Dirk Beveridge

The FAM Newsletter

You’re Meant for More Than Autopilot

November 30, 2025

Good morning Reader—

And welcome to the 6th issue of The FAM.

It’s something how the Sunday after Thanksgiving has a way of quietly shifting the world around us. The last of the holiday dishes gets stacked away. Houses begin to feel just a little different as trees go up, lights get untangled, and in thousands of homes, the Elf on the Shelf will make his first magical appearance in the morning. The playlists change. The air changes. There’s a soft turning in the season—an almost unnoticed movement from one chapter into the next.

And whether we acknowledge it or not, most of us feel that same turning inside ourselves.

It’s subtle, but it’s real.

A kind of inner stirring.

A quiet pull.

A spark just under the surface.

We’ve heard it again and again from members of The FAM—people saying things like:

“I can feel something shifting in me”

“I’m ready for a reset” “

“I’m tired of going through the motions.”

This weekend brings that to the surface. Not with pressure. Not with urgency. But with a gentle whisper that says: Pay attention. Something is beginning.

And maybe you feel that shift too—you feel it… and then you scroll. You hear it… and then dinner needs to be made. You know something’s waking up… and yet the world keeps asking you to sleepwalk.

If you do feel that sense that the next version of you is clearing its throat, waiting patiently, ready to be invited in… this is your moment to reflect and make the decision to step towards living fully alive.

What has been quietly asking for your attention—beneath the noise and obligations?

This past week, my wife Gail and I traveled to Amsterdam, where we spent Thanksgiving week visiting our daughter, Allison, who’s living there for a year with her work. And as much as I missed the familiar rhythm of turkey, family noise, and a long American weekend, I embraced the feeling of a warm home with my wife and daughter, our laughter and stories filling the spaces. Being here offered its own quiet reminder of how seasons shift in more ways than one.

On Wednesday last week, as we wandered through a small neighborhood, we came across an old telephone booth that had been transformed into a tiny community library. Where people once stepped inside to make a call, they now step inside to leave a book behind and take a new one home.

As we stood there looking at the shelves—the paperbacks worn, the spines soft—a young boy with a head full of curls walked up and asked us what we were doing. His name was Boris.

There was something about his openness, his willingness to approach two strangers with nothing but curiosity, that pulled me in. This moment was nothing short of beautiful. He wasn’t in a hurry. He wasn’t self-conscious. He simply saw something that caught his attention and moved toward it.

And standing there, in front of a phone booth that had become something new, listening to a child who was simply following his interest, I felt the smallest nudge inside. A reminder that things shift quietly. That parts of our lives can be repurposed and crafted into something entirely new and unique. That curiosity is often the very first signal of change. And that the stirrings inside us rarely arrive with fanfare. They arrive softly, asking only that we pay attention.

And this—your attention—is something that some days may seem so small or fleeting or limited or scattered, but has the power to change absolutely everything.

There’s something I’ve come to believe with absolute conviction:
Our lives don’t change because we want them to. They change because we finally pay attention to the moment inside us that says, “This isn’t who I want to be anymore.”

And that moment rarely arrives with fireworks. It arrives the way it did for us, standing in front of that old phone booth in Amsterdam—quietly, unexpectedly, asking to be noticed. It’s up to you to listen and approach with curiosity.

One of the lessons I’ve learned over the last five years, especially through the conversations on the road with We Supply America and the weekly talks with Athens John, is this:

Every meaningful transformation begins as a whisper long before it becomes a decision.

The whisper is the real beginning

The Greeks understood this. Aristotle taught that we become what we repeatedly do—but before the repetition comes the spark. The recognition. The small, almost private moment of honesty that says:

“Something in me is waking up.”

Because if you trace any change—any moment where you or anyone rose up in their life—it never started with the habit or the routine.

It started with a feeling. A flicker. A soft tap on your shoulder. A moment you barely notice… until you can’t ignore it anymore. The quiet moment where you say, “This isn’t who I want to be anymore.”

And maybe you’ve felt that whisper that comes when the kids are finally asleep, or when you pull into the driveway and sit in the car a little longer, or on the drive home from the grocery store.

It doesn’t shout or threaten or loom over your head.

It just gently asks: Are you ready yet?

And the more work I do on myself and speak to FAM members, the more I realize this:
Most people don’t miss their moment because they lack the ability to change. They miss it because they ignore the whisper.

This weekend—this turning of the season—has a way of bringing the whisper to the surface.
Not loudly.
But clearly.

And if you’re feeling anything stirring inside you right now—even a faint sense of “I want my life back,” or “I’m ready for something different,” or “I can’t keep living on autopilot”—that is not to be ingnored.

That is the beginning.
That is the real work of becoming.
That is the doorway into living fully alive.

Here’s what I’ve learned about people who read this newsletter, who show up to our virtual Sunday afternoon meetups, who join The FAM:

You and I are not people who sleepwalk through our lives.
We feel the stirrings the moment they begin.

We may try to ignore them. We may get busy. We may distract ourselves. But that inner truth? It keeps tapping us on the shoulder.

And here’s the other truth: Most people sense the same stirring… but they turn away from it.

Not because they’re wrong—but because it’s uncomfortable to feel the beginning of a change you can’t yet name.

But you? If you’re reading this, you’re the kind of person who refuses to pretend you don’t hear it.


You notice when life pulls you forward. You notice when something inside you says,
“This isn’t quite it… I’m meant for more than this autopilot version of myself.”

You don’t bury that. You don’t numb it. You face it—even when you don’t know what it means yet.

That right there is identity.

Not the goals you make. Not the habits you track. Not the roles you’ve been handed.

Identity begins the moment you acknowledge what your inner voice is telling you.


So ask yourself, not as a task but as a truth-seeking moment:

What is quietly asking for my attention right now?

What part of me is tired of just getting by?

Where do I feel the first small pulse of life again?

If one of those questions hits something inside you—stay with it.
That’s not noise. That’s not distraction.
That’s you.

That’s the earliest sign of becoming.

That’s the whisper of the Fully Alive version of you trying to get a word in.

And when you recognize it—even for a moment—you get to say something honest and grounding:

“Yes… this is who I am.
This is what I’m waking up to.
This is like me.”


This. Is. Like. Me. Is there anything more empowering than that you can say? This is the kind of inner work that quietly shapes everything else, and I hope you know you have the capacity and capability to reach a fully alive life if you listen to that whisper.

What I hope you hear in all of this is simple: you’re not alone in whatever stirring you’re feeling right now. You and I—and so many others inside The FAM—are standing in the same early moment of awareness. A moment that doesn’t demand action, but invites honesty. A moment that doesn’t require answers, but asks us to stay awake.

Over the next five weeks, we’re going to explore this together. Not with pressure. Not with a list of things to fix. But with an honest conversation about what it means to reclaim our attention, our energy, our identity, and our sense of what’s possible.

Think of this as preparing the soil before the first seed goes in.
These weeks aren’t about transformation; they’re about readiness.
They’re about listening to that quiet pull and letting it guide us toward January 1—a day that, this year, can mean something entirely new.

I’m not talking about resolutions or self-imposed expectations. This year, let’s enter the new year with a quieter, deeper commitment:

To show up more fully alive.

Together.

So if you feel even the faintest stirring inside you—a small truth rising, a quiet desire to come back to yourself—stay with me.

Let’s give this stirring the attention it deserves.
Let’s walk these next weeks side by side.
And when January 1 arrives, let’s step into a new kind of beginning—one built not on pressure, but on the incredible possibility that exists perfectly for you.

There is more life here for you.
And I’m honored to walk with you toward it.

Before any real change begins, there is always a quiet moment—a small tug inside, a shift in how we see ourselves, a truth we’ve been carrying but haven’t yet named. This first week of our end-of-year rhythm is about noticing that moment. Not fixing anything. Not forcing clarity. Simply turning toward the part of you that’s been trying to get your attention.

To support you in that, I’ve included a simple 5-minute reflection called The Inner Noticing Practice. It’s designed to help you hear what your life has been whispering beneath the noise and pace of the year. Three gentle prompts, no pressure, no expectations—just space for you to listen. What rises here is the beginning of the work we’ll build on in the weeks ahead.

While I was in Amsterdam this week, I came across a short journal entry I wrote about this time last year. I had forgotten about it, but when I reread it, something inside me lit up. It felt like one of those reminders that deserves to live on a Post-it note on my bathroom mirror—especially as we move toward a new year. Here’s what I found:

RELENTLESSLY PURSUE YOURSELF

You need to know yourself

You need to relentlessly pursue the best version of yourself

The more I pause and reread these words—and let them take hold—the more I realize how quietly powerful this kind of inner noticing has been in my life. Not loud. Not dramatic. Not even something you can point to in the moment. It’s like strength training: you never know the exact moment you got stronger… but you look up one day and there it is. In the same way, this simple reminder has been shaping me all year without me even realizing it.

And that’s what this first week of our journey as we move towards the end of the year, is really about. Not resolutions. Not reinvention. Not doing more. But noticing the truths that have already been trying to rise inside us.

My hope is that the time and inner work you just gave yourself, gives you a moment of that same quiet clarity—a sense of returning to yourself. Next week, we’ll take the next step together: exploring the courage it takes to let go of what no longer belongs in the life we’re ready to live.

P.S. If something stirred in you while reading this—if even one line felt like it was meant for you—I’d love to hear what it was. Just hit reply and share what’s rising. And if you know someone who’s been feeling the same quiet nudge, forward this their way.

We’re on a mission to empower one million people to live Fully Alive, and you’re one of them!

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Dirk Beveridge is America’s leading voice on self-empowerment, helping individuals reclaim clarity, confidence, and joy — igniting personal growth that transforms cultures and fuels thriving organizations.

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