Two years into the solopreneur journey, the biggest turning point arrived, and it wasn’t another business strategy or qualification.
It was family constellation work.
At the time, I had been planning to pursue a PhD, but something still felt missing. Then, in November 2022, birthday month again, I attended my first family constellation workshop.
Walking in, I had no idea what was about to happen. Walking out, everything felt different.
It was one of those rare moments in life where things suddenly click into place. Like the boy in The Alchemist, I realised I had been searching everywhere for something that had quietly lived inside me all along.
Returning to ancestral practices and rituals within the Tulu-speaking community felt like returning to a reverence my body already understood before my mind did. As a child, I had watched these ceremonies quietly, witnessing guardians of the land being invoked to restore balance, justice, and wellbeing without fully grasping their meaning. Coming back to that wisdom as an adult felt both grounding and deeply familiar.
Family constellation work connected me to parts of myself that formal education never reached. It gave language to what I had always sensed intuitively about family systems, inherited trauma, belonging, and the invisible loyalties carried across generations.
For me, it also brought a deeper understanding of how caste and systemic oppression had shaped my family lineage in quiet but deeply embodied ways. Not just intellectually, but emotionally, relationally, and physically.
The work helped me recognise patterns that had previously felt invisible or difficult to explain. Through systemic thinking, it made hidden dynamics visible and brought clarity to complex relationships, both personally and professionally. What I initially saw as an extension of my work gradually became a more holistic ecosystem for understanding people, leadership, and belonging, one grounded in sustainable impact, deeper awareness, and meaningful change.
4 comments
Jayshri
Hi Soumya
Thank you for sharing your story, experience, thoughts and breaking it all down carefully into small pieces , it reminded me of Gibbs reflection cycle . It takes a lot of courage to lay it all out there in the open, some may feel vulnerable but I can see how liberating this process can be.
The sentence I resonated the most was the confusion aspect ,” it does not mean it’s not working , but may be a sign of real growth” this has inspired me to keep going despite all the uncertainties of choices we make leaving us with all the confusion to deal with .
Wishing you all the best as you continue to make a difference and touch so many lives by your valuable contributions
Jayshri
soumya
It fascinates me to learn how we connect with other peoples stories and life experiences and what it can remind us – your mention of the Gibbs reflection cycle took me back to a workshop 🙂 Thank you for reading this piece and seeing me for who I am, I’m learning to walk into discomfort and have the courage to share my story .
Raksha
Hey Soumya,
I hope you have found the strength to deal with the loss of your father. Thank you for sharing this with us. I can relate to a lot of aspects you have written here. While I would like to quote a lot of what you have written, I’ll pick this one first “It’s safer not to have too much.”
Wishing you the best always ❤️.
Soumya
Dear Raksha,
Thank you for taking the time to read, expressing your appreciation and sharing how this piece of my journey touched you. I have definitely found a connection with my father in many ways which contributes to my growth after his passing but the missing never ends.