I'm really glad you're here.
And I want to start by saying something before we go anywhere else.
I see you.
Not the version of you that shows up for everyone else.
Not the version that keeps moving when others have stopped.
Not the version with the grit and the follow-through.
And the quiet determination that has carried you through things that would have stopped most people.
I see all of that.
And I also see what it costs.
You are someone who keeps going.
It's not just what you do.
It is who you are.
Or at least,
It is who you have always believed yourself to be.
The one that pushes through.
The one who figures it out.
The one who doesn't stop until the thing is done.
And the world has confirmed that identity again.
And again.
Because the world loves a hard worker.
It celebrates effort.
It rewards output.
It holds up the person who never quits,
As the standard everyone else should aspire to.
And so you kept going.
Because keeping going worked.
It got you through.
It built things.
It proves things.
It kept you safe in a world that seemed to reward those who moved and question those who stopped.
And now something is asking you to consider the possibility that less might actually be more.
And every part of you that has been built around keeping going is looking at that possibility and saying,
I don't know how to do that.
That's not who I am.
If I stop,
What happens?
If I do less,
Does that mean I've given up?
Does that mean I'm weak?
Does that mean everything I built through effort and grit was wrong?
It doesn't mean any of that.
It means you are ready to learn something new.
Not instead of who you are.
In addition to it.
If it feels comfortable,
Gently close your eyes or soften your gaze.
And let yourself arrive here.
Feel the surface beneath you.
Notice how your body is being held right now.
You don't have to hold yourself up in this moment.
Take a slow breath in through your nose.
And a long gentle breath out.
Again.
Breathing in.
.
.
And breathing out.
Let your shoulders soften just a little.
Unclench your jaw.
Allow your belly to be soft.
Let your body settle.
Not because you are giving up.
Because you are about to discover what happens when you give your body the condition it actually needs to do its best work.
Take another slow breath in.
And a long breath out.
Now bring gentle awareness into your body.
Scan slowly from the top of your head.
Down through your face.
Your shoulders.
Your chest.
Your belly.
Your hips.
Your legs.
Your feet.
Just noticing.
And as you scan.
Notice the places that carry the accumulated weight of always keeping going.
Maybe your shoulders.
The ones that have been braced for so long that you barely notice it anymore.
Maybe your job.
Held tight through so many moments of pushing through when you had rather have stopped.
It may be your chest.
Carrying the quiet exhaustion of someone who has never quite given themselves permission to put it down.
Maybe your whole body.
Tired in a way that sleep doesn't fix.
Because the tiredness is not just physical.
It is the tiredness of a nervous system that has been in motion for so long it has forgotten what stillness feels like.
Just notice.
Without judgment.
This is not weakness.
This is information.
Your body is telling you something it has been trying to say for a long time.
Let's be honest about something.
The drive to keep going doesn't just come from strength.
For many people,
It comes from something older.
Something that was learned before they had words to question it.
Maybe keeping going was how you stayed safe.
In a home or an environment.
Or stopping meant falling behind.
Where stillness meant vulnerability.
Where emotion was the only thing that felt like control.
Maybe keeping going was how you earn love.
Through achievement.
Through effort.
Through proving that you were worth the space that you took up.
Maybe keeping going was how you outran something you didn't want to feel.
Because as long as you're removing.
As long as there was always something next.
The things that lived in the quiet,
Never quite caught up.
And maybe all those things are true at the same time.
Because the drive to keep going is rarely just one thing.
It is layered.
Complex.
Intelligent in its own way.
And it has served you.
Until now.
Until the body started asking for something different.
Sit quietly inside.
My drive has served me.
And my body is asking for something new.
Both of those things can be true.
Take a breath.
Let that land.
Now let's try something that might feel unfamiliar.
Just for this moment.
Not forever.
Just now.
Let the drive be there.
Let the pull to do something be there.
And don't follow it.
Just for this breath.
Just for this moment.
And notice what happens.
Maybe restlessness.
May be guilt.
It may be the feeling that something is wrong.
Because you're not moving.
Just notice.
And breathed.
Now notice something else.
Underneath the restlessness.
Underneath the guilt.
Underneath the pole to keep going.
Is there something else?
Maybe relief.
Even a small amount.
The relief of a body that has been waiting for permission to stop.
The relief of a nervous system that has been running on high for so long.
It had almost forgotten another gear existed.
Even if it's just a whisper of relief.
Just the smallest exhale of something that has been held for a very long time.
Notice it.
Because that whisper is your body telling you the truth.
This is what I needed.
This is what I've been asking for.
Less is not giving up.
Less is finally giving me what I need to heal.
Take a slow breath in.
And a long breath out.
And let that relief be a little bigger than it was a moment ago.
Here is something the world never told you.
Stopping is not the opposite of strength.
It is a different expression of it.
The strength that keeps going through exhaustion is one kind of strength.
The strength that recognizes when the body needs to stop and actually stops.
That is another kind.
And it is harder.
For people like you.
For people whose identity is built around grit and motion and keeping going.
Choosing to do less requires more courage than pushing through ever did.
Because pushing through is familiar.
Doing less is unknown.
And unknown is always harder than familiar.
But here's what the body knows,
That the grit and motion narrative never acknowledges.
The body does not heal in pushing.
It heals in recovering from the pushing.
In the space between efforts.
In the rest that follows exertion.
And the less that follows more.
A muscle that is never allowed to recover does not get stronger.
It breaks down.
A nervous system that is never allowed to rest does not become more resilient.
It becomes more dysregulated.
A body that is always in motion does not build more capacity.
It depletes.
And the most courageous thing someone with your level of grit can do right now.
Is stop.
Not permanently.
Just enough.
Just long enough for the body to do what it has been trying to do all along.
Stay quietly inside.
Stopping is not weakness.
It is a different kind of strength.
The kind that is harder for me.
The kind that takes more courage.
The kind my body needs right now.
Take a slow breath in.
And a long breath out.
The part of you that keeps going,
Trusted effort,
Because effort worked.
So let's give the part of you that is learning to do less the same opportunity.
To trust because it works.
Start small.
One moment of genuine rest.
Where you notice that nothing collapsed.
One afternoon of doing less,
Where you notice that the world kept turning.
One day of less where you notice that your body felt even slightly different.
Not dramatically.
Just slightly.
Just enough to give the keep going part of you a new piece of evidence.
I did less.
And I was okay.
I stop.
And something actually got better.
Maybe less really is more.
That is how trust is built for someone like you.
Not through being told.
Through experiencing.
Through the accumulation of small moments where less proved itself.
Where rest showed results.
We're stopping creating more capacity than pushing ever could.
Stay quietly inside.
I'm willing to experiment with less.
I am willing to let it prove itself.
I have trusted effort my whole life.
And now I am learning to trust rest.
Take a slow breath in.
And a long breath out.
Now slowly begin to bring your awareness back to the space around you.
Notice the sounds nearby.
The surface supporting you.
Feel your body here.
Present.
Still.
Not pushing.
Not moving.
Just here.
And notice.
You are still you.
The grit is still there.
The drive is still there.
The capacity to keep going is still there.
Nothing was taken.
Just Rested.
Gently move your fingers and your toes.
Take one more slow breath in.
And a long breath out.
And when you feel ready.
Gently open your eyes.
You have spent your life proving what you could do through effort and grit and keeping going.
And that has been real.
And that has mattered.
And now your body is asking you to prove something different.
That you can also stop.
That you can also receive.
That you can also trust the process of doing less.
Even when every part of you that has been built around more is resisting.
Less is not giving up.
Less is not weakness.
Less is not the end of the person you have always been.
It is the beginning of the person your body has been trying to become.
Someone who has grit and who also knows when to rest.
Someone who can keep going and also knows when to stop.
Someone who has always done more and is finally learning that sometimes,
Less is the most powerful thing you can do.
Your body has been waiting for this.
Let it have it.
You have earned the rest.
Not through doing more.
Through finally deciding that you are worth it.