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Energy – From Rationing to Surging

Energy – From Rationing to Surging

Break Free from the Scarcity Illusion and Fully Enliven Your Greater Vision

You don’t have to look far to see that we’re in an energy crisis—not on the grid, but inside our lives.

People tell me things like:

“I have to save my energy for work, and then I’ve got nothing left for fun.”
“My energy tank is half-empty by noon.”
“I’m just not an energetic person. I wasn’t built for more.”

On top of that, we collectively spend staggering amounts of money trying to buy energy.

In the U.S. alone, people spend roughly $300–$ 350 million every day on coffee and energy drinks. Around $250–275 million per day goes to coffee (all forms), and another $55–70 million per day to energy drinks.

Clearly, most of us feel like we have to get energy from the outside. It has become a consumable—something we need to keep up with the pace of the world to stay competitive and not fall behind. Every latte, shot, and can quietly reinforces the story:

“My energy is limited. I need help. I’m running out.”

This is the “tiny battery” model of energy.

We’ve been taught—explicitly and implicitly—to live as if each of us has a small personal battery that drains as the day goes on. The job is to protect, manage, and ration it. If we’re not careful, the battery dies, and so do our chances of a meaningful, joyful life.

This article offers you a different perspective.

Not a new hack or supplement, but a new understanding of where your felt sense of energy really comes from.

We’ll explore how the experience of “not enough energy” is about our state of mind and our ideas about our energy. And we’ll introduce a simple framework—the Realization Catalyst Formula (Envision, Listen, Play)—to help you discover a steadier, more reliable inner source of energy.

This isn’t about denying physical realities like sleep or hormones. It’s about seeing through the illusion that you are nothing more than a small battery trying to keep up.

The Battery Model and How It Shrinks Your Life

Most people don’t walk around saying, “I believe in the tiny battery model of energy,” but they live as if it’s true.

You can hear it in everyday language:

  • “I only have so much energy. I have to be smart about how I spend it.”
  • “Once I spent all my energy on work, I have nothing left for fun.”
  • “I’m exhausted all the time. I have to save my energy for “important” tasks.”
  • “I can’t stop thinking about all the stuff I have to do. It even keeps me up at night, and then I have to fight sleepiness all day.”

When energy is seen as a small, fixed resource, life quickly becomes about rationing:

  • Constantly asking, “Will this drain me?” before making decisions.
  • Saying no to things that genuinely matter (connection, creativity, joy) because they feel “too expensive” energetically.
  • Over‑prioritizing what you must do and under‑prioritizing what makes you actually feel alive.

On paper, the logic seems responsible: manage your energy carefully, and you’ll avoid burnout.

In lived experience, though, the battery mindset often shrinks our lives:

  • We end up always “too tired” for what matters most. Work gets our best; our relationships, passions, and inner life get leftovers—if anything at all.
  • We routinely postpone what we really want: “When things calm down… When I have more energy… After this busy season…” That “later” doesn’t arrive in the way we imagine.
  • We organize our days around avoiding depletion rather than moving toward what’s true, meaningful, or wise. Life starts to feel small, cautious, and slightly grey, even if it’s “successful” on the outside.

Over time, this reinforces harsh internal conclusions:

“Everyone else seems to have endless energy. What’s wrong with me?”
“Maybe I’m just not built for more.”
“I’m a low‑energy person. That’s just who I am.”

Here’s the compassionate truth: you’re not failing. You’re living in a story about energy that you were never taught to question.

The battery model makes sense if energy is purely physical and purely personal. But what if that’s not the whole picture? What if much of what we call “low energy” is actually the felt effect of a busy, worried, self-judging mind, rather than the true limit of your capacity?

To explore that, we need a very different understanding—a closer look at how our experience is created in the first place.

The Three Principles View: Energy as an Infinite Flow

Let’s introduce the Three Principles as a way to understand human experience, including the experience of energy:

  • Mind – the deeper intelligence or universal life force behind all things. You could call it Source, Spirit, Life, or simply the “aliveness” that beats our heart and grows trees without our input.
  • Consciousness – the capacity to be aware. It’s what allows us to have an experience of anything at all—our body, our thoughts, our feelings.
  • Thought – the ongoing, moment‑to‑moment flow of ideas, images, interpretations, and stories that appear in our personal mind.

From this perspective, our moment‑to‑moment experience is always created from Mind, Consciousness, and Thought—from the inside out. We don’t interact with life directly nor objectively. We experience our thinking about life, made real and rich by Consciousness, powered by the deeper energy of Mind.

So how does this relate to energy?

Most of us believe:

“My energy is like a personal battery that I draw down as I go through the day.”

But in this deeper understanding, what we call “energy” is often a felt expression of our current state of mind—how open or constricted we are to the ever‑present flow of Mind.

  • When our thinking is heavy, fearful, self‑critical, and fast, the flow feels blocked. Our body often registers that as fatigue, tension, or overwhelm.
  • When our thinking naturally quiets and slows down—when we’re present, engaged, or in flow—something else shines through. We feel lighter, clearer, and more energized, even if we’re doing physically demanding things.

The surprising twist is this:

The availability of the deeper energy of life doesn’t actually go up and down. What changes is how much of it we feel, depending on the quality of our moment‑to‑moment thinking and how we relate to that thinking. We experience this relationship on a spectrum, ranging from being aware of thoughts passing through our minds to being so enmeshed with them that we are utterly identified with them. From “there is a sad thought on my mind” to “I am so sad”.

We could say:

  • Battery model: Energy is a small, personal resource I must manage and protect.
  • Infinite source model: There is a constant, impersonal flow of life (Mind). My experience of energy depends on how my current thinking allows that flow to be felt—or not.

This doesn’t mean we ignore sleep, food, or biology. It means we stop assuming that every dip in energy is proof that our battery is dying, and we become curious about how much of our “tiredness” is actually being shaped and amplified by thought.

To see that more clearly, it helps to distinguish between different kinds of energy.

How Thought Creates ‘Tiredness’ Before the Body Does

When people say, “I’m exhausted,” they’re often blending several layers of experience together. Let’s separate them out—not to analyze endlessly, but to gain clarity.

Physical energy

This includes:

  • Sleep and rest
  • Nutrition and hydration
  • Medical conditions (thyroid, anemia, chronic illness, etc.)
  • Circadian rhythms
  • Hormone cycles (including the female cycle, perimenopause, and menopause)

Physical energy matters. If you’re severely sleep‑deprived, malnourished, or dealing with health issues, those are real, compassionate starting points. This article doesn’t replace medical care or common sense.

But even here, you only ever experience physical signals through Thought and Consciousness.

Mental energy

This is your cognitive load:

  • Constant multitasking and task‑switching
  • Endless decision‑making
  • Consuming huge amounts of information
  • “Trying to hold everything in your head.”

You can feel mentally drained just from holding a long to‑do list in your mind before you’ve done anything on it. That’s not your body failing; that’s the weight of thought.

Emotional energy

Emotions also impact how energized we feel:

  • Unresolved anger
  • Chronic fear and anxiety
  • Shame and self‑criticism
  • Being around people or environments that bring up old wounds (the “energy vampire” experience)

Notice how a single difficult conversation can leave you “wiped out” for the day, even if you didn’t do anything physically demanding. Again, what changed most was your internal weather of thought and emotion, not your raw physical capacity.

Spiritual energy

You could call this:

  • A sense of being connected to something larger than yourself
  • Moments of peace, presence, or awe
  • A felt sense of being “held” by life, even when things are hard

When we touch this deeper dimension—even briefly—we often feel unexpectedly energized or clear, without changing our sleep, diet, or schedule.

Now, add heavy thought on top of all of this:

  • “I can’t handle this.”
  • “I’m so behind; I’ll never catch up.”
  • “Something’s wrong with me.”
  • “If I slow down, I’ll be left behind.”

That thinking doesn’t just describe our state; it creates our felt reality.

We don’t feel “tax season”, “The conversation”, or “performance review month” directly. We feel our thinking about those events: the predictions, worries, self‑criticism, and catastrophizing.

Overthinking can be far more draining than the event itself.

This is not a suggestion to police your thoughts or “think positive.” It’s an invitation to see that your tiredness has layers, and that some of those layers are made of Thought, not fixed truth.

Once you see that, it becomes easier to question the next big misunderstanding: the idea that you are a “low‑energy person.”

The ‘Low-Energy Identity’ and Its Hidden Cost

“I’m just not an energetic person.”
“I’ve always had little energy.”
“I’m not built for big things like other people are.”

“Life is just too much.”

These thoughts don’t come out of nowhere. They arise from repeated experiences + meaning we’ve made + confirmation bias:

  1. You notice yourself feeling tired or overwhelmed in certain situations.
  2. You look for an explanation. “It must be me. I’m just not cut for this.”
  3. You start anticipating tiredness and scanning for it.
  4. Every time you feel low, it confirms the story: “See? I knew it.”

Over time, “I feel tired” quietly becomes “I am not capable.” A temporary state turns into a fixed identity.

The hidden cost of this identity is that it:

  • Narrows what you even consider possible for yourself.
  • Makes you extra vigilant and fearful around anything that might “drain” you.
  • Keeps you from noticing the many moments when the story simply isn’t true.

Because here’s something almost everyone can recognize:

There have been exceptions to your low‑energy story.

  • Times when you’re with certain people, and you suddenly feel lighter, more animated.
  • Moments when you’re doing something you love—writing, painting, playing, helping—and you “forget” to be tired.
  • Situations (even crises) where you find unexpected strength and clarity you didn’t know you had.

In those moments, what changed?

Your biology didn’t radically upgrade for an hour. What shifted was your state of mind—your relationship to Thought. The story of “I’m not capable” simply wasn’t on the forefront of your mind, so more of the deeper energy of life could shine through.

This is the impersonal nature of Thought:

  • Thoughts arise and pass.
  • They feel real while they’re here.
  • But they are not you. They are not the final word on what’s possible.

Seeing your “low‑energy identity” as a habitual thought pattern, rather than a truth about your essence, doesn’t make you instantly hyperactive. It does something subtler and more powerful: it creates space.

Space to be curious. Space to notice, “Oh. This is that ‘I’m just not built for more’ channel again.” Space to experiment with different choices, from a slightly lighter state of mind.

That’s where we begin to distinguish between fear‑based rationing and wise, energizing use of our capacity.

Wise Use of Energy vs Fear-Based Rationing

On the surface, “Will this drain me?” sounds like a smart, protective question. And sometimes, it is.

But if you look closely, you may notice that this question often comes not from wisdom, but from fear and identity:

  • “If I say yes, I’ll prove again that I can’t handle things.”
  • “If I try this, I’ll crash and burn and confirm I’m broken.”
  • “I don’t trust myself to have the energy, so I’ll avoid anything uncertain.”

When fear is driving, our internal decision filter becomes:

Fear-based filter: “Will this tire me out? Can I handle this?” 

This filter tends to:

  • Label many nourishing, meaningful things as “too expensive” (creative projects, deep conversations, learning something new).
  • Have you say yes to “musts” that feel misaligned, then resent them.
  • Turn even rest into something anxious and empty—scrolling, numbing, or obsessing about not doing enough.

Another decision filter is available. It speaks more quietly:

Wisdom-based filter: “Is this true for me? Does this feel alive or right, right now?” 

This filter often leads to choices that look similar on the outside (you might still decline an invitation or choose rest), but they feel radically different on the inside:

  • Saying no from wisdom brings relief and clarity, not guilt and FOMO.
  • Saying yes from alignment can actually feel energizing, even when it involves effort.
  • Rest chosen from wisdom feels nourishing, not like a guilty escape.

Seen through the Three Principles, this difference makes sense:

  • Fear-based rationing is fueled by anxious, anticipatory thoughts that you’re living inside as if they were true.
  • Wise use is what naturally emerges when your mind quiets even a little, and you feel into what’s genuinely right in this moment. That wisdom is part of the deeper intelligence of Mind, always available beneath the noise.

There’s also an important loop to recognize:

  1. You believe “stress drains all my energy.”
  2. You innocently fuel stressful thinking—rumination, worst‑case scenarios, self‑criticism.
  3. You feel drained and take that as proof that stress is deadly, and you’re low‑capacity.

The loop reinforces itself.

We’re not trying to convince you that stress is “good.” We’re pointing to something subtler: the more you understand that you are feeling your thinking about stress, not just stress itself, the more room you have for a different experience—sometimes even in the middle of the same circumstances.

So, where can we begin to live from this different understanding, practically?

That’s where the Realization Catalyst Formula comes in.

Enter the Realization Catalyst Formula (Envision, Listen, Play)

The Realization Catalyst Formula is a simple way to explore limitless energy from the inside out. It’s not a strict method; it’s more like three invitations:

Envision – Challenge the “finite battery” story, open up to the possibility of limitlessness

Envisioning is about loosening the grip of your current narrative and setting new standards. You don’t have to force yourself to believe something new. You simply make room for the possibility that your experience of energy could be very different.

Questions to gently hold:

  • “What if my ‘low energy’ is not an inescapable physical condition but a passing or habitual state of mind?”
  • “What if some of what I call ‘tired’ is actually thought-created limitation?”
  • “What if energy isn’t something I have to get from the outside, but something that flows from within when I’m less caught up in my head?”

Envisioning starts to crack open rigid myths:

  • “At my age, it’s normal to feel…” —> Are there not people this age who feel…?
  • “There’s so much to juggle, of course, I’m tired.” —> What if I had more than enough energy to do all of it and more? What would that be like?
  • “I’ve always been this way; it can’t change.” —> Have I not surprised myself in the past doing way more than I assumed I could?

You don’t need to argue with these thoughts. Simply noticing, “Oh, that’s a story, not a law of physics, nor is it always true,” your energy begins to shift, and you begin to see new possibilities.

Listen – Drop into deeper wisdom and a quieter mind

Listening is about cultivating a relationship with the quieter, more grounded part of you—what we might call wisdom, intuition, or Mind’s guidance.

This isn’t about perfect meditation practice. It’s about moments of:

  • Pausing before you automatically say yes or no.
  • Feeling into your body, grounding in the moment, rather than racing ahead mentally.
  • Noticing what arises in the space when you’re not frantically analyzing.

When you listen in this way, you can often sense:

  • The difference between fear voices (“You’ll regret it. You’ll fail. You’re too tired. You’ll deplete yourself. You can’t do it”) and wisdom nudges (“Not this, not now,” or “Actually, let’s do it. Take just the next step.”).
  • When rest is truly needed vs. when it’s a habitual escape.
  • When a small aligned action might actually give you energy.

Listening lets the infinite source show up in practical ways—through fresh ideas, simple next steps, and surprising clarity.

Play – Experiment lightly in daily life

Play is where insight turns into experience.

Instead of trying to overhaul your life, you experiment with small, low‑stakes shifts:

  • When you notice “I’m too tired for anything,” you might play with asking, “If that weren’t true for the next 10 minutes, what tiny thing would I want to do?” Then go for it, just as an experiment.
  • When you catch “I just don’t have this kind of energy” running, you might play with doing one small aligned thing anyway—like sending a message, taking a 5‑minute walk, doodling an idea—and see how you feel afterward.
  • When you feel guilty about resting, you might give yourself permission to rest for just the next 5 or 10 minutes, noticing what happens when you drop the self‑critical commentary.

Play is key because it takes the pressure off. You’re not trying to prove anything. You’re simply discovering, through lived experience:

“What actually happens when I relate differently to my thinking about energy?”

Over time, these small experiments accumulate into a very different felt reality:

  • More moments of natural enthusiasm or “second winds.”
  • Less fear of being “drained” by life.
  • A deeper trust that your energy is not fragile nor finite, but an expression of something far deeper and more generous.

Experiences of Limitless Energy

The cultural story says:

“Your energy is stored in a tiny battery. Guard it. Boost it. Top it up however you can. Try to keep up.”

No wonder we spend hundreds of millions of dollars per day on coffee and energy drinks. Energy has been sold to us as something we must purchase, protect, and fear losing.

The understanding we’ve explored here offers a different possibility:

  • Your experience of energy is created from the inside out, via Mind, Consciousness, and Thought.
  • Much of what feels like permanent “low energy” is actually thought‑amplified tiredness and identity, not the true limit of your potential.
  • There is a deeper, reliable inner source—the same life force that animates everything—that you touch whenever your thinking quiets, even for a moment.

You don’t have to force a radical overnight transformation. You can start simply by:

  • Paying attention to your inner dialogue around energy.
  • Noticing how certain thoughts (“I can’t handle this,” “I’m not built for this,” “rest is lazy”) instantly sap your energy.
  • Gently wondering, “What if this is just a thought passing through, not an absolute truth?”

Over the coming month, we’ll explore this more deeply in four shorter community articles:

  • Week 1: Sorting real fatigue from thought-created exhaustion—understanding physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual energy.
  • Week 2: Dismantling the low‑energy identity and the stress loop that keeps proving you right.
  • Week 3: Rest, guilt, and myths about age and circumstances—seeing them as stories, not sentences.
  • Week 4: Practical insights and daily playful experiments in Envision, Listen, Play—living into limitless energy in ordinary life.

You’re invited to come along, not as a fixer-upper, but as someone who may have underestimated their own capacity.

Your lack of energy is not a failing. It’s a doorway—into a new understanding of who you are, how experience works, and how much more of life might be available when you’re no longer believing in the tiny, fragile battery story.

Join us for the Mindset Monday community series, and experiment to uncover the limitless energy already moving through you.

realize who you are and what you can do

It is time to realize who you are and what you can do

recognize my own strengths

Realize who you are. Realize what you can do.

Most people are under the impression that they are stuck in a chaotic and uninspiring life. At Realize, with life coaching, we guide our clients through a proven framework to confidently build a life where they thrive.

Florence Doisneau

Certified Life Coach

954.826.9172

florence@realizeunlimited.com

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