-
I give myself full permission to soften, to slow down, and to rest without earning it.

What We Carry When We Cannot Soften
We have forgotten how to be still without calling it waste. Somewhere along the way — perhaps in childhood, perhaps in the early architecture of our working lives — we absorbed a story that relaxation must be earned. That rest is a reward dispensed after sufficient labor, not a birthright woven into the fabric of being alive. And so we carry tension like a credential. We clench our jaws in meetings and scroll through our phones in bed and call the exhaustion that follows a sign of commitment. We mistake the inability to relax for discipline.
The weight of this is quiet but cumulative. We notice it in the shoulders that hover near our ears long after the stressful moment has passed. We notice it in the strange guilt that surfaces when an afternoon opens up with nothing required of us. We notice it in the way we reach for stimulation — noise, tasks, plans — to fill the spaces where stillness might otherwise arrive. We are, many of us, profoundly uncomfortable with the experience of letting go. Not because we don’t want it. Because we were never taught that it was ours to take.
What the Research and the Practice Reveal
Neuroscience has given us a remarkably clear picture of what happens in a body that cannot relax. The sympathetic nervous system — our ancient fight-or-flight architecture — remains chronically activated, flooding the bloodstream with cortisol and adrenaline long past the point of usefulness. Dr. Herbert Benson at Harvard documented what he called the “relaxation response” decades ago: a measurable physiological shift — slower heart rate, lower blood pressure, reduced oxygen consumption — that occurs when the body is deliberately guided out of vigilance and into ease. It is not a vague feeling. It is a specific, reproducible state. And it does not happen by accident.
This is what contemplative traditions have understood for millennia: relaxation is not the absence of activity. It is a practice. In the yoga traditions, the term is shavasana — the corpse pose — considered by many teachers to be the most difficult posture of all, precisely because it asks the practitioner to do nothing. To allow the body its own weight. To let the breath move without managing it. Research from the University of Konstanz has shown that even brief periods of intentional relaxation — as short as ten minutes — can shift activity from the prefrontal cortex’s anxious planning mode toward the default mode network, the neural substrate of open, reflective awareness. The mind, given permission, knows how to rest. It is waiting for us to stop interrupting it.
What Shifts When We Turn Toward Softening
When we begin to practice relaxation with the same seriousness we give to productivity, something rearranges. It is subtle at first. We notice a breath that drops below the collarbones and into the belly. We notice a moment — perhaps while sitting with a cup of tea, perhaps in the pause between one task and the next — where the body exhales fully, and for a second, nothing needs to be different. These are not small events. They are the nervous system remembering its other mode: the parasympathetic state, sometimes called “rest and digest,” the biological infrastructure of repair, integration, and renewal.
What shifts is not just physiology. It is identity. We begin to separate who we are from what we produce. We begin to notice that the guilt accompanying rest is not a moral signal — it is a conditioned reflex, a residue of a culture that conflates worth with output. Psychologist Dr. Kristin Neff’s research on self-compassion shows that individuals who extend kindness to themselves during periods of rest — rather than judgment — demonstrate greater resilience, not less. They return to their work with more creativity, more presence, more capacity. Relaxation, practiced honestly, does not diminish us. It returns us to our actual size.
What We Return To
We return to something very old. Older than productivity culture, older than the industrial clock, older than the anxious stories we tell ourselves about falling behind. We return to the animal body that knows, without instruction, how to soften in warm sunlight. How to yawn without apology. How to let the muscles release their vigilance when the danger has truly passed. This is not regression. It is remembering. The body has always known how to relax. It is the mind — with its schedules and scorecards and fear of being seen as idle — that needs the practice.
And so the practice is simple, though not always easy. We set down the phone. We close the eyes. We let the exhale be longer than the inhale — a direct signal to the vagus nerve that safety is present. We do this not because we have finished everything, but because we understand, finally, that finishing everything was never the prerequisite for deserving peace. We do this because relaxation is not a luxury. It is the ground state of a regulated, integrated nervous system. It is where healing happens. It is where clarity lives.
Today, carry this with you — not as an obligation, but as an offering to yourself. Let the affirmation settle somewhere below thought, in the body, where it can do its quiet work. You do not need to earn the next breath. You only need to receive it.