sabotage challenge is something I created to help me stop getting in my own way. It’s seven days of small but intentional actions to break patterns of fear, perfectionism, and procrastination.
This was actually my third time doing it. The first time, I did a 7-day challenge and I completed it. The second time, I pushed myself to try a 14-day version… and that’s where I failed. I self-sabotaged, got in my head, and didn’t finish.
I’m sharing this because growth isn’t perfect. It’s messy, uncomfortable, and sometimes you fall off track. But this third time felt different. After my MRI breakthrough, I came into this challenge ready to face my fears — and I finished stronger than ever.
🗓 My 7-Day Anti-Sabotage Challenge Recap
| Day | Challenge | Reflection |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | Beat Perfectionism | I started writing for my blog and stopped after just a few sentences — on purpose. It felt weird and unfinished, like a part of me wanted to keep going to “make it perfect.” But this reminded me that done is better than perfect. I distracted myself to avoid going back and over-editing — a big win for me. |
| Day 2 | Micro-Action Wins | Blogging is something I tend to sabotage, but this time I actually scheduled it in my calendar and stuck to it. Even though I wanted to avoid the “hard work,” I didn’t give up on myself. |
| Day 3 | Protect Your Energy | I deleted Instagram and TikTok from my phone to stop my mindless scrolling habit. Protecting my energy meant protecting my focus. |
| Day 4 | Body Reset | I went for a 25-minute walk without my phone. Being fully present and connecting with my body felt grounding and peaceful. |
| Day 5 | Radical Honesty | I finally told my mom about my medical issues, including that I had gotten a brain MRI. It was hard but also freeing to say it out loud and be completely honest with her. |
| Day 6 | Release the Old | After receiving the news that I have a pituitary tumor (check out last week’s post for more insight), I felt years of guilt leave my body. For almost 10 years, I had blamed myself for my irregular periods — and now, I finally let that go. |
| Day 7 | Integration | Resistance showed up hard each day. I wanted to scroll social media to avoid doing the work, but each time I reminded myself: we are changing. This day felt like a ceremony of saying goodbye to my old self. |
🌱 What I Learned
This challenge showed me that resistance will always show up, but it doesn’t have to control me. I can feel the discomfort, do the thing anyway, and come out stronger on the other side.
Most importantly, it reminded me that every time I choose myself, even in a small way, I build trust with the new version of me I’m becoming.
🔗 What’s Next
I’m currently on FMLA for the next five weeks while I focus on my health and get answers about my medical situation. At first, I thought I needed to quit my job right away. Believe me, I was ready to plan my exit strategy. But being realistic with myself, I know I can’t afford to leave just yet, especially with the insurance coverage I need right now.
Instead of seeing this as a setback, I’m choosing to see it as a gift. Extra time to slow down, breathe, and put in the work toward building my dreams. My goal now is to use this time intentionally: to write, to create, and to lay the foundation for my blog to eventually become my brand and business.
Next week, I’ll share exactly how I’m using this time away from work to focus on my mental health, personal growth, and the creative projects that light me up. If you’ve ever wondered how to turn a season of “pause” into a season of purpose, you won’t want to miss it.














