March 29, 2026
We often assume that career progress begins with clarity. If only we could identify the perfect next step, everything would fall into place. But experience shows something different. Clarity rarely appears at the beginning of a transition. More often, it follows the moment we find the courage to question what no longer feels aligned.
A few days ago, I ran a poll on LinkedIn asking a simple question:
What do you feel you need most in your career right now?
The answers were revealing…
Half of the respondents chose courage.
At first glance, many people assume that what they lack in their career is clarity. They believe that if they could simply figure out the right next step, everything would fall into place.
But after years of working with professionals navigating career transitions – especially in demanding labour markets like Brussels – I have learned something different.
Often the real challenge is not clarity.
It’s courage.

Brussels attracts highly educated professionals from across Europe and beyond. Many speak several languages, hold advanced degrees, and work in prestigious institutions, international organisations, consultancies, or policy environments.
The expectations are high. The competition is intense.
On the outside, many of these careers look impressive.
But behind that success, many professionals quietly ask themselves difficult questions:
These questions often appear after years of achievement.
And that is precisely what makes them so difficult to face.
Because when you have built a strong career, changing direction can feel risky.
Financial stability, reputation, and professional identity are all at stake.
Sometimes the career you worked so hard to build becomes what many people describe as a golden cage.
Safe, respected, but limiting.

Another pattern I frequently observe is constant comparison.
In highly competitive environments, professionals measure themselves against others who seem more accomplished, more confident, or more successful.
This comparison fuels impostor syndrome and weakens self-trust.
Instead of asking themselves what they truly want, people begin adapting to what they believe the market expects.
They try to fit into predefined paths rather than design their own.
Over time, this creates a subtle but powerful disconnection.
Not because they lack talent or opportunity — but because they have lost touch with themselves.

Many people believe clarity must come first.
But in reality, clarity often appears after the first act of courage.
Courage in a career does not always mean making dramatic changes.
Sometimes it begins with a quiet moment of honesty.
Admitting to yourself:
“This role no longer reflects who I am.”
“This environment no longer supports the life I want to build.”
This kind of honesty requires courage because it challenges familiar structures and expectations.
It may mean questioning decisions that once felt right.
But it also opens the door to something essential: self-awareness.

In my coaching work, I guide professionals through a process that begins with foundations rather than opportunities.
Too often people start their career search by looking outward – scanning job boards, comparing positions, and reacting to market demands.
But a meaningful career transition begins inside.
The process typically unfolds in four stages:
When people skip the first steps, they often repeat the same cycle – moving from one impressive role to another without feeling fulfilled.
But when they begin with self-awareness, their decisions become much more aligned.

Courage in a career is not about reckless risk.
It is about acting according to who you are.
Most importantly, courage means placing yourself – your values, your aspirations, your humanity – at the centre of your decisions.
Because a meaningful career is not only about usefulness to organisations or institutions.
It is about building a life that reflects WHO YOU TRULY ARE.
And sometimes, the first step toward that life begins with a simple but powerful realisation: Career clarity rarely appears before courage.
It emerges after the first honest step.