# Releasing

## The Weight We Carry

Some things only become clear the moment we let them go. A held breath, a clenched hand, a story we have told ourselves for years, these all feel lighter once they leave us. The name *releasing* reminds me that freedom is not always found in gaining. Often it arrives in the quiet decision to stop gripping so tightly.

I have watched friends set down old resentments the way a child finally drops a toy that no longer fits their hand. Their shoulders changed first. Then their voices. The relief was not dramatic. It was simply the absence of unnecessary effort.

## What Leaves, What Stays

Releasing does not mean forgetting or pretending something never mattered. It means understanding that some experiences have finished their work with us. They taught what they came to teach. Now they can move on.

There is a gentle honesty in this. We do not need to keep every wound alive to honor its existence. We do not need to carry every opinion, every fear, every old version of ourselves. The river does not cling to the leaves that fall into it. It carries them a while, then lets the current take them.

- We release expectations when they stop serving love
- We release outcomes when they steal our peace
- We release the need to be right when connection matters more

## A Small Daily Practice

On a warm evening in early July, I sat on the porch and wrote down three things I had been holding too long. Then I burned the paper in a small metal bowl. The smoke rose straight up into a still sky. Nothing magical happened. Yet something inside me exhaled.

Releasing is rarely one grand moment. It is a thousand small returns to openness.

*Letting go is how we make room for what is already here.*