How to Trust Your Inner Knowing When Life Is Asking You to Change | Marta Knobloch
What happens when the truth becomes impossible to avoid? In this episode of FIND YOUR FLOW, Lisa Roche sits down with cultural explorer, poet, author, and wellness advocate Marta Knobloch for a conversation about inner knowing, personal transformation, courage, and the moment you realize you can no longer keep living the way you have been. Leaving rarely begins with one single event. Often, it begins quietly — with a feeling, a truth, or a knowing that asks you to pay attention. Together, Lisa and Marta explore: • How to recognize when your life is asking you to change • The courage it takes to leave behind what is familiar • Why inner knowing can become impossible to ignore • Personal transformation through self-discovery • Listening to your intuition during major life transitions • What it means to live with more purpose, truth, and flow • Finding the strength to take the next step This episode is for anyone standing at the edge of change, questioning what comes next, or feeling the quiet truth that something in their life is no longer aligned. Sometimes the first step is not having the whole plan. It is finally being honest with yourself. Subscribe to FIND YOUR FLOW with Lisa Roche for conversations about personal transformation, intuition, emotional healing, nervous system regulation, holistic wellness, and creating a life that feels more aligned, supported, and true. About Marta Knobloch Marta Knobloch is a poet and author whose work spans poetry, ecological fables for young people, plays, essays and critical reviews. She has written four award winning collections of poems, and has edited and contributed to literary journals and anthologies in the United States and abroad. Her work reflects a lifelong fascination with different countries and cultures which began as a child growing up in a military family assigned to numerous duty stations. She studied with Sister Maura Eichner, the acclaimed Catholic poet, at The College of Notre Dame, now Notre Dame of Maryland University. With her husband, William Knobloch she raised two sons, Charles and Mark in Baltimore, Maryland where her life was devoted to family, writing, and community involvement. She lived in Bloomsbury while researching the life and work of the English poet, Lawrence Hope at the British Library’s iconic Reading Room. Invited to be a visiting poet at Fondazione Il Fiore in Florence, Italy, she later lived in Rome and Ferrara. After her husband’s death she travelled to the American Southwest. What began as a search for family history became a spiritual journey inspired by the vast, luminous solitude of the minimalist landscape. Follow https://martaknobloch.com/

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