Magnetic Marketing Energy-Based for People Mid-Awakening
The in-between state is one of the most challenging positions to show up from. You know what you no longer are: the messaging, the orientation, the professional framing that defined the practice until recently has become genuinely misaligned with where you actually are now. You don’t yet fully know what you’re becoming: the new perspective is still taking shape, the new voice hasn’t fully arrived, the next version of the practice isn’t yet stable enough to show up as.
And yet the business continues. The audience is there. The expectations — of consistency, of clarity, of a practitioner who knows what they’re doing and why — haven’t paused for the transition.
This is the specific showing-up challenge of mid-awakening, and it’s different from garden-variety visibility blocks. It’s not primarily a fear of being seen. It’s the genuine difficulty of showing up authentically when the authentic self is currently between versions.
What Mid-Awakening Creates in the Visibility Field
What mid-awakening creates in the visibility field is a specific quality of incoherence that the practitioner often feels acutely but can’t always articulate to their audience. The content carries a kind of tentativeness — not the hedging of someone who lacks confidence, but the genuine uncertainty of someone who is in the middle of something that isn’t finished yet.
For audiences who are perceptive, this can be confusing. The practitioner who was clear and confident in one direction suddenly seems less certain. The messaging that was consistent becomes mixed. The positioning that felt solid now shifts from piece to piece.
This is not a marketing failure. It’s a developmental reality. But it does create a specific challenge: showing up in a way that is honest about the transition without being so uncertain that it undermines audience trust.
The Temptation to Perform the Old Identity
The most common response to mid-awakening in the showing-up context is to continue performing the old identity — to keep producing content from the previous framing even though it no longer fits, because the new framing isn’t ready yet.
This produces a specific kind of inauthenticity that is different from ordinary pretense. The practitioner knows what they’re doing. They’re performing a version of themselves they’ve genuinely moved beyond, for the practical reason that the emerging version isn’t yet presentable. The content is technically competent but energetically hollow — the practitioner isn’t actually in it. And audiences often sense this, even without being able to name it.
The beliefs that make in-between showing up feel impossible often sound like: “I can’t show up until I know what I’m showing up as.” “My audience will be confused if I’m not consistent.” “I need to have it figured out before I share it publicly.” These beliefs make the transition harder than it needs to be by imposing a completed-identity requirement on a process that is inherently in-progress.
Showing Up From the Transition Itself
The alternative — which is harder initially but more sustainable — is to show up from the transition as the honest subject of the content.
This doesn’t mean making every piece of content about the awakening. It means being willing to create from the genuine emerging perspective, even while that perspective is still taking shape. It means sharing what’s actually becoming clear, rather than what was clear before or what might be clear eventually.
Identity work during transition includes the recognition that an in-progress identity is still an identity. The practitioner mid-awakening is not no one — they are a specific someone at a specific point in a specific process. That someone has a genuine perspective, genuine insights, genuine things to offer. The content that comes from that actual current state, while less polished than content from a fully settled identity, often carries more genuine presence precisely because it’s real.
Calibrating visibility to the current level of emergence means not waiting for the transition to complete before showing up, but also not forcing a completed presentation before the completion is real. The calibration question is: what do I actually know right now, from where I actually am? What can I share from here that is genuine?
What the Transition Produces as Content
The practitioner who has worked through the mid-awakening visibility challenge often discovers that the transition itself becomes some of their most resonant content. Not because they’re performing vulnerability, but because the genuine in-progress nature of the awakening speaks directly to audiences who are in their own transitions.
How mid-awakening fits in the full approach recognizes that authenticity is the foundation of presence. And authentic presence during transition is, paradoxically, often more magnetic than polished performance from a settled but no-longer-genuine position. The practitioner who shows up honestly from where they actually are — including the uncertainty, the emerging clarity, the genuine not-yet-knowing — creates connection with the people in their audience who are also mid-process.
These are often the most ready-to-engage audiences: not looking for someone who has it all figured out, but for someone who is genuinely working with the same territory they are.
The Abundance GPS Skool community includes practitioners mid-transition — navigating the specific showing-up challenges that awakening in progress creates. If you want to do this work with others in similar territory, the door is open at https://www.skool.com/miraclesforme/about.
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