# Letting Go

## The Weight We Carry

Some things are meant to stay only for a season. We hold them tightly, sometimes for years, afraid that releasing them will leave us smaller. Yet the opposite is often true. What we release makes space for what we might become.

I have watched friends move houses, empty drawers, and sort through old letters. Each time the room feels different afterward, quieter, lighter. The act of releasing is rarely dramatic. It usually happens in small, ordinary moments: deleting old emails, saying goodbye to a worn-out coat, or finally admitting a hope that no longer fits.

## The Space That Opens

Releasing is not the same as losing. It is a quiet form of trust. When we let something go, we admit that we do not need to control every outcome. We make room for surprise, for rest, for new questions we could not hear before.

There is a gentle rhythm to it. We gather. We keep what still feels alive. We thank the rest. Then we open our hands. The world does not end. Most often it simply continues, only now with fewer things pulling at our attention.

- A finished notebook
- An old version of ourselves
- Expectations we inherited from someone else

Each one, when released with care, becomes a small act of freedom.

## A Quiet Practice

Releasing is something we learn slowly. It asks for honesty and kindness at the same time. We do not throw things away in anger. We set them down with respect. This practice softens us. It teaches us that we are not defined by everything we have touched or carried.

On a warm evening in early July, I sat on the porch and watched the sky change color. I thought about the year behind me and the things I was still gripping. One by one I named them, then let the breeze take the words. Nothing visible happened. But inside, something settled.

*Releasing is how we make peace with time.*