01/06/2026
It’s hard to honor the limitations of our body.
Over the last 14 months, I’ve learned this the hard way.
In the words of Lael Stone, “If you listen to your body when it whispers, you won’t have to hear it scream.”
It took my body screaming for me to finally get the message.
Many of you know I’ve been in a long season of healing—two significant injuries, two recoveries, and two periods of relearning how to move forward. What surprised me most wasn’t just the physical recovery, but how much listening it required. How much slowing down. How many times I had to resist overriding signals of stress, fatigue, and pain in the name of “pushing through.”
I had to learn something many trauma survivors know intimately: healing doesn’t respond to force.
The body learns slowly. The nervous system changes gradually. What’s been conditioned over a lifetime doesn’t unwind in one sweeping moment of insight or effort.
Healing of any kind asks us to do something different.
For me, that meant resting more, simplifying my training, letting go of old ways of pushing, and learning to work with my body instead of against it. And the truth is—I feel stronger now than I did before. Less depleted. More aware. More present. I’m moving again in ways that feel sustainable, guided by curiosity instead of ego.
So many of us get frustrated when our bodies or minds don’t “heal fast enough.” But our bodies are our homes. And just like any healing human or growing child, they don’t need more pressure, they need safety.
They need the gentle hand of the parent we may never have had.
Not the voice that says do better or try harder, but the one that says, I’m here. I’m listening. Take your time.
So today, I invite you to pause.
To notice what it feels like to listen instead of override.
To honor what your body is asking for—without judgment. To offer yourself a loving, steady voice in your healing. Time, space, and support are what heal us all.
Sending love.❤️🩹