
This morning an advertisement caught my attention.
A woman shared her story of feeling stuck in her own body. She talked about weight gain, discouragement, perimenopause, and the exhausting realization that no matter what she did, things didn’t seem to change. Her story sounded familiar. Too familiar.
For a moment I wondered if I needed the app she was recommending.
Then I had a surprising realization.
I don’t think I need more insight.
I think I need rest.
For years I have been collecting understanding.
I’ve read books.
Listened to podcasts.
Filled journals.
Processed emotions.
Studied family systems.
Learned about trauma responses, nervous systems, attachment, communication, faith, healing, and personal growth.
I know a lot.
But knowledge and rest are not the same thing.
And somewhere along the way, I think I confused them.
I thought if I could just understand enough, I would finally feel safe.
If I could identify every wound, name every need, uncover every hidden belief, and discover every missing piece, perhaps I would finally arrive at peace.
But this morning I discovered something different.
The issue wasn’t that I lacked understanding.
The issue was that I had spent most of my life carrying.
The Weight I Didn’t Know I Was Carrying

As I followed the thread deeper, I found an old belief hiding underneath it all:
If I stop carrying, everything will fall apart.
At first I thought I was carrying responsibility.
Finances.
Family.
Emotions.
Faith.
Relationships.
But underneath those things was something even deeper.
Connection.
Somewhere along the way, I learned that carrying was how I stayed connected.
If I helped enough…
If I noticed enough…
If I held enough…
If I managed enough…
Then I would belong.
Then people would stay.
Then everything would be okay.
The problem is that carrying became my identity.
I became the atmosphere manager.
The encourager.
The one who held things together.
The one who understood.
The one who made sense of things.
The one who stayed strong.
And after years of doing that, my nervous system became exhausted.
Why Abundance Felt Uncomfortable

One of the strangest discoveries was realizing that I don’t always enjoy abundance.
Overgrown gardens make me anxious.
Too many commitments overwhelm me.
Large groups drain me.
Summer, which I once loved, has become more difficult than winter.
At first this bothered me.
I thought perhaps I wasn’t really an abundance person.
But then I realized something.
I don’t dislike abundance.
I dislike carrying.
An overgrown garden doesn’t whisper:
“Look at the bounty.”
It whispers:
“Look at everything needing you.”
Too much isn’t abundance when you believe you are responsible for maintaining it.
Too much becomes burden.
No wonder my nervous system preferred winter.
Winter asks less of me.
Winter doesn’t need me to manage it.
The Question That Changed Everything

At one point I was asked:
“What happens if you stop carrying?”
My immediate answer was:
“Everything falls apart.”
But then another thought surfaced.
One I wasn’t expecting.
I’ve been carrying my whole life, and it hasn’t actually done anything for me.
That sounds harsh, but hear me out.
Carrying helped me survive.
Carrying helped me adapt.
Carrying helped me stay connected.
But carrying never created the safety I was hoping it would create.
It never produced the certainty I was searching for.
It never guaranteed the outcomes I was trying to protect.
And suddenly another possibility appeared.
If carrying isn’t creating safety…
Then maybe I can let some of it go.
Maybe I can rest.
My Dreams and Taking Up Space

This realization connected to something much larger.
For years I have dreamed of a beautiful estate.
Not because I want luxury.
Not because I want status.
Because I long for space.
Beauty.
Flow.
Room to breathe.
As I reflected on why that dream moves me so deeply, I realized something.
The tears weren’t about the house.
The tears were about permission.
Permission to take up space.
Permission to stop shrinking.
Permission to stop apologizing for the size of my inner world.
Permission to stop earning my right to exist.
The deepest realization of all was this:
I do not have to earn my right to take up space.
I read that sentence and felt immediate agreement.
Not because I was convincing myself.
Because something inside me already knew it was true.
Maybe You Don’t Need Another Insight

If you’re the woman attracted to the latest self-help app, personality test, healing program, or nervous system course, perhaps take a moment and ask yourself:
What am I actually looking for?
Maybe you need insight.
Maybe there are things you genuinely need to learn.
But maybe you already know enough.
Maybe what you’re really looking for is permission.
Permission to rest.
Permission to stop carrying everyone else’s emotions.
Permission to enjoy beauty.
Permission to receive.
Permission to laugh.
Permission to want things.
Permission to take up space.
Permission to be loved without earning it.
This morning I didn’t solve my finances.
I didn’t answer every question.
I didn’t figure out the future.
But I did lay down a weight.
I poured a cup of tea.
Turned on ocean sounds.
Started my day with my boys.
And for the first time in a while, I felt something beautiful.
Not certainty.
Not control.
Just relief.
And maybe that’s where healing begins.
Not by carrying more.
But by discovering that you were never meant to carry it all in the first place.

In everything you do -eat, play, and love- may it always be seasoned with Joy!
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