Walking Anyway: Living with uncertainty, navigating life transitions, and finding faith when life doesn't go as planned
Walking Anyway is a podcast for spiritually thoughtful people learning how to live faithfully when life feels uncertain, unresolved, or heavier than expected.
Instead of offering quick answers or forcing clarity, each weekly episode explores how to stay present in real life—while still taking small, meaningful steps forward.
Walking Anyway: Living with uncertainty, navigating life transitions, and finding faith when life doesn't go as planned
04: Not Knowing What Comes Next
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What do you do when you don’t know what comes next… but feel like you should by now?
If you’ve been feeling uncertain, or a little stuck in a season where nothing feels settled, this might feel familiar.
In this episode, I talk about the space between something ending and something new beginning—and what it’s like to live inside that moment when life doesn’t have a clear next step.
In this episode:
– what it feels like when you don’t know what comes next
– the pressure to figure things out
– how to come back to what is true right now
If you’re in a season like this, this might help you feel less pressure to figure it all out—and a little more grounded in the middle of it.
You don’t have to figure it all out today.
Links + Resources From This Episode:
- Start with a 21-day Guest Seat at The Table
- Find me on Instagram @denisa.o.nica
- Download a transcript of this, and every episode at www.denisaonica.com
Find Denisa Elsewhere:
- Leave a review on Apple Podcasts
- Join Denisa's Substack
- Order Kairos, When The Holy Meets The Daily
- Get the monthly letter
I'm Denisa Nica and welcome to Walking Anyway. You're listening to episode 4. This is a podcast about living faithfully in uncertain seasons when life feels unclear and nothing is quite settling yet. If you carry questions and you're not quite sure how to move through this in a way that feels steady and true, you're in the right place to keep walking anyway. I'm an author and spiritual director and the founder of The Table, a contemplative space shaped by a weekly rhythm where women practice this kind of faithful living together at their own pace in the middle of their real lives and faith. I live in Spain where life moves a little slower, and that has changed the way I pay attention and the way I live inside my own life. Now for today's episode, listen in. This week something has taken space, and I think it has to do with a decision I need to make. And the truth is, most of it is completely outside of my control. Which is not my favorite kind of situation. I wish it were. And this doesn't have that. Parts of it are unclear, parts of it depend on other people, and parts of it just haven't settled yet. And I can feel that tension building, that quiet pressure to decide, to respond, to move something forward. But truth is I'm tired. Not just of the decision itself, but of carrying something that doesn't have a clear place to land. And I notice it in my body too. I don't have the same kind of energy I usually do. Sometimes my heart starts racing even when I'm sitting still, and there's this low steady hum in the background that I can't quite turn off. And I think part of what makes this heavier right now is where I am in life. I'm somewhere in my mid to late 40s, 46 to be exact. And I feel like this is the stage of life where you just want things to land a little more. Like, can something just settle, please? And when you move to a different continent after spending your entire adult life in one place, there's a kind of vulnerability that comes with that. Everything is newer, less rooted, and a little bit more exposed. The things that used to feel simple don't always feel simple anymore. The systems aren't fully built yet. The rhythms aren't fully formed yet. So your needs feel closer to the surface. You notice more, you feel more. And there's less margin for things that are uncertain or unresolved. And in the middle of that, I find myself here with something that needs a decision and no clear next step. And this thought keeps coming up. I feel like I should know by now. And maybe this is what happens at the beginning of summer too. Things just start to feel a little bit more real. If you're here too, somewhere between something that's ending and something that hasn't started yet, I want to stay here with you for a minute. Because I think part of what makes this so hard is not just the uncertainty itself. It's what uncertainty feels like. For a long time, especially when I was a younger Christian, I would hear language like walk by faith. And I didn't really know what to do with that. Because in real life, not knowing what comes next doesn't just feel unclear. It can feel dark. And I realized at some point that my struggle wasn't just with uncertainty. It was with the way uncertainty felt like darkness. And the way darkness brought up fear in me. There's a line from Richard Rohr where he says that not knowing that uncertainty is a kind of darkness that many people find unbearable. And that felt true for me. Because I don't think I was just trying to figure things out. I was trying not to feel lost, not to feel alone, not to feel like I was walking without anything to hold on to. But hear me out for a minute. What if not knowing is not failure, but formation? What if not knowing what comes next doesn't mean you're doing something wrong? What if this space, this in-between, unclear, unresolved place is actually doing something in us? We often confuse clarity with faithfulness. We think being faithful means knowing what to do, having a clear next step, feeling certain about the direction we're going. But maybe faithfulness looks more like being grounded right here. You don't need clarity about what comes next to stay faithful in what's here. And not knowing doesn't mean there's an absence of guidance, an absence of God. Sometimes it just means you're in a place that hasn't unfolded yet. The future is not something you control, it's something you walk into. And you don't have to have the whole picture to take the next step that's in front of you. So when you notice that pressure building, when things start to feel a little dark and you don't know what to do, when you don't know what's coming next. And this could be about your life, your work, a relationship, or something very specific that you're holding right now. Come back to this question. What do I know right now about this moment? Not about the future, just about what is true here. Where am I? What's in front of me? What feels real, even if it's small? And if it helps, you can say it out loud or write it down. Just something that brings you back to what is real. You're allowed to not know yet, and still be a whole person, still believing your life, still be right here. Not knowing what comes next doesn't mean you're lost. It might mean you're standing exactly where life is asking you to be. And you don't need to know what comes next to stay faithful in what's here. Thanks for listening to episode four of walking anyway. I hope the simple practice of coming back to what you do know helps you stay grounded and gently find your way forward. Just enough to keep walking anyway. Because the way you're walking through this, right in the middle of what hasn't settled yet, is already forming something steady in you. If you're wanting a place to actually practice this and not just think about it, you can begin with a 21-day guest seat inside The Table. It's a quiet space where you learn to stay with God in your real life and where you don't have to do that on your own. You can find me online at denisaonica.com or on Instagram at denisa.o.nica. As you step back into your day, notice what stayed with you. And let that be enough for today. Just like light moving through a room, you don't need to see everything at once to keep living faithfully here. I want to leave you with these words from Jesus in the Message translation. " I am the world's light. No one who follows me stumbles around in darkness. I provide plenty of light to live in. " Thanks for listening, and I'll be here with you next time.