11 Signs That Your Life Is About to Change – A Journey of Inner TransformationBased on the insights of Korean creator Joo Eon-Gyu (주언규) PD Have you ever felt a quiet discomfort, a vague sense that your current life no longer fits you? If so, you may be entering a period of transformation. Korean creator Joo Eon-Gyu outlines 11 emotional and psychological stages people go through when their life is about to change. Here’s a deep summary of each stage: Feeling stuck or uneasy? Discover 11 emotional stages people go through when major life change is coming. Based on Joo Eon-Gyu PD’s insights on personal transformation. Final Thought These 11 stages aren’t just a theory—they’re a lived emotional map. You may not go through them in perfect order, but recognizing them helps you move with awareness, not fear. If you’re going through any of these, trust that it’s part of a bigger transformation. 👉 Read the original Korean post by Joo Eon-Gyu here: https://borabii.com/entry/주언규-피디-인생이-바뀔-때-나타나는-11단계-징조 When Artists Feel Stuck: Lessons from Joo Eon-Gyu’s 11 Stages of Change How creative growth often begins with quiet discomfort As artists, we begin our journey full of excitement. The brush feels magical, the sketchbook becomes a sacred place, and the smallest bit of praise lights us up. But after some time—after several exhibitions, some recognition, and the development of a “style”—something shifts. What once brought joy starts to feel repetitive or hollow. We find ourselves wondering: What’s next? When Creativity Feels Like Repetition There comes a time when growth slows down. You’re still making work, still producing, but something inside feels off. That “off” feeling isn’t failure—it’s a sign. As Joo PD writes, we become so used to growth that we forget to make space for realignment. Instead, we fall into frustration and even self-blame. “We don’t realize that we’re in a basecamp for something bigger. So we criticize ourselves instead of trusting the pause.” If you’re an artist feeling uninspired, anxious, or like you’re just “repeating yourself,” you’re not broken. You’re in the transition zone—what Joo calls “the quiet pain before a leap.” What If Work Is Not a Burden, But a Privilege? One of the most striking parts of Joo’s writing is this: “Special people treat work as a right, not a duty.” For many of us, making art becomes a task. A job. A responsibility. But what if it’s actually a privilege? What if creating is something you get to do, not something you have to do? When we see our creative work as a right—as something precious and deeply our own—it stops being a burden. It becomes meaningful again. It becomes play. The Shift: From Expectation to Curiosity The real breakthrough comes when we stop expecting ourselves to grow in linear ways. When we stop asking, “Why am I not improving?” and start asking, “What wants to be expressed now?” Joo says: “So I decided to just trust the message. And then came peaceful growth. And after that—fun.” It’s true. After the frustration, and after trusting that quiet space, there’s a new kind of freedom. You begin to explore, play again, and grow not because you must—but because you can. Final Thoughts for ArtistsIf you’re an artist standing at the edge of burnout or disillusionment, know this:
📚 Read the original post (in Korean): 👉 “11 Stages That Appear When Life Is About to Change” by Joo Eon-Gyu Comments are closed.
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