Emotional Cartography

Charting the Path: Learning to Trust The Navigator

SuperMell steers a calm pirate ship under a starry night sky while The Navigator points toward the stars to guide the way, and Diana the black cat plays with a fish on the deck.

After the Storm, Before the Course Is Set

Charting the path is never easy. There are always too many factors to consider—and then there’s the constant pain in the ass known as timing.

Things aren’t as chaotic as they’ve been, though some things are still a little tense. Sometimes the direction is obvious, but not always. Finding the right path is part of the journey.

I’m currently standing at a crossroads. Where do I begin? What direction do I go in from here? This is where listening to The Navigator comes in.


Introducing The Navigator

This is a continuation of my Emotional Cartography exploration. In an attempt to understand how my thoughts and emotions affect me, I have identified some key characters that influence a particular area.

The Navigator is the character I’ve imagined who sets the course, making sure to adjust for tides or inclement weather. She doesn’t just navigate by maps and charts. Sometimes she uses her gut instincts. In fact, sometimes I think of her as my own internal compass—or my intuition.

She isn’t loud or overbearing in any way. A gentle nudge here, a whisper there. There’s nothing urgent about her message. The Navigator is a quiet presence who suggests direction, rather than demands it.


When the Signal Gets Lost

Because she’s not so brash, I sometimes have difficulty hearing her. There have been times when she’s tried to get my attention more urgently to stop doing something that wasn’t the direction I should be sailing in. But I didn’t heed her word, so now she’s more reserved.

It can be difficult to hear her whispers. I’m sometimes prone to listening to Dr. Anxiety or The Depression Beast and wind up acting rashly, impulsively, and reactive. She can wind up being drowned out by these sometimes more obnoxious and louder emotions.


How I Hear Her Now

Sometimes I have to drown out the noisier thoughts and emotions. To do this, I have to be silent. Meditation can help, though that’s when these characters tend to show up, waving their hands and shouting to get my attention. This isn’t The Navigator’s style.

To me, listening to The Navigator means quieting the inner critic, outside influences, and background noise. Once things settle, her voice becomes clearer—not loud, but certain.

This is where seeing her as my intuition comes in. She’s the little voice—or conscience—that tells you exactly what is the right course of action to take in the moment. You can feel her in your gut, or solar plexus. If you act against her, you’ll feel pain in your stomach, or sometimes butterflies. But when you listen to her and follow her guidance, you get a tingling sensation. You feel like you’re glowing from the inside out.

If anything, The Navigator is your authentic self. She’s the part of you that already knows the right direction—even when you don’t want to hear it.


Navigation in Practice

Listening to The Navigator is a lot like following your gut instincts. Deep down you know what the right path to take is. For example:

  • Choosing what to-do to work on right now:
    Tonight I tidied the living room, tested a video game system, made spaghetti, and then chose to write this blog.
  • Deciding when to rest:
    Writing this post might feel like work, but for me it’s restful—especially when I’m exploring these emotions.
  • Picking the next step in my blog:
    Even when I ask ChatGPT for ideas, The Navigator still decides what feels right—and how I approach it.

When I Ignored the Warning Signs

But wait! Didn’t you say she urgently tried to stop me from doing something! Yes, that’s so very true. Quite a long time ago when I turned 30, I decided I needed to get married. That is a time period I now refer to as my “temporary insane” era. She was screaming at me before I got married to not do it. I could feel her getting more and more tense the closer I got to the wedding, and indeed for the brief time I was married. She knew this guy wasn’t right for me and this wasn’t the right decision for me to make.

I felt intense pain in my gut, but chose to ignore it for a while. It wasn’t until I finally stopped myself and listened to her, then I realized it wasn’t worth it and ended the marriage.

Dr. Anxiety had made me feel like I had to prove myself to others that I would be a success, and married by 30 seemed like that was a goal I had to achieve. The problem is I didn’t have a good self-esteem at the time and chose someone who wasn’t right for me. A little while later, I heard Barbara Walters say in an interview with Oprah that “If you’re going to get married, and you have a heavy heart going into it, don’t do it.”

That “heavy heart” feeling is what I experienced when The Navigator was trying to tell me this wasn’t right.


Diana, Unbothered and On Course

I’m sure cats have that inner instinct or Navigator, but it looks like she obeys that voice. When she’s hungry, she eats, or meows loudly if her bowl is almost empty. If she’s tired, she sleeps. Sometimes she gets a sudden impulse to run around the apartment at full speed from one end of the building to the other. She has no problem hearing that inner voice.


Final Thought: Trust the Quiet Signal

It’s important to start charting the path as early as you can. The good news is it’s never too late to change course and sail away in a different direction. Listening to The Navigator is sometimes difficult to do, but it’s always the right decision to make.

When has The Navigator spoken to you? Did you listen? Tell me about it in the comments. I love a good story.

FunDay Friday

My Personal Signal System: Geeky Metaphors for Decision Making

A colourful digital illustration of SuperMell, a female superhero in a purple and black costume with a stylized "M" on her chest and matching glasses, standing at a high-tech sci-fi control panel. She is observing multiple glowing symbols and signal lights. Diana, a black cat with a white chest tuft and golden eyes, sits confidently beside her on the console.

What Would a Starfleet Captain Do?

Decision-making doesn’t always come naturally to me. I’m someone who likes options—all the options—and who tends to weigh each one like it’s the fate of the universe. (Which, to be fair, it sometimes feels like.) So I’ve developed a personal tool to help. It’s not a spreadsheet or a decision matrix. It’s geeky metaphors.

Over the years, I’ve learned to treat my inner voice like a sci-fi scanner or a superhero signal. When I tune into that system, I can tell whether something is a green light, a red alert, or a confusing anomaly that needs more analysis.


Super Signals and Sci-Fi Scanners

Let me explain with some of the metaphors I actually use in my day-to-day life:

  • The Bat-Signal Test: If I get an idea and it feels like the Bat-Signal just lit up the sky, I know I need to pay attention. It doesn’t mean I have to act right away, but it does mean something in me is calling out for a response. It’s a sign that this idea is personal, meaningful, or urgent to some deeper part of me.
  • The Spidey-Sense Check: On the flip side, if my stomach tightens or I get a weird sense of danger that I can’t explain, I treat it like Spider-Man’s spidey-sense. Maybe it’s fear, maybe it’s intuition—but either way, I slow down and investigate before I leap into anything.
  • The Starfleet Scan: When I’m feeling overwhelmed, I try to scan the situation like I’m running a tricorder over it. I ask questions: What’s really going on here? What’s under the surface? What does this feeling mean?

Interpreting the Signals

What’s important is that these metaphors give me something concrete to work with when my emotions are fuzzy. I’ve learned not to judge myself for needing extra tools to process decisions. I actually think it’s kind of a superpower. I just had to build the right toolkit—and mine happens to come from fandom.

Sometimes my Bat-Signal is wrong. Sometimes my tricorder malfunctions. But just like any hero-in-training, I’ve learned to adapt. What matters is that I keep listening, even when the signals are faint.


Diana’s Corner: The Real Signal Cat

My cat Diana is the opposite of indecisive. When she wants food, she makes it known. When she’s happy, she purrs like a warp core. She doesn’t overthink, she just knows.
Watching her has helped me realize that some decisions don’t need analysis—they just need presence. If the sunbeam feels good, stretch into it. If it doesn’t, walk away. She’s a Jedi in a cat’s body.


Final Thought: Tune In to Your Own Signal

Whether you’re a fellow geek or not, the idea here is simple: you can invent your own signal system. Borrow from books, movies, video games, or anything else that helps you better understand yourself.

Life throws a lot at us—but with the right internal compass (or superhero metaphor), you can find your direction.

Have you ever relied on ‘gut feelings’ or geeky metaphors to steer your choices? Share your favourite mental tool!