Sunday, April 19, 2026

More thoughts on Sleep 5

 Let Things Be Exactly As They Are

This one is the hardest and the most freeing.

We spend so much energy trying to control what we can’t.

The news. Other people. Outcomes. Tomorrow.

And at night, when everything is quiet, that effort catches up with us.

Linda used to lie awake trying to “figure everything out.” One night, exhausted, she said something simple out loud:

“Maybe I don’t have to solve this tonight.”

That was the beginning of her rest.

Letting things be doesn’t mean giving up. It means recognizing what is not yours to carry in this moment.

Not everything needs an answer before sleep.

Not every problem needs a plan at midnight.

Sometimes, the bravest thing you can do is say, “For now, this is enough.”

Fear thrives on control. Peace grows in acceptance.

When you release the need to fix everything, your mind softens. Your body follows.

And here’s the quiet truth: most things look different in the morning.

So tonight, as you lie down, give yourself permission.

Permission to not have all the answers.
Permission to rest anyway.
Permission to let the world turn without your constant attention.

Because it will.

And you, finally, can sleep.

Fear may visit. It always will.

But it doesn’t get to stay in charge.

With small, steady practices like these, you begin to shift something powerful inside yourself. You move from reaction to choice, from tension to trust.

And one night, almost without noticing, you’ll lie down…

…and simply rest.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

More thoughts on Sleep 4

 Take a Walk

There’s something almost magical about stepping outside when your mind feels crowded.

Not a long hike. Not a fitness goal. Just a walk.

Tom used to pace his living room when he couldn’t sleep, replaying the same worries over and over. One night, he put on his jacket and stepped outside instead.

The air was cool. The street was quiet. His thoughts didn’t disappear, but they loosened.

Movement changes the conversation in your mind.

When you walk, your body leads and your thoughts follow. The rhythm of your steps, the feel of the ground beneath you, it all brings you back to the present moment.

Fear lives in the future. Walking brings you back to now.

Even five minutes can interrupt a spiral. Ten minutes can shift your mood entirely.

And here’s something powerful: every step is a quiet statement, “I’m not stuck.”

Because you’re not.

You’re moving. You’re choosing. You’re stepping forward, even when it feels hard.

Try it the next time your thoughts won’t settle. Step outside, or even walk slowly through your home.

Let your body remind your mind: we’re okay. We’re here. We’re moving.

And often, when you return, sleep is waiting.

Friday, April 17, 2026

More thoughts on Sleep 3

  Love Yourself Through Your Anxiety

Anxiety doesn’t knock politely. It barges in, fast heartbeat, racing thoughts, that tight feeling in your chest.

And most of us respond the same way: we fight it.

“Not now.”
“Go away.”
“I shouldn’t feel like this.”

But what if, instead of pushing it away, you met it with something unexpected?

Kindness.

Think of anxiety not as an enemy, but as a signal, a part of you trying, in its own clumsy way, to protect you.

When you lie in bed and your mind starts spinning, place a hand gently on your chest. Breathe. And say, quietly, “I’m here.”

You don’t need to fix everything in that moment. You don’t need to solve every fear.

You just need to stay with yourself.

This is where real strength lives, not in avoiding fear, but in refusing to abandon yourself when it shows up.

And here’s the truth many people miss: anxiety passes faster when it’s not resisted.

Sometimes in minutes. Sometimes a bit longer. But always, it moves.

Each time you respond with patience instead of panic, you are retraining your mind. You are teaching it that fear does not equal danger.

And slowly, those nighttime battles become quieter.

You’re not broken. You’re learning.

And that learning leads to rest.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

More thoughts on sleep 2

  Treasure the Day

George used to end his evenings with a list of everything he didn’t get done.

It was a long list.

And it followed him to bed every night.

One evening, after another restless night, he tried something different. Instead of asking, “What did I miss?” he asked, “What did I live?”

It changed everything.

We’ve been taught to measure our days by productivity. But peace doesn’t come from doing more; it comes from recognizing what already mattered.

Did you make someone smile?
Did you show up, even when it was hard?
Did you take a step, however small?

That counts.

Fear often whispers, “You’re falling behind.”
Treasure answers, “You were here. You lived this day.”

Before bed, take a moment, not to review your failures, but to honour your presence. Even difficult days hold value. Especially difficult days.

When you begin to treasure your days, something remarkable happens: the pressure eases. The mind softens. Sleep becomes less of a battle and more of a return.

And slowly, that nagging voice of “I can’t” begins to lose its grip.

Because you did.

You showed up. You made it through. You lived.

That’s more than enough for one day.