# Releasing

## The Weight We Carry

Some things only reveal their true size when we try to set them down. A grudge, a fear, an old version of ourselves, these sit quietly in the chest until the moment we decide to loosen our grip. The act of releasing is rarely dramatic. It usually arrives as a small, almost ordinary breath, the kind you take without thinking, and suddenly the air feels different.

I have noticed this in quiet rooms and late evenings. What I once held tightly, an expectation, a regret, a need to be right, begins to lose its shape the instant I stop feeding it attention. The mind, like a hand that has been clenched for hours, aches both when it grips and when it finally opens.

## What Stays Behind

Releasing does not mean disappearance. It means the thing no longer controls the temperature of the day. The memory might remain, but it no longer burns. The disappointment might linger, but it no longer steers.

There is a gentleness in this. We do not need to declare victory or erase the past. We only need to stop carrying what no longer needs to be carried. The hands that once clutched now rest. The shoulders drop. Life continues, lighter by ounces rather than by tons.

- Some releases happen in conversation
- Others happen in silence on an ordinary Monday
- A few arrive years later, long after we thought we had already let go

## The Space That Opens

When we release, we do not become empty. We become available. Available to notice the light on the wall, the sound of someone laughing down the street, the small kindness we almost missed while we were busy holding yesterday.

*On July 6, 2026, I am still learning that letting go is less about courage and more about making room for what wants to arrive.*