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I am capable of feeling everything without becoming everything I feel.

The Email That Started It
It was barely eight o’clock when the email arrived—one of those messages that doesn’t say anything overtly cruel but carries a tone, a clipped formality, that landed in my chest like a stone dropped into still water. I read it twice. The second time was worse, because by then my mind had already begun constructing the story: I’d done something wrong, I was being judged, the relationship was damaged beyond repair. My jaw tightened. My fingers hovered over the keyboard ready to fire back something defensive, something clever, something that would prove I wasn’t the person that email seemed to suggest I was.
But I didn’t type. I closed the laptop. Not out of wisdom, honestly—more out of a dull recognition that I’ve been here before, and the replies I send from this particular place in my nervous system never land the way I imagine they will. I stood up, walked to the kitchen, and filled the kettle. The sound of water hitting the metal basin. The small click of the stove igniting. These are not profound things. But they were real, and they were happening now, and the email was already in the past.
Sitting with the Heat
I sat on the cushion after tea, not because I wanted to but because I’d made a quiet promise to myself at the beginning of the month. The anger was still there—actually, underneath the anger was something softer and more embarrassing: hurt. Just plain hurt. The kind that makes you feel about seven years old. I let myself notice that. The impulse to regulate, to manage, to smooth it all into something presentable, was strong. I caught myself trying to breathe the feeling away, using the exhale like an eraser. That’s not quite what this practice is, I think. It’s more like—letting the feeling be a feeling. Letting it take up the space it actually takes up, not the catastrophic space my thoughts want to assign it, and not the zero space my pride prefers.
There’s a difference between being swallowed by an emotion and simply being with it. I forget this difference constantly, and then I remember it again, usually while sitting still and noticing that the heat in my chest has not, in fact, killed me. It just sits there, being warm, being uncomfortable, being temporary. At some point during the sit, I noticed my shoulders had dropped about an inch. I hadn’t told them to. The body sometimes knows the way back before the mind does.
What Regulation Actually Looked Like Today
Later in the afternoon I did reply to the email. It was three sentences. It was honest without being reactive, clear without being cold. I don’t say that to congratulate myself—I say it because I remember what the alternative used to look like: the long, impassioned paragraph; the subtle dig disguised as professionalism; the cc’d colleague for leverage. None of that happened today. What happened instead was a gap. A small, unremarkable gap between the feeling and the action. That gap is the whole practice, I think. Not the absence of anger, not the suppression of hurt, not some elevated state where emails can’t touch you. Just a gap wide enough to choose.
I went for a walk after sending it. The magnolia tree on the corner has started dropping petals—brown-edged, curling, still faintly sweet when you pick one up and hold it close. I thought about how emotional regulation sounds so clinical, like something from a textbook or a therapist’s whiteboard. But lived, it’s more like this: you feel the thing, you don’t pretend you don’t feel the thing, and you give yourself enough room to decide what to do next. Some days the room is spacious. Today it was more like a closet. But it was enough.
What Stayed After the Sit
By evening the charge from the email had mostly dissolved—not because I’d resolved anything, but because feelings do that when you let them move through instead of pinning them down or pushing them out. There was a residue of tenderness, the kind that comes after you’ve been honest with yourself about something vulnerable. I ate dinner slowly. I noticed I wasn’t replaying the day in my head the way I sometimes do, running the highlight reel of grievances. The hurt had been real. The anger had been real. And neither one had made me do something I’d need to undo tomorrow.
If any of this resonates—the tightened jaw, the email you want to fire off, the feeling of being seven years old in an adult body—maybe just try the kettle. Try the pause. Not to fix anything, but to find out what you actually want to do next, once the heat has said what it came to say.