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When Your Life Falls Apart, This Is What Happens Next
What happens when the path you thought you were on suddenly disappears?
In this episode of Say It Anyway, James Ferrigno sits down with Elizabeth Cruz for a raw, expansive conversation about identity, spiritual awakening, and rebuilding yourself after life takes a hard turn.
Elizabeth shares her upbringing as the “good child” in a small Puerto Rican-American family—academically driven, responsible, groomed for a stable future. But in college, a quiet thought emerged: “I want to know myself. I want different experiences.” That single spark shifted everything. Her path changed through major life detours involving abuse, drugs, identity collapse, and years of trying to “find her way back.”
Now at 57, Elizabeth reflects on what her soul may have been doing all along—how adversity shaped compassion, resilience, self-awareness, and deeper understanding of others. But she also names the struggle many “spiritually oriented” people face: having gifts that don’t always translate cleanly into a capitalist society.
From there, the conversation turns to mental health with nuance and compassion—Elizabeth discusses lifelong anxiety, her suspicion of ADHD (especially how it can go undiagnosed in women), and the relief that comes from naming what’s happening inside. She also shares how the Enneagram—especially identifying as a Type 4—helped reduce shame and increase self-understanding.
One of the most moving moments comes when Elizabeth describes a visceral decision point: running on a treadmill, fed up with being human, and hearing a message from Spirit—Choose to be here. That choice became a practice: one foot in front of the other.
They also explore:
If you’ve ever felt lost, broken, behind, or like you missed your chance—this episode is a reminder: you’re not done. You can re-choose your life, re-meet yourself, and build the next version—one step at a time.
By James FerrignoWhen Your Life Falls Apart, This Is What Happens Next
What happens when the path you thought you were on suddenly disappears?
In this episode of Say It Anyway, James Ferrigno sits down with Elizabeth Cruz for a raw, expansive conversation about identity, spiritual awakening, and rebuilding yourself after life takes a hard turn.
Elizabeth shares her upbringing as the “good child” in a small Puerto Rican-American family—academically driven, responsible, groomed for a stable future. But in college, a quiet thought emerged: “I want to know myself. I want different experiences.” That single spark shifted everything. Her path changed through major life detours involving abuse, drugs, identity collapse, and years of trying to “find her way back.”
Now at 57, Elizabeth reflects on what her soul may have been doing all along—how adversity shaped compassion, resilience, self-awareness, and deeper understanding of others. But she also names the struggle many “spiritually oriented” people face: having gifts that don’t always translate cleanly into a capitalist society.
From there, the conversation turns to mental health with nuance and compassion—Elizabeth discusses lifelong anxiety, her suspicion of ADHD (especially how it can go undiagnosed in women), and the relief that comes from naming what’s happening inside. She also shares how the Enneagram—especially identifying as a Type 4—helped reduce shame and increase self-understanding.
One of the most moving moments comes when Elizabeth describes a visceral decision point: running on a treadmill, fed up with being human, and hearing a message from Spirit—Choose to be here. That choice became a practice: one foot in front of the other.
They also explore:
If you’ve ever felt lost, broken, behind, or like you missed your chance—this episode is a reminder: you’re not done. You can re-choose your life, re-meet yourself, and build the next version—one step at a time.