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Annmarie is a wealth of knowledge and experience that she uses to help clients work through the large and small challenges of living with an auto immune disease. She has a heart for helping others to live their best life!

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Annmarie is an engaging speaker. She is both thoughtful and considerate. She has helpful insights and good listening skills. Annmarie is open about her personal journey, including her own experiences with trauma, and her diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis.

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Spring Is Coming, and I’m Not Rushing It

March 04, 20264 min read

Spring Is Coming, and I’m Not Rushing It

Something always shifts in March.

The light lingers a little longer in the evening.
The air feels different, even if it’s still cold.
There’s a subtle sense that winter is loosening its grip.

And yet, here in the Northeast, we were buried in a blizzard the last full weekend of February 2026.

Snow piled high.
Wind howling.
A reminder that winter doesn’t leave just because the calendar says it should.

That storm felt like a metaphor.

Because even when spring starts whispering, winter can still have something to say.

There was a time when March meant one thing to me: do more.

Longer days meant more productivity.
More energy.
More proof that I was back.

Spring used to feel like a starting gun.
And I would run.

But living with autoimmune disease has changed that relationship.

Now, when the light changes, I notice something different.

Part of me feels hopeful.
Ready for renewal.
Ready for fresh air and forward motion.

And another part of me still feels like I’m recovering.

Still thawing.
Still rebuilding.
Still honoring what winter required.

For years, I would have ignored that second voice.

I would have pushed anyway.

But this year, I’m choosing to move slower on purpose.

Just because the season is changing does not mean my body has to keep up with it.

Spring does not demand acceleration.
The world might.
My nervous system does not.

And March, being Autoimmune Awareness Month, makes this even more important.

Awareness is not just about information.
It’s about understanding the lived reality of this body.
It’s about recognizing that healing and rebuilding trust take time.

There is pressure that comes with longer days. Higher expectations. The unspoken belief that we should feel lighter simply because the sun is out more often.

But healing, recovery, and rebuilding trust with your body do not follow the weather.

After months—sometimes years—of inflammation, unpredictability, and fatigue, your system learns to brace. To conserve. To protect.

You don’t undo that because March arrived.

You undo it slowly.

With consistency.
With safety.
With gentleness.

This is what I mean when I say I’m not rushing it.

I’m not using early sparks of energy as permission to overload my calendar.

I’m not mistaking hope for capacity.

I’m not equating sunshine with strength.

I’m allowing myself to thaw.

Blooming doesn’t start above ground.

It starts where no one sees.

It starts in the quiet rebuilding of trust.
In the choice to rest before exhaustion.
In the decision to move with your body instead of ahead of it.

The blizzard reminded me of something important.

Seasons overlap.

Winter can linger even when spring begins.

And that doesn’t mean anything is wrong.

It just means transition takes time.

This March, I’m preparing for my rhythm.

Not forcing it.
Not chasing it.
Preparing it.

And as part of that preparation, I’m opening the doors to my membership on March 13.

Not as a push.
But as an invitation.

An invitation into a space where we move at the pace our bodies can sustain.
Where rhythm is honored.
Where awareness turns into steadiness.

Because this is what Autoimmune Awareness Month really means to me.

Not just recognizing the disease.
Recognizing ourselves inside of it.

One steady choice at a time.

One step.
One flare.
One breath at a time.


A Gentle Invitation

If this resonates, you don’t have to rush into anything.

You might simply notice where you feel ready to move and where you still need space. Both can exist at the same time.

If community feels supportive, you’re welcome inside my free Facebook page, Autoimmune Women: Life After Diagnosis. It’s a place for honest conversations and steady encouragement from women who understand the overlapping seasons of living with autoimmune disease.

👉 You’re welcome to join - Click Here

And if you would rather start with a conversation, I offer Hello Calls through Calendly. It’s simply a place to reflect, ask questions, and feel supported without pressure.

👉 If that feels right, you can book a Hello Call Here


And because this month is about preparing for your rhythm, I’m opening the doors to my membership on March 13.

This space was created for women who are tired of living in reaction mode.

It’s where we stop letting the disease take center stage and start building sustainable rhythm instead.

Inside, we focus on:

– Rebuilding trust with your body
– Creating steadiness instead of bursts of productivity
– Moving from survival into sustainability

Not perfectly. Not aggressively.
But consistently.

March being Autoimmune Awareness Month matters to me because awareness alone is not enough.

We deserve support.
We deserve structure that respects our capacity.
We deserve a place where rhythm is built slowly and lasts.

If you’ve been reading and quietly thinking, “I need this kind of steadiness,” this is your moment to step into it.

The doors open March 13th.

See you there!


Autoimmune Awareness MonthAutoimmune Support
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Coach Annmarie Entner

Annmarie Entner is an Autoimmune Support Coach and founder of Life Coaching for Change, specializing in the emotional and mental wellness of women living with chronic conditions. After her rheumatoid arthritis diagnosis, Annmarie identified a critical gap in autoimmune care the lack of support for the psychological impact of chronic illness. Since achieving remission in 2019, she's dedicated her work to helping women navigate diagnosis with confidence and clarity. Through coaching, Positive Intelligence training, and community support, Annmarie empowers women to thrive beyond their diagnosis and reclaim purpose-filled lives.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Here Are a Few Common Questions

Question 1: Do I need a diagnosis to start working with you?

No. May of my clients begin coaching while they're still searching for answers or waiting on results. This space is for anyone navigating uncertainty and wanting more emotional balance.

Question 2: Is coaching the same as therapy?

Coaching focuses on forward movement, helping you build habits, routines and mindset tools to live well with your condition. Therapy often looks to the past; coaching helps you create what's next.

Question 3: What's the best way to get started?

Schedule a free consultation call or send me a message through the form. I'll help you find the right next step for your journey.

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