# Releasing ## The Weight We Carry Some things only become light once we set them down. A finished project, a quiet apology, an old version of ourselves we have kept polishing long after it stopped fitting. Releasing is not the dramatic letting go we see in movies. It is usually quieter: a soft exhale at the end of a long day, the moment we stop checking a wound that has already healed. I have noticed this pattern in my own life. The longer I grip something, the heavier it grows, even if it started as something beautiful. A manuscript, a relationship, a belief about who I am supposed to be. The grip itself becomes the burden. ## What Release Actually Feels Like Release often arrives without fanfare. One morning you simply notice the story you have been telling yourself no longer interests you. The anger you have nursed for years feels tedious rather than righteous. The dream you once needed to prove something now feels optional. This is not failure. It is evidence that you have changed. The things we release are not necessarily wrong or broken. They have simply completed their purpose in our lives. * A child lets go of the table edge when her legs grow strong enough. * A writer deletes the paragraph that no longer serves the story. * A grown person finally stops waiting for an apology that will never come. ## The Space That Opens Every release creates room. Not dramatic empty space, but gentle, usable space. Room to breathe. Room to notice what is actually here instead of what we wish were here. Room for something new that fits who we are becoming. On this ordinary Tuesday in 2026, I am thinking about all the small releases that make a life possible. The quiet goodbyes. The gentle surrenders. The willingness to stop carrying what no longer needs to be carried. *We do not release to become empty. We release to become free.*