The Gap Between Who You Were and Who You’re Becoming.

April 18, 2026 Louise Mosley

FOR ARCHETYPE: 4: Discerning DIM Explorer (DME)

WHAT THEY'RE EXPERIENCING: Intellectually rigorous and fiercely independent, they're mapping their own way through the in-between phase of their life and will only move when the data convinces them it's time.

TOPIC: Future vision

TONE: Reflective

CONTENT KEYWORD: Transformation

When Purpose Disappears Before the Next Chapter Begins

Something shifts quietly before you can name it. There’s no dramatic exit, no crisis point, just the gradual realisation that what once fitted no longer does. You’ve outgrown something: a role, a version of yourself, a chapter that made complete sense for a long time. The strange part is that you’re functioning perfectly well. You’re capable, clear-headed, experienced in navigating change. Yet the question of why purpose seems to disappear during this kind of crossing, and how long it’s reasonable to sit inside that gap, keeps surfacing without resolution.

This piece doesn’t offer a roadmap. It offers something that may be more useful right now: a few different frameworks for making sense of where you are.

What Transition Research Tells Us About Purpose in the In-Between

Psychologist William Bridges offered a distinction that many people find useful as a starting point. Change, he argued, is situational. Transition is psychological. The new job, the ended relationship, the outgrown chapter, those are the changes. The internal process of letting go of what was, moving through uncertainty, and eventually orienting toward something new, that’s the transition. Bridges called the middle phase the “neutral zone,” and he was clear that it’s not a problem to be solved. It’s a necessary part of the process, even when it feels unsustainable. That’s one lens. There are others.

Why This Crossing Feels Different From the Professional Transitions You’ve Handled Before

Professional transitions tend to have external scaffolding: a new title, a defined objective, a measurable outcome. Even when they’re difficult, there’s a map of sorts. When what’s shifting is something closer to your sense of self, your purpose, your direction, the story you’ve been telling about who you are, there’s no job description to step into. The absence of that scaffolding isn’t a sign that something has gone wrong. It simply means you’re navigating terrain that doesn’t come with pre-existing coordinates. High-functioning people find this particular gap harder to navigate precisely because the skills that served them well in every previous transition don’t fully apply here.

Three Ways People Make Sense of the In-Between

Some people treat this period as a fallow one: deliberately unproductive, intentionally quiet, trusting that clarity will emerge when it’s ready. Others find that staying intellectually active helps, reading widely, examining different perspectives, building a kind of internal map even without a destination. A third group focuses on what researcher Herminia Ibarra calls “provisional selves”: trying on different possible directions without committing, using the exploration itself as information. None of these approaches is definitively right. Each reflects a different relationship with uncertainty, and each has something to recommend it depending on your temperament and circumstances.

The Question of Sustainability

The neutral zone doesn’t last indefinitely, and most people navigating it are aware of that. There are practical realitie, financial ones, professional ones, social ones that place a reasonable boundary around open-ended transition. Two schools of thought exist on this. One, supported by transition research, suggests that the pressure to resolve the gap prematurely is often what extends it, that grasping for the nearest available answer delays something more genuine from emerging. The other takes a more pragmatic position: that open-ended uncertainty carries real costs, and that some degree of structured movement, even imperfect movement, can restore a sense of agency that pure waiting does not. Neither position is definitively right. What they agree on is that the question is worth examining honestly rather than suppressing.

What Others Have Noticed About This Kind of Crossing

Research into how people navigate this particular gap suggests it asks something that most professional transitions don’t: the capacity to stay curious about your own experience without demanding it resolve itself on a schedule. Whether that sits comfortably or uncomfortably will depend on the person. What seems consistent, across different frameworks and different accounts, is that the gap between outgrowing one chapter and stepping into the next is rarely as empty as it feels from the inside.

Written by AI on behalf of Louise Mosley using the Writing for Resonance process.

About the Creator

Louise Mosley
Louise Mosley
Flow Specialist
Flow specialist and lover of the underwater world.

After years in corporate, I know the pressures, pace, and expectations of high-performing careers. I also know what it feels like when success on paper no longer brings fulfilment.

For over a decade, I’ve supported professionals, leaders, and entrepreneurs who sense they’ve drifted from what matters and are ready to navigate a more aligned, sustainable path forward.

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