Quick Answer: Feeling strong during uncertainty isn't about knowing what's next—it's about choosing to show up for yourself today. Anchor yourself in what you can control: moving your body, taking care of basics, and being present. Strength grows one day at a time, even when the path ahead isn't clear.
Feeling strong during uncertainty isn't about having everything figured out—it's about choosing to show up for yourself even when nothing around you makes sense. Strength during uncertainty is the daily practice of anchoring yourself in what you can control when everything outside of you feels unstable. This Q&A is for the woman sitting in the middle of a season where the ground keeps shifting and she's wondering if she's going to be okay. You are. And these are the questions I hear most.
You don't have to know what's next to be strong right now. Strength isn't about certainty—it's about deciding that today, you're going to take care of yourself, move your body, keep going, even without a clear map. Some of the strongest seasons of my life happened when I had zero idea where I was headed. I just kept putting one foot in front of the other, and eventually the path showed up.
Completely normal. When everything around you is shifting—relationships, jobs, finances, your health, your family dynamic—it makes sense that you'd feel disconnected from who you are. You haven't lost you. She's still in there. She's just been in survival mode, and survival mode doesn't leave a lot of room for feeling like yourself. Give yourself grace for that.
Move your body. I know that sounds simple, but it works. Even a twenty-minute walk or a quick workout changes something in you. When your brain is spinning about things you can't control, physical movement brings you back into your body and the present moment. It's not about a fitness goal. It's about reminding yourself that you're alive, you're here, and you're capable of doing hard things. This has been one of the most consistent anchors for me through every hard season I've walked through.
For me personally, it's been a game-changer. Not because it fixes anything, but because it gives me thirty or forty minutes where I'm focused on something I can do instead of spiraling about what I can't. Physical strength starts to bleed into mental strength. You finish a hard set and think, okay, if I can do that, I can get through today. That's real. At OK Tease Co., our whole mission is helping women feel strong again—and sometimes the gym is where that feeling starts before it shows up anywhere else in your life.
You probably won't stop entirely, and that's honest. But you can shrink the amount of mental space it takes up. I started writing down two lists: things I can control today and things I can't. Then I pour my energy into the first list. Getting enough sleep. Drinking water. Moving. Being present with my kids. Showing up. It doesn't erase the worry, but it keeps me from drowning in it.
That's okay. My faith has carried me through some of the hardest moments of my life, but I'd be lying if I said it always felt rock solid in the middle of them. Sometimes believing looked like one whispered prayer at 2 a.m. and nothing else. God can handle your doubt and your questions. Faith during uncertainty doesn't have to look polished—it just has to be real.
You don't have to show up perfectly. You just have to show up. Kids don't need a mom who has it all together—they need a mom who keeps going. Some days showing up looks like cereal for dinner and a movie on the couch, and that counts. But I'll also say this: you can't pour from nothing. Taking ten minutes for yourself—to breathe, to move, to just be quiet—isn't selfish. It's survival. And it makes you a better mom, not a worse one.
No. It's not true. Most women are holding more together than anyone sees, and a lot of them are quietly struggling too. Social media in 2026 is still a highlight reel, even with all the "authentic content" trends. Comparison will steal your strength faster than almost anything else. Stay in your lane, focus on your next step, and remember that your journey doesn't have to look like anyone else's.
Yes. If what you're carrying feels bigger than a hard season—if it's affecting your ability to function, eat, sleep, or care for yourself or your kids—please reach out to a qualified professional. I'm not a therapist or counselor, and I'll never pretend to be. I share my own experience and encouragement because I genuinely care about this community, but there's no shame in getting real support. The SAMHSA National Helpline is a free, confidential resource available 24/7. Asking for help is one of the strongest things you can do.
You were built for resilience. Women come back from setbacks in a way that honestly amazes me, over and over again. You might not come back as the same version of yourself—and that might actually be the point. The woman on the other side of this season is going to be someone you're proud of. Don't give up on her. She's counting on you to keep going today.
Wear Your Power.
OK Tease Co. is a modern women’s apparel brand rooted in purpose, confidence, and intentional storytelling.
Stillwater, Oklahoma
View full profile