
A January Reflection
February feels like the right moment to pause and look back. January has a way of doing that. It’s not dramatic, but it’s revealing. The noise of the holidays is gone, the year is officially underway, and whatever direction you chose for yourself is suddenly very real.
For me, January 2026 was quieter than I expected. Louder internally, though, than I anticipated.
After years of working as a filmmaker and instructor, I made a deliberate shift into video editing and branding coaching. Not tutoring. Not editing for hire. Coaching. That distinction matters. It changes how you work, who you work with, and how responsibility is shared.
January was my first full month operating inside that new identity.
I worked with a professional client early in the year. Someone motivated, intelligent, and navigating a demanding career while trying to build something new for themselves. Like many people exploring video and creative tools, they weren’t chasing trends. They were looking for agency, clarity, and a way to stop outsourcing decisions they wanted to understand on their own.
The work wasn’t linear. Life rarely is.
Progress happened, but not at the pace either of us might have idealized. Work schedules, fatigue, and the weight of daily life all played a role. Still, important foundations were laid. Understanding how a Premiere Pro project is structured, how to organize assets, how to evaluate footage using markers, and how to begin thinking strategically before ever touching the timeline. Those are not small things. They are the scaffolding everything else hangs on.
At the same time, January taught me something: Transitions require space.
When things feel slow, the instinct is to panic. To slip back into familiar patterns. To say yes to work that no longer fits simply because it feels predictable. To confuse motion with progress.
I felt that pull completely.
But here is the truth I keep returning to: nothing new can take hold in your life if you don’t make room for it.
A new normal needs time to feel awkward. It needs patience while the shape of it becomes clear. If you abandon it the moment it feels uncertain, you never discover what it could have become.
That applies whether you are changing careers, raising your rates, learning a new skill, or redefining how you want to work.
January was not explosive for me. I had a one-session coaching client in December, a multi-session client in January, and long stretches of quiet in between. But it was not empty either. It was formative. It clarified what kind of work energizes me, what kind drains me, and what kind of clients I want to serve going forward.
As a video editing and branding coach, I am here for people who are in transition. People are willing to tolerate not knowing yet. People who understand that ignorance is not a failure. It is the starting line. Quite often, we do have to take a few steps back in order to take several steps forward.
So if you are reading this at the beginning of a new year, especially if you are just starting your journey, consider this reminder:
Momentum does not always announce itself loudly. Sometimes, the most important thing you can do is resist the urge to fill every quiet moment and instead make room for what is trying to enter your life.
There are still stellar opportunities ahead.
If you give them space to land.
If you want a calm, practical conversation about your work, your systems, or your creative direction, schedule a no-pressure discovery call here:
https://calendly.com/ajemedia/appointment