Restoring Identity

reflection at salt lake uyuni (bolivia)
Part I – Seen and Remembered

Who You Were Before the World Named You

man taking nature walk in autumn
Part II – Authority Restored

Authority You’ve Forgotten You Have

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Part III – Discipline That Anchors

Discipline as Protection, Not Restriction

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Part IV- Living Unentangled

Living Unentangled

An editorial series exploring the journey of rediscovering identity beneath expectation, pressure, and cultural definition.


In a world that constantly assigns labels, expectations, and narratives, many people gradually lose sight of who they were created to be. Identity becomes shaped by performance, comparison, and external approval rather than anchored in truth.

The Restoring Identity series explores the quiet work of remembering who we are beneath those layers. Through reflection, spiritual insight, and thoughtful examination, this four-part series invites readers to rediscover the identity that existed before the world began assigning names.

Each article builds upon the last, moving from recognition to authority, from discipline to freedom.


Part I — Who You Were Before the World Named You

Exploring how identity becomes shaped by labels, expectations, and cultural pressure — and why remembering our original identity is the beginning of restoration.

Available in the March Issue.


Part II — Authority You’ve Forgotten You Have

Understanding the quiet authority that comes from alignment with truth and learning how internal agreements shape the way we live.

Releasing in April.


Part III — Discipline as Protection, Not Restriction

How discipline safeguards identity and creates the structure necessary for freedom, clarity, and sustainable growth.

Releasing in May.


Part IV — Living Unentangled

Discovering how to participate fully in the world without allowing its noise, pressure, and expectations to define who you are.

Releasing in June.

Identity influences every area of life — decisions, relationships, leadership, and purpose. When identity becomes shaped primarily by external expectations, people often live reactively rather than intentionally.

The Restoring Identity series invites readers to slow down, reflect, and realign with the deeper foundation of who they were created to be.

Restoration begins with remembering.

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