We love her.
Think of release as something we need to make happen,
As a decision,
As an effort,
As a moment of clarity.
We are supposed to arrive at,
But most release does not begin with intention,
It begins when effort quietly stops.
Notice how much energy you spend holding things in place.
Holding a thought,
Holding a position,
Holding yourself together in a particular way.
Much of this holding happens automatically,
Not because it is necessary,
But because it is familiar.
See if you can sense the act of holding itself,
Not what you are holding,
But the effort behind it.
You are not being asked to let go.
You are being invited to notice where holding can soften.
What is ready to fall away does not need to be pushed.
It responds to space,
Not force.
There may be parts of you that are not ready to release.
Those parts do not need to be convinced.
Release is not something you impose,
It is something you stop preventing.
Notice if effort can ease,
Even slightly,
If gripping can loosen,
Without instruction.
Often,
What falls away is not dramatic,
It leaves quietly,
Almost unnoticed,
Like tension dissolving once it is no longer supported.
Your role is not removal,
It is permission.
Permission for the system to reorganize itself without being managed.
Ease appears not when something is taken away,
But when holding ends.
For now,
Allow what is ready to fall away to do so in its own time.