Why I’m choosing presence over panic
For most of my life, I lived in reaction mode.
React to anxiety.
React to stress.
React to fear.
React to the need to be understood, validated, or safe.
I was good at fixing, managing, and holding things together. What I wasn’t good at was pausing.
I didn’t know how to slow down long enough to feel what I was feeling or to choose how I wanted to respond.
I just moved. Moving, moving, moving, like a shark. And most of the time, I was exhausted.
What Is “The Pause”?
The pause is the space between what happens and how we respond.
It’s the breath before the sharp reply.
The moment of stillness before the spiral begins.
The check-in before we abandon ourselves.
It’s where we remember:
I am safe right now.
I don’t have to rush.
I can choose how I show up.
Psychologically, this is nervous system regulation.
Emotionally, it’s self-trust.
Practically, it’s freedom.
Why I Needed the Pause
When you grow up in emotionally unpredictable environments, you learn to move fast.
You adapt, scan for danger, and try to stay ahead of discomfort. Over time, that becomes your default.
For me, that looked like:
~Overthinking.
~Overworking.
~People-pleasing.
~Seeking relief through distraction.
~Undereating.
~Overexercising.
~Trying to control outcomes.
None of it meant something was “wrong” with me. It meant my system didn’t feel safe enough to slow down.
The Woman I Am Becoming
When I imagine the life I want to grow into, I don’t see someone striving. I see a woman who lives in the pause.
This woman:
~is grounded
~is present
~doesn’t rush to prove herself.
~speaks thoughtfully.
~listens deeply.
She doesn’t need to be loud to be powerful.
She doesn’t need constant validation to feel secure.
She trusts herself.
She has made peace with her past versions.
She respects her body and her mind.
She is honest without being harsh.
She is compassionate without self-abandonment.
There is a quiet confidence about her, a sense of ease, and a sense of wholeness.
Life in the Pause Is Not Passive
Pausing is not giving up. It’s choosing intentionally.
It’s responding instead of reacting.
It’s creating space between emotion and action.
It’s staying connected to yourself under pressure.
The pause is where old patterns soften, and where new choices become possible.
How I Practice the Pause
Sometimes it’s as simple as:
One slow breath.
A hand on my chest.
A moment of awareness.
Sometimes it’s choosing not to answer immediately.
Sometimes it’s noticing, “I’m overwhelmed,” instead of pushing through.
Sometimes it’s letting myself feel without fixing.
Tiny moments of presence, repeated daily.
That’s the practice.
What I’m Learning
I used to think growth would feel dramatic. I have always been looking for flashy signs from God or the universe telling me that I’ve arrived. I’ve made it.
Instead, it feels quiet.
Less urgency.
More discernment.
Less self-avoidance.
More self-respect.
Less panic.
More peace.
The pause has become my anchor.
An Invitation
If you feel constantly rushed mentally, emotionally, or physically…hear me here: you’re not broken.
Your system is asking for safety.
Maybe what you need isn’t more discipline.
Maybe it’s more space.
More breath.
More kindness.
More permission to slow down.
The pause isn’t about becoming someone else.
It’s about coming home to yourself.
And I’m choosing to live there.
