Something I’ve noticed is how radical this idea feels to women.
Not success.
Not achievement.
Not growth.
But goodness.
A life that feels kind to your body.
A pace that doesn’t require constant recovery.
A sense of safety inside your own nervous system.
Many women build lives that look impressive but feel heavy.
They handle everything.
They show up.
They keep going.
But the question underneath isn’t “Am I doing enough?”
It’s “Why does this feel so hard if I’m doing everything right?”
A pattern I see often is that women learn to tolerate discomfort instead of questioning it.
They normalize stress.
They minimize exhaustion.
They explain away tension.
Because wanting ease feels unrealistic. Or lazy. Or undeserved.
So they settle for functioning instead of feeling good.
Not miserable.
Just managing.
But there’s a difference between surviving your life and inhabiting it.
Between coping and experiencing.
Between enduring and enjoying.
And noticing:
How often you assume struggle is part of success.
How rarely you consider that leadership could feel supportive.
How unfamiliar ease feels in your body.
And noticing:
How long it’s been since you felt fully present in your own life.
Not pushing for answers.
Not trying to fix anything yet.
Just letting yourself tell the truth about how it actually feels to be you.