Learn to
Let It End — and Let the New Begin
L · Look at the Truth · I · Invite a New Perspective · E · Execute with GraceYour guide by
Coach Gayl BensonSister, if you're holding this guide, something inside you already knows — it's time. Time to release what no longer belongs in your story. Time to stop clinging to a chapter that was never meant to be your whole book.
L.I.E. is not about giving up. It is about the courageous, quiet act of choosing your future over your fear. It is about trusting that the God who authored your beginning also holds everything that comes next.
You don't have to have it all figured out. You just have to be willing to take the first step: Look at the truth. That's where this journey begins.
I'm honored to walk this path with you.
Three letters. One transformative permission: to let what needs to end — actually end.
We hold on for so many reasons. Fear. Obligation. Identity. The sunk cost of time and tears. But holding on past the season is not loyalty — it's avoidance. And avoidance keeps us from the life that is waiting on the other side of release.
The L.I.E. framework is a three-step journey of honest reflection, wise counsel, and graceful action. It is designed not to rush you, but to guide you — gently but purposefully — toward freedom.
Every season of release is an act of faith. You are not losing — you are making room for what is meant for you.
Step One
Before we can release anything, we must be honest about what we are actually holding. Not the version of the story we have told ourselves to survive. The truth — as it is, not as we wish it were.
Looking at the truth requires stillness. It asks us to sit with what is uncomfortable, to name what we have been avoiding, and to stop giving our energy to things that are no longer aligned with who we are becoming.
This is not an act of judgment — it is an act of clarity. You cannot navigate toward freedom when you are pretending you are not in a prison.
Step Two
We are not meant to navigate our most vulnerable moments alone. Once we have looked at the truth honestly, the next step is to seek wisdom that goes beyond our own limited view.
This means finding a truth friend — someone who will speak life into you without telling you only what you want to hear. It means creating space for prayer, quiet, or reflection where clarity can actually reach you. It means asking the hard questions and genuinely waiting for the answers.
Inviting a new perspective is an act of humility and courage. It says: "I am willing to see this differently — even if what I see changes everything."
Step Three
Letting it end does not mean slamming a door in anger. It means closing it — with intention, with dignity, and with the peace that comes from making a decision aligned with your truth.
Executing with grace does not require the other person to agree or understand. It simply means you choose how you leave. You honor what the season gave you. You release what it no longer can. And you step forward with your head high and your hands open.
Grace protects you. It protects your testimony. And it keeps the door of your heart clean for what is coming next.
"You are not abandoning your future by letting your past end. You are finally making room for it."— Coach Gayl Benson
The process of letting go can bring grief, anxiety, and overwhelm. These breathing techniques are designed to regulate your nervous system so you can move through the weight — not around it.
When emotions become too large to hold, your body is not betraying you — it is asking for your attention. Regulated breath signals safety to your nervous system. It slows the spiral. It creates a pause between feeling and reacting. Use these techniques whenever the journey feels heavier than your strength.
When your mind is racing and your chest feels tight, this technique activates your parasympathetic nervous system — your body's natural calm response.
Used by leaders in high-pressure moments to restore calm and focus. Bring this practice to any moment when you need to ground yourself before a hard decision.
Endings bring grief — and grief deserves space. This breath does not rush you through sadness. It honors it and makes room for it to move.
After the release, your spirit needs to be filled. Use this breath to intentionally invite newness — to practice the posture of openness and expectancy.
A gentle reminder: If you find yourself consistently overwhelmed to the point where daily function is impacted, please seek support from a licensed therapist or counselor. Breathing practices are powerful tools — and they work best alongside community, coaching, and care. You do not have to carry this alone.
Words have power. Speak these over yourself — in the mirror, on the hard days, and especially when you don't believe them yet.
Coach Gayl is here to walk alongside you — through the releasing, the rebuilding, and the becoming. Reach out today and take the next step.
Visit www.iamcoachgaylbenson.com to book your consultation
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