Audit the Ecosystem π±
Munna Abdelhady
2/24/20262 min read


#MunnaMonday
I remember praying for all the things I have now. Iβm learning to be more specific in my prayers π. If I pray for travel, let it be with people I love β not endless business trips βοΈ. If I pray for love, let it be consistent and clear π. If I pray for money, let it come with stress I can manage π°. Being intentional with my life brings joy, not confusion or insecure emotions ποΈ.
I am past the point of exhaustion, and I am sitting with reflection and growth π±. My success was not built on talent or consistency alone, but on faith and discipline. As quarter one reaches its end, Iβm learning to audit my ecosystem more carefully β even when it costs me something.
I stepped into the house of God during a recent break from work and society. This is not a metaphor when I say I fell to my knees and felt the hand of God over my stomach through the hands of a woman of God π€. It was real. In prayer, God spoke to me and told me to release people who taint my ecosystem β people who do not care about my writing or my emotions, people who use me more as a resource than as a human.
I am choosing to live with more integrity in my environment π».
As I sit with this clarity, Iβm realizing that growth isnβt only about what I do β itβs about what surrounds me π. The environments we place ourselves in, the people we allow access to us, and the systems we move within quietly shape the outcome of our lives. Effort alone is not enough if the ecosystem it lives in is unstable. When alignment, structure, or honesty are missing, confusion replaces peace, momentum slows, and emotional exhaustion follows.
Sometimes this means creating distance between myself and people I love π β not because they are left behind, but because we are growing in different directions π±. Not everyone is willing to work, communicate, or evolve in a way that allows them to remain in my ecosystem. That truth hurts. Iβve let my tears fall where they may π§οΈ, trusting that even they will water the seeds of my new growth πΈ.
Success will not grow in an inconsistent ecosystem.
Understanding this has shifted the way I view the people around me. Auditing my life doesnβt mean cutting people off out of anger or resentment β it means paying attention π. It means noticing who supports versus who consumes, who celebrates my growth versus who merely tolerates it, and who brings peace into my life versus anxiety.
Not everyone who knows me has access to me anymore πͺ.
Putting God at the frontline of my business has shifted everything π§. He is not an afterthought or a backup plan β He is the foundation. God is the CEO, the CFO, and the compass π.
For all that I have obtained and succeeded with, it has been through the power of my relationship with God π.
I trust God with what stays and what goes π€.
Iβm not losing people β Iβm protecting what God is growing π±.
β All my love, Munna