THE SHEN LIFE PACK

The Shen Life community is lovingly referred to as a Pack after the Rogers’ wolf dogs Bella*, China*, Atlas*, Lupa, Vishen, Raven and Sisu. Read more about each one here.

The Square Peg

The Square Peg

July 14, 20264 min read

Not every open door is your door.

That's one of the hardest lessons for driven people to learn — because drive doesn't come with discernment. Drive says go. Discernment says where.

Without both, you end up forcing yourself into situations that looked right on the surface but were wrong underneath. And by the time you realize the fit was off, you're stuck — entangled in a mess that's ten times harder to leave than it was to enter.

The Heart Is a Masterful Liar

The monkey mind is bad enough — jumping from option to option, spinning stories about why this is the one, painting pictures that look much better than reality.

But the heart is worse.

Scripture says it plainly:

"The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?" — Jeremiah 17:9 (KJV)

That's not a condemnation of emotion. It's a warning about mistaking desire for discernment.

The heart wants what it wants. And it's masterful at constructing justifications — dressing up lust as love, impatience as urgency, fear of missing out as divine timing.

The mind builds the case. The heart signs the warrant. And together, they can convince you that a square peg belongs in a round hole — if you just push hard enough.

The Squeeze

On the surface, many things can appear to be a good fit.

The job that checks every box on paper. The relationship that feels electric in the first month. The business opportunity that seems too perfect to question. The city, the circle, the deal, the partnership.

Your system wants it. Your emotions confirm it. Your mind builds the narrative to support it.

So you push. You squeeze yourself into it. You shave off the corners that don't fit. You tolerate the friction. You call the discomfort "growing pains."

And it works — for a while.

But a square peg in a round hole doesn't become round. It gets stuck. And the deeper you push, the harder extraction becomes.

Relationships built on forced fit become entanglements. Business decisions built on desire instead of discernment become traps. Lives built on "it seemed right at the time" become Groundhog Day.

Getting in was easy. Getting out is the part no one planned for.

Cautious Urgency

So what's the move?

Not paralysis. Not endless analysis. Not waiting for the universe to send a certified letter confirming your next step.

The move is cautious urgency.

Proceed — but proceed awake. Move with a great sense of purpose and a deep sense of presence. Lean in without lunging.

To paraphrase Krishnamurti: life is like a minefield that we are walking through blindfolded. We should tiptoe through it.

That's not fear. That's respect for the terrain.

Cautious urgency keeps the spider senses wide open while still moving toward the goal. It means you don't sacrifice speed for recklessness — and you don't sacrifice discernment for desire.

The organism wants to rush. Survival kung fu loves urgency — because urgency bypasses the slower, deeper knowing that might say not this one.

Shen moves differently. Shen moves with precision. Not slow — precise. There's a difference between someone moving carefully and someone frozen. One is sovereign. The other is stuck.

The Body Check

Before you commit to anything significant — a relationship, a business decision, a major life move — run it through the body.

Not the mind. The mind already has its story ready.

Not the heart. The heart already signed the warrant.

The body.

Does the gut settle or clench?

Does the chest open or tighten?

Does the organism feel expanded or compressed when you sit with the decision in silence — without the narrative, without the justification, without the sales pitch you've been giving yourself?

If you have to convince yourself it's right, it probably isn't.

Clean decisions don't need a closing argument. They land in the body with a quiet yes that doesn't require persuasion. It's just open and ready.

When in Doubt

And when you can't tell — when the signal is mixed, when the body isn't clear, when the mind and heart are running competing campaigns —

Sit.

As long as necessary.

Not as avoidance. As discipline. As the refusal to force a fit just because the waiting is uncomfortable.

The discomfort of patience is always cheaper than the cost of extraction.

A square peg forced into a round hole doesn't just damage the peg. It damages the hole. And sometimes both are destroyed before you find the courage to pull it out.

Better to sit. Better to feel. Better to let clarity arrive on its own schedule than to manufacture a false certainty and call it faith.

The Clean Fit

When the fit is real, you'll know.

Not because the mind built a convincing case. Not because the heart flooded you with desire. Because something deeper than both — something in the gut, something in the bones, something prior to the narrative — said yes.

And that yes didn't need to shave off any corners.

It just fit.

Reach for it.

square pegforcing itShen Lifesovereigntybody compassgut instinctpatiencecautious urgencysurvival kung fuself deceptionJeremiah 17:9inner workembodimentnervous systemself masteryspiritual growthmindfulness
blog author image

Stephen & Erica

Stephen and Erica help growth-minded individuals move forward from an inside-out approach that affects all areas of life. From Stephen's experience and research of transformation with clients and himself, he created Shen Life—a spiritual path to reach your potential. Together as teachers, healers, scholars, and outlaws, Stephen and Erica help move people forward in a radical way!

Back to Blog
The Square Peg

The Square Peg

July 14, 20264 min read

Not every open door is your door.

That's one of the hardest lessons for driven people to learn — because drive doesn't come with discernment. Drive says go. Discernment says where.

Without both, you end up forcing yourself into situations that looked right on the surface but were wrong underneath. And by the time you realize the fit was off, you're stuck — entangled in a mess that's ten times harder to leave than it was to enter.

The Heart Is a Masterful Liar

The monkey mind is bad enough — jumping from option to option, spinning stories about why this is the one, painting pictures that look much better than reality.

But the heart is worse.

Scripture says it plainly:

"The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?" — Jeremiah 17:9 (KJV)

That's not a condemnation of emotion. It's a warning about mistaking desire for discernment.

The heart wants what it wants. And it's masterful at constructing justifications — dressing up lust as love, impatience as urgency, fear of missing out as divine timing.

The mind builds the case. The heart signs the warrant. And together, they can convince you that a square peg belongs in a round hole — if you just push hard enough.

The Squeeze

On the surface, many things can appear to be a good fit.

The job that checks every box on paper. The relationship that feels electric in the first month. The business opportunity that seems too perfect to question. The city, the circle, the deal, the partnership.

Your system wants it. Your emotions confirm it. Your mind builds the narrative to support it.

So you push. You squeeze yourself into it. You shave off the corners that don't fit. You tolerate the friction. You call the discomfort "growing pains."

And it works — for a while.

But a square peg in a round hole doesn't become round. It gets stuck. And the deeper you push, the harder extraction becomes.

Relationships built on forced fit become entanglements. Business decisions built on desire instead of discernment become traps. Lives built on "it seemed right at the time" become Groundhog Day.

Getting in was easy. Getting out is the part no one planned for.

Cautious Urgency

So what's the move?

Not paralysis. Not endless analysis. Not waiting for the universe to send a certified letter confirming your next step.

The move is cautious urgency.

Proceed — but proceed awake. Move with a great sense of purpose and a deep sense of presence. Lean in without lunging.

To paraphrase Krishnamurti: life is like a minefield that we are walking through blindfolded. We should tiptoe through it.

That's not fear. That's respect for the terrain.

Cautious urgency keeps the spider senses wide open while still moving toward the goal. It means you don't sacrifice speed for recklessness — and you don't sacrifice discernment for desire.

The organism wants to rush. Survival kung fu loves urgency — because urgency bypasses the slower, deeper knowing that might say not this one.

Shen moves differently. Shen moves with precision. Not slow — precise. There's a difference between someone moving carefully and someone frozen. One is sovereign. The other is stuck.

The Body Check

Before you commit to anything significant — a relationship, a business decision, a major life move — run it through the body.

Not the mind. The mind already has its story ready.

Not the heart. The heart already signed the warrant.

The body.

Does the gut settle or clench?

Does the chest open or tighten?

Does the organism feel expanded or compressed when you sit with the decision in silence — without the narrative, without the justification, without the sales pitch you've been giving yourself?

If you have to convince yourself it's right, it probably isn't.

Clean decisions don't need a closing argument. They land in the body with a quiet yes that doesn't require persuasion. It's just open and ready.

When in Doubt

And when you can't tell — when the signal is mixed, when the body isn't clear, when the mind and heart are running competing campaigns —

Sit.

As long as necessary.

Not as avoidance. As discipline. As the refusal to force a fit just because the waiting is uncomfortable.

The discomfort of patience is always cheaper than the cost of extraction.

A square peg forced into a round hole doesn't just damage the peg. It damages the hole. And sometimes both are destroyed before you find the courage to pull it out.

Better to sit. Better to feel. Better to let clarity arrive on its own schedule than to manufacture a false certainty and call it faith.

The Clean Fit

When the fit is real, you'll know.

Not because the mind built a convincing case. Not because the heart flooded you with desire. Because something deeper than both — something in the gut, something in the bones, something prior to the narrative — said yes.

And that yes didn't need to shave off any corners.

It just fit.

Reach for it.

square pegforcing itShen Lifesovereigntybody compassgut instinctpatiencecautious urgencysurvival kung fuself deceptionJeremiah 17:9inner workembodimentnervous systemself masteryspiritual growthmindfulness
blog author image

Stephen & Erica

Stephen and Erica help growth-minded individuals move forward from an inside-out approach that affects all areas of life. From Stephen's experience and research of transformation with clients and himself, he created Shen Life—a spiritual path to reach your potential. Together as teachers, healers, scholars, and outlaws, Stephen and Erica help move people forward in a radical way!

Back to Blog

Walk The Shen Life Path

To build your Shen Life practice, there is an ideal path. Each step builds on the one prior. Keep it simple. Train it in order.

STEP 1.

Take The Transformashen Training.

The entry point. Simple, straightforward approach to begin the Transformashen and build your foundation. Designed for beginners and seasoned seekers alike. No fluff. No theatrics. Just practice.

STEP 3.

Join The Revolushen.

Ongoing transmissions: teachings and commentary that keep you oriented in a world that rewards fragmentation. This is where you refine discernment, deepen doctrine, and stay in the current—without spiritual bypassing and without reductionist “nothing is real” nonsense.

STEP 2.

Dive Into The Shen Life Immershen.

The full work. A guided + self-directed immersion through the complete Shen Life model. This is where The Core Work and The Life Work becomes fully integrated—because you’re orienting the whole system toward a higher stage of functioning.

STEP 4.

Join The Shen Life Pack.

The gathering hall. Community, continuity, and an organized teaching library so you’re not doing this alone, and you’re not wandering without structure. Profound change needs context. The Den provides it.

More From The Shen Life Perspective

The Square Peg

The Square Peg

July 14, 20264 min read

Not every open door is your door.

That's one of the hardest lessons for driven people to learn — because drive doesn't come with discernment. Drive says go. Discernment says where.

Without both, you end up forcing yourself into situations that looked right on the surface but were wrong underneath. And by the time you realize the fit was off, you're stuck — entangled in a mess that's ten times harder to leave than it was to enter.

The Heart Is a Masterful Liar

The monkey mind is bad enough — jumping from option to option, spinning stories about why this is the one, painting pictures that look much better than reality.

But the heart is worse.

Scripture says it plainly:

"The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?" — Jeremiah 17:9 (KJV)

That's not a condemnation of emotion. It's a warning about mistaking desire for discernment.

The heart wants what it wants. And it's masterful at constructing justifications — dressing up lust as love, impatience as urgency, fear of missing out as divine timing.

The mind builds the case. The heart signs the warrant. And together, they can convince you that a square peg belongs in a round hole — if you just push hard enough.

The Squeeze

On the surface, many things can appear to be a good fit.

The job that checks every box on paper. The relationship that feels electric in the first month. The business opportunity that seems too perfect to question. The city, the circle, the deal, the partnership.

Your system wants it. Your emotions confirm it. Your mind builds the narrative to support it.

So you push. You squeeze yourself into it. You shave off the corners that don't fit. You tolerate the friction. You call the discomfort "growing pains."

And it works — for a while.

But a square peg in a round hole doesn't become round. It gets stuck. And the deeper you push, the harder extraction becomes.

Relationships built on forced fit become entanglements. Business decisions built on desire instead of discernment become traps. Lives built on "it seemed right at the time" become Groundhog Day.

Getting in was easy. Getting out is the part no one planned for.

Cautious Urgency

So what's the move?

Not paralysis. Not endless analysis. Not waiting for the universe to send a certified letter confirming your next step.

The move is cautious urgency.

Proceed — but proceed awake. Move with a great sense of purpose and a deep sense of presence. Lean in without lunging.

To paraphrase Krishnamurti: life is like a minefield that we are walking through blindfolded. We should tiptoe through it.

That's not fear. That's respect for the terrain.

Cautious urgency keeps the spider senses wide open while still moving toward the goal. It means you don't sacrifice speed for recklessness — and you don't sacrifice discernment for desire.

The organism wants to rush. Survival kung fu loves urgency — because urgency bypasses the slower, deeper knowing that might say not this one.

Shen moves differently. Shen moves with precision. Not slow — precise. There's a difference between someone moving carefully and someone frozen. One is sovereign. The other is stuck.

The Body Check

Before you commit to anything significant — a relationship, a business decision, a major life move — run it through the body.

Not the mind. The mind already has its story ready.

Not the heart. The heart already signed the warrant.

The body.

Does the gut settle or clench?

Does the chest open or tighten?

Does the organism feel expanded or compressed when you sit with the decision in silence — without the narrative, without the justification, without the sales pitch you've been giving yourself?

If you have to convince yourself it's right, it probably isn't.

Clean decisions don't need a closing argument. They land in the body with a quiet yes that doesn't require persuasion. It's just open and ready.

When in Doubt

And when you can't tell — when the signal is mixed, when the body isn't clear, when the mind and heart are running competing campaigns —

Sit.

As long as necessary.

Not as avoidance. As discipline. As the refusal to force a fit just because the waiting is uncomfortable.

The discomfort of patience is always cheaper than the cost of extraction.

A square peg forced into a round hole doesn't just damage the peg. It damages the hole. And sometimes both are destroyed before you find the courage to pull it out.

Better to sit. Better to feel. Better to let clarity arrive on its own schedule than to manufacture a false certainty and call it faith.

The Clean Fit

When the fit is real, you'll know.

Not because the mind built a convincing case. Not because the heart flooded you with desire. Because something deeper than both — something in the gut, something in the bones, something prior to the narrative — said yes.

And that yes didn't need to shave off any corners.

It just fit.

Reach for it.

square pegforcing itShen Lifesovereigntybody compassgut instinctpatiencecautious urgencysurvival kung fuself deceptionJeremiah 17:9inner workembodimentnervous systemself masteryspiritual growthmindfulness
blog author image

Stephen & Erica

Stephen and Erica help growth-minded individuals move forward from an inside-out approach that affects all areas of life. From Stephen's experience and research of transformation with clients and himself, he created Shen Life—a spiritual path to reach your potential. Together as teachers, healers, scholars, and outlaws, Stephen and Erica help move people forward in a radical way!

Back to Blog

Copyright 2026. Shenology, Inc. All rights reserved.