“What’s your favorite color?” Sounds like a simple question — but it can be surprisingly revealing.
Over time, I’ve noticed that our connection to color is more than just preference. It reflects who we are, what we desire, and the emotional energy we are aligned with in different chapters of life.
My favorite color has always been blue. At first, I never questioned why—I just loved every shade of it. But as I grew and evolved, I realized that blue symbolizes what I want most in my life: peace, stability, and harmony. It represents calm waters, clear skies, and emotional balance.
But it wasn’t always blue.
There were seasons of my life defined by:
Earth Tones
When I needed grounding, consistency, and something to anchor myself to. These colors symbolized reliability and the desire to feel secure.
Pink
When love, softness, connection, and passion were at the center of my world. This was a time of emotional openness and longing for warmth.
Blue
Represents a season of alignment, healing, and inner calm.
Watching my color preferences shift taught me something valuable: We transform in ways we often don’t notice. Sometimes even through the colors we feel drawn to.
Color becomes a quiet language of the soul, expressing emotions we may not have words for.
What About People Who Don’t Have a Favorite Color?
I’ve met many people who say they don’t have a favorite color at all.
To me, that doesn’t mean they’re unsure or disconnected — it may mean they’re: * Living in the moment *Open to possibilities *More influenced by mood than by identity * In a season of flowing rather than choosing
Not having a favorite color can also reflect a flexible or evolving identity — someone who doesn’t feel defined by one thing and is comfortable shifting, trying, or exploring.
Color as a Mirror of Transformation
Our favorite colors can shift as we grow, heal, or enter new chapters in our lives. They change as our emotional landscape changes. They speak for us when we are still figuring out what we feel.
So now I ask you:
What’s your favorite color today? And what might it reveal about the season of life you’re in?
Life invites us into transformation in many ways — through joy, through discomfort, and sometimes through endings we didn’t expect. Recently, I’ve been supporting someone navigating a divorce, and it reminded me how deeply personal transitions reflect the essence of R.I.Z.E. Transformational Coaching.
Divorce is often misunderstood as a failure or a breaking point. But in truth, it is one of the most powerful opportunities for self-discovery, healing, and rebirth. It is a space where we are asked not to retreat, but to rise.
This article explores how divorce, through the lens of the R.I.Z.E. pillars — Resilience, Introspection, Zen, and Elevation — can become a catalyst for profound transformation.
The Human Side of Divorce: More Than an Ending
When a relationship ends, it can feel like the world has shifted beneath your feet. Whether the separation is mutual or unexpected, the emotional terrain is often filled with grief, confusion, guilt, or relief — sometimes all at once.
But what many people forget is that divorce is not simply the breaking apart of two individuals. It is the breaking open of truths, lessons, patterns, and possibilities. Every relationship has a purpose: to teach, to reveal, to stretch us, or to prepare us.
Sometimes, a marriage offers clarity on what aligns with us. Other times, it reveals what no longer fits who we are becoming. And occasionally, it helps us recognize the parts of ourselves we ignored or silenced along the way.
Understanding this allows the transition to become not just an end, but a beginning.
The R.I.Z.E. Framework for Divorce Transformation
The R.I.Z.E. pillars serve as guiding lights during major life transitions — especially one as emotionally layered as divorce. They provide structure, compassion, and clarity as a person rebuilds their identity, voice, and vision for their life.
R — Resilience: Learning to Stand Again
Resilience is not about being unaffected. It’s about being willing to rise, even with trembling hands.
Divorce tests the emotional foundation of a person. You may question who you are outside the marriage. You may grieve the version of life you expected. You may feel lost, angry, or afraid.
Resilience invites you to acknowledge your emotions without becoming consumed by them. It says:
You are allowed to feel this.
You are allowed to take your time.
You are allowed to continue forward.
Resilience is built moment by moment — through decisions, boundaries, and new commitments to yourself.
I — Introspection: Understanding the Lesson Beneath the Experience
No marriage ends without reason. But the reasons extend deeper than surface-level conflicts or circumstances.
Introspection invites you to explore questions like:
What did this relationship teach me about myself?
Where did I compromise too much?
Where did I grow?
What values do I now know I need in a partnership?
What beliefs about love or self-worth are ready to shift?
Introspection turns pain into insight. It transforms confusion into clarity. It allows the story to evolve from heartbreak into wisdom.
This is the stage where clients often begin to reclaim their voice and identify what they truly want moving forward.
Z — Zen: Finding Stillness in the Middle of Change
Divorce can bring chaos — paperwork, emotional triggers, new routines, financial transitions, or family dynamics. But even in the midst of this, there is sacred space for grounding and peace.
Zen doesn’t require silence, perfection, or spirituality. Zen simply invites presence.
It helps clients slow down and reconnect with their inner truth instead of reacting from fear or pain.
Practices may include:
intentional breathing
guided grounding
journaling
mindfulness
body awareness
emotional regulation techniques
Zen supports clients in choosing aligned responses instead of impulsive reactions. It creates emotional safety — the foundation of real transformation.
E — Elevation: Rising Into a New Chapter
Elevation is the moment when clients begin to rise above the story of loss and into the story of empowerment.
It’s when the questions shift from:
Why did this happen to me? to
What is this guiding me toward?
Elevation allows a person to walk away without labeling themselves a failure. It removes shame from the conversation. It acknowledges that not every relationship is meant to last forever — and that’s okay.
Closing a chapter is not giving up. Sometimes it is the bravest choice you can make.
It honors both individuals by allowing each to grow in directions that no longer align together.
Elevation is choosing truth, choosing healing, and choosing yourself.
The Transformation After the Transition
Divorce can reveal:
new levels of personal strength
desires that were buried
dreams that were paused
boundaries that were needed
the next version of one’s identity
With the right support, clients often emerge more centered, more aligned, and more self-aware than ever before.
Transformation doesn’t erase the past — it reshapes its meaning.
And with the R.I.Z.E. pillars guiding the journey, divorce becomes less about endings and more about evolution.
Final Thoughts
Divorce is not a failure. It is not a weakness. It is not a reflection of someone’s worth.
It is a transition — sometimes painful, sometimes liberating — but ultimately an opportunity to rediscover oneself.
Through Resilience, Introspection, Zen, and Elevation, clients learn that they are not breaking down — they are breaking open.