The Path of Trust: A Journey to Living Fully

“As soon as you trust yourself, you will know how to live.” — Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

I came across this quote yesterday while reviewing my course material on trust and doubt as part of my professional coach training. Trust has been a major theme in my life over the past two years, especially the process of learning to trust both life and myself. Reflecting on it now, I realize how much trust—or the lack of it—has shaped my journey.

Learning to trust myself and life has been deeply transformative. Trust opens up possibilities, unleashes inner strength, and brings comfort in the unknown—things I never thought were possible. Growing up, and for much of my adult life, I was a deeply fearful and anxious person. I dreaded the unknown, clung to the illusion of security, and avoided risks. I played small, hoping to navigate life without encountering the frequent catastrophes I imagined. But those catastrophes came anyway, each one leaving me feeling even more disconnected from trust.

When I finally began the journey of (re)building trust, I realized it wasn’t something I could simply will into existence. It required time, effort, and practice. I explored the concept of basic trust, experimented with strategies to cultivate it, and began taking small (and even bigger), intentional risks. Gradually, I started to feel calmer, less anxious, and more open to life. To my surprise, during a period of immense uncertainty—when my life felt like one big unknown—I was the calmest I had ever been. I even began to see the unknown not as a threat, but as a space full of potential.

Of course, I’m still navigating this journey and still experience moments of doubt and fear. But these days, I know how to find my way back to trust—sometimes more easily than others. I feel more alive, joyful, and at peace than ever before. Goethe was right: trusting ourselves and life enables us to live authentically, wholeheartedly, and with greater ease—even in the face of uncertainty.

As a central figure of the Romantic movement, Goethe emphasized intuition, emotion, and the deep connection between the self and the world. He believed that self-trust allows us to navigate life’s uncertainties with grace. Instead of clinging to control or trying to predict every outcome, trust invites us to embrace life as an unfolding process, full of potential.

Goethe saw self-trust as a pathway to personal growth. Trusting ourselves doesn’t mean having all the answers—it’s about believing in our ability to learn, adapt, and thrive through life’s experiences. In moments of doubt or transition, trust becomes a compass, guiding us toward authenticity and alignment with our true selves.

Practical Ways to Build Trust in Yourself and Life

Understanding trust philosophically is one thing, but putting it into practice is another. And trust isn’t something we can simply decide to have—it’s something we develop through small but meaningful actions. Now, let me ask you: How would it feel for you to trust—in yourself, in life, or even in the universe? Are you willing to establish that trust? What is holding you back?

Here are a few strategies I’ve found helpful:

Keep promises to yourself: Build confidence by following through on small commitments, like drinking a glass of water each morning or taking a daily walk. These small wins create the foundation for bigger leaps.

Take risks: Trust grows when we step outside our comfort zones. This might mean speaking up, trying a new hobby, or allowing yourself to be seen. These aren’t life-threatening risks—they’re opportunities to stretch and grow. For example, I began posting online, taking the risk of being both visible and vulnerable.

Reflect on life’s finiteness: Ask yourself, “Can I afford not to live fully?” Life is too short to let fear and doubt hold you back from joy, authenticity, and growth.

Trust is a journey, not a destination. But the more we lean into trust—both in life and in ourselves—the more alive, aligned, and fulfilled we can feel.

Have we created a monster?

Life as we humans have created it over thousands of years and live in most parts of this world has something antibiotic, i.e. against life, about it. What is meant by this? If we think about how much time we spend doing gainful work to earn our living (one could also think about this designation), it seems that nowadays we do not work to live, but rather live to work, and the trend is increasing.

There is such a great imbalance in this world as well as in our individual lives that, intuitively, cannot be natural. On the one hand, there are many people who have working hours that only allow them to get barely enough rest, not to mention time for other things they want to do. They are able to support themselves financially, but not even able to do much more. And on the other hand, there are people who are struggling to have just enough to survive, who want to work but can’t get a job. They can’t do much either because they have to worry about finances, food, and survival. (Of course, there are also cases between the extremes). So, it seems that some are working for two or three while others don’t even get to work? Those who have the goods to stay alive don’t have the time to live and the others have the time but not the goods? Isn’t there a middle way?

Many years ago, people started to settle down, build houses, farm, and build more and more of a (world) economy. And it goes on steadily. It seems that everything we ever have is never enough. We have smartphones, cars, houses, etc., but we need bigger, smaller, faster, and so on. To get there, we (as humans) need to perform and work, but at what cost? We will never get where we want to go, there is always something that could be better, smaller, bigger, and so on – there is always more profit to be made. It has long ceased to be about providing us with what we need to live, to live well. It has long ceased to be about the living, rather it’s about the inanimate such as money and the power of those who have it.

This is neither healthy for the world nor for us. We are getting sicker and sicker – physically, mentally, and socially. That’s a high price to pay, and that’s not all – think about it: For all we know, we have to assume that as human beings we have only this one, finite life, and to spend it predominantly in a rush of achievement, attainment, earning and providing seems like a waste of that life – especially when there is not even enough time (and/or energy) left beside it for joy, play, love, creativity, self-development, seeing, hearing, feeling and being – for living.

Life should not mean work and work should not mean hardship, pressure, and burden. Working – understood as being productive and creative – is a part of life (any life – even the smallest microorganisms actively take care of their survival and we humans have always hunted and gathered for food and built for shelter), but it needs to be balanced in itself and with all other aspects of life.

So, I’m not arguing that development, innovation, and activity are bad things per se, but they should not be mainly about profit and power, but about us as humans, as individuals and as a community. Above all, we should develop positively as a human race. And life and all its parts should be in favor of living.

The questions that arise and that we need to think about are therefore: Is, paradoxically, the price of the way of life which we have created and which is supposed to sustain our lives, life itself? Is there a way out of this paradox? The point is: not only did we get ourselves into this mess, but the way of life as we have created it now seems to be a self-runner, and to stop it – to defeat the monster we have created – we need a huge shift in our thinking, in the way we deal with life and the way we make things (and ourselves) work – towards a balanced way of living.