You know the feeling when something just feelsโฆoff?
Not dramatic, not urgent, justโฆnot right.
You can still function – show up, get things done, carry on with life.
But it all feels heavier than it should.
Or you feel disconnected fromโฆeverything.
Nobody else can tell anythingโs โnot rightโ.
Youโre doing what ya gotta do. Youโre โfineโ.
But it takes more out of you than it should.
You just go through the motions & routines of each day, not fully present, not really absorbing the moments.
Days blur together. Memories donโt quite stick.
Then youโll have a good day, or a better day, and you think everythingโs ok. You breathe the fresh air, go for a walk, hold a genuinely content smileโฆ
And then it drops again.
So you start to question yourself – whatโs really going on here?
And the cycle continues.
You end up feeling restless but stuck. Tired, but wired. Numb but overwhelmed.
Life becomes about just getting through the day. Or the hour. Or the momentโฆ
Thereโs a reason this feels this way
This isnโt random. This isnโt you failing at life.
I experience this in my own ways, and Iโve spent a long time trying to understand it.
Often, youโre โjustโ stressed the fuck out. And when youโre stressed the fuck out, your body releases a chemical called cortisol.
Cortisol is helpful in short bursts because itโs purpose is to protect you, but itโs not meant to stay elevated.
Sometimes your nervous system speeds up, causing restlessness & anxious energy.
Sometimes it slows down, causing a heavy & shut-down feeling.
One pushes, the other pulls back.
And they cycle. As much as they feel the need to.
Your mind can get to the point of prioritizing getting through the moment over thinking clearly – and survival over presence.
Relief Without Hype
Youโre not broken – youโre overwhelmed.
Your brain is trying to protect you, not break you.
This is what many people experience as depression & anxiety. Theyโre two sides of the same coin in my experience – even when only one is more obvious, the other is lurking.
Not broken. Not failing.
Overwhelmed. Depleted. Stuck in a loop your brain learned.
Everyone experiences some version of this, to varying degrees – thereโs a spectrum, just like anything in life. Nothing is ever truly black & white.
It becomes a problem when it starts interfering with your ability to live your life. But you donโt need to hit a breaking point to take it seriously.
Have compassion for yourself – Understanding can change how you see it; labeling it can soften it. When you can put a name to it, it starts to lose some of its power.
You donโt need to justify how you feelโฆ
Patterns like this donโt come out of nowhere – your mind learned them for a reason, even if you canโt fully see why yet.
Some things stay with youโexperiences, stress, grief.
Even when they fade into the background, they donโt disappear.
And sooner or later, they surface.
Not randomly. Not out of nowhere.
Thereโs always a reason.
If this feels familiar, youโre not alone – and youโre not broken.
It makes sense.
Stick around.
Weโre going to keep making sense of it – one layer at a time.
If this hit something for you, Iโd love to hear – what part of this felt the most familiar?
If you liked this post, please give it a โlikeโ, share, and subscribe if youโre new.
Stay real. Stay loud. And rock the fuck on. ๐๐ค๐ป
Since February is the season of love, I thought I’d write a focused series of posts throughout the month. Don’t worry, they’re not the typical bullshit. I’m thinking self love, romanticizing your life, long term relationships, and “weird” relationships… everything with a bit of a “twist”. ๐ Stay with me here…
Reframing February
The concept of self-love feels lame because it became performative, sanitized, and dishonest – Insta-worthy bubble baths & all that shit. It isnโt lame on its own, but the way itโs portrayed certainly is.
February doesnโt need more aesthetic self-care โadviceโ.
This post is intended as a humane, grounded, and lived-in reset.
Self love about staying with yourself, not futile attempts toward fixing yourself at the spa.
What โSelf-Loveโ Actually Is (and Isnโt)
Self-love is something I choose when my mind is consumed with perceived chaos.
Sometimes it doesnโt feel good in the moment – it shows up later as steadiness, clarity, or less self-abandonment.
It lives in the thoughts you repeat about yourself – all of yourself.
Sometimes you have to say โfuck youโ to your self depreciating bullshit and choose yourself anyway.
The โSelf-Love Is Cringeโ Problem
The cringe associated with it is a social survival reflex.
Just as much as weโre pressured by the media to indulge in often frivolous acts of self care, weโre also pressured to โhustle, grind, rewindโ – push through & ignore anything that gets in the way.
Growing up, caring openly often wasnโt โsafeโ for me. Especially considering all of the grief my motherโs family has dealt with (ALS, Grief, and Growing Up Too Fast) – I was raised (as I know most of us are) to ignore my feelings & push through tough situations. Which, at times, can be beneficial. But it catches up to us all eventually.
โSoftnessโ wasnโt modeled for most of us – for better and worse.
Self-love isnโt about erasing our shadows – Itโs about integrating them so that they stop running the show from the background.
I try hard to let myself work with what I usually keep hidden, through my writing, my artwork & crafts, and journaling. When something is making me feel uncomfortable, I often ask myself why, and what positive & productive things can I do with this?
Self-love is choosing presence over avoidance.
Journaling as a Nervous System Practice
Journaling can be a great way to practice presence and soothe your nervous system – Itโs a place to contain & converse with your demons when needed, and stay with yourself while you figure everything out.
Thereโs something about handwriting such that I personally I would suggest using an analog journal over digital – it forces you to slow down & examine your thoughts completely. Whatever method you choose is up to you of course, for the sake of privacy if nothing else. It doesnโt need to be seen by anyone but you.
It isnโt about writing well, itโs about maintaining presence. A sentence or two is enough if thatโs all you have the time or energy for on any given day.
The 7-Day Self-Love Journaling Experiment Overview
On the topic of journaling, Iโd like to invite you to try a quick little experiment!
The purpose of this experiment is to slow your nervous system, build trust with yourself, and create a place to land your chaos.
Day one will contain the whole practice, while the following days are optional expansions – so even one day counts!
If you miss a day: Nothing is ruined. Come back when youโre ready.
And remember – Self-love isnโt about consistency, itโs about returning to who the fuck you are.
Day 1: The Self-Love Letter
Write a letter to you as though youโre an outside observer who knows your personal history. No positivity performing, no shaming, no fixing.
Start by naming your current emotional state without judgment, just as a basis to understand the tone of the letter if you were to read it months from now.
Then reflect on the challenging situations youโve dealt with in your life, being sure to acknowledge your resilience and any lessons youโve learned or personality strengths youโve gained through those experiences.
Express gratitude for your growth where it feels appropriate – Gratitude is acknowledgment, not unfounded praise.
Develop some affirmations if youโd like – Affirmations are for orientation, theyโre not always hype. (Some fun examples – โI am a badassโ, โBe yourself, fuck allโ, โLive vibrantlyโ, or โAlchemize the fire withinโ.)
Skip anything that feels forced.
Days 2โ7: Optional Expansions
Day 2: Naming Without Fixing
(Presence & containment)
Today is about noticing, not solving. Naming something doesnโt make it bigger โ it makes it clearer.
What emotions keep resurfacing lately, even when you try to ignore them?
If you werenโt required to โdo anythingโ about them, what would they want you to know?
What are you already doing to survive this season of life, even if it doesnโt look impressive?
Day 3: The Parts You Keep Private
(Shadow integration, gently)
This is for the things you donโt usually say out loud. You donโt need to like these parts. Just let them exist on the page.
What part of yourself do you tend to hide because it feels inconvenient, messy, or โtoo muchโ?
When did you first learn that this part wasnโt welcome?
How might this part be trying to protect you, even imperfectly?
Day 4: Slowing the Nervous System
Write slowly today. Let your body lead. This can be a list. Or a single sentence. Or a deep breath and a word.
How does your body feel right now โ not metaphorically, literally?
What helps you feel even 5% more settled?
What does โgood enoughโ look like today?
Day 5: Identity, Mood, and Self-Trust
(Who you are when youโre not performing)
Who are you when no one is watching?
What do you do, like, or need that doesnโt make sense to anyone else?
What parts of your identity feel most stable right now?
Day 6: Boundaries as Care
(Self-love in action)
Think structure, not restriction – Boundaries arenโt punishment; theyโre containment.
Where do you feel most drained lately?
What boundary (time, space, energy, emotional) would support you right now?
Whatโs one small way you already protect yourself โ even if itโs imperfect?
Day 7: Staying With Yourself
(Integration & closure)
Letโs close the loop without pressure. You donโt have to carry this perfectly – just honestly.
What did you learn about yourself this week?
Where did you show up for yourself, even quietly?
What would it look like to continue โstayingโ with yourself moving forward?
Lived Authority
As much as I love my family, I protect my morning routine ruthlessly. Itโs become a very firm boundary that I maintain in my daily life. Otherwise, I find myself buried under other people in my ears, demanding my attention, all day long.
My morning routine is forced space for other things that are important to me such as reading, writing, movement, & meditation.
Self-love often looks like structured self care – Not indulgence, but an intentional nervous system reset.
Ultimately, for me, itโs a boundary for my family and for me.
Utilizing self-love and practicing self-care during genuinely challenging seasons taught me something important: I can endure chaos. And I can come out prouder, steadier, and more confident on the other side.
Itโs about staying with myself.
This isnโt a prescription. Itโs an invitation.
Youโre the only person youโll live with your entire life, so youโre allowed to honor yourself.
Self-love doesnโt need to be cringe.
And journaling is a real, usable resource.
If this resonated, you might try one sentence in a notebook tonight. Or tomorrow. Or next week. Returning counts.
If you want more grounded practices like this, feel free to subscribe to my blog – no hype, no fixing, just honest tools for staying with yourself.
Stay tuned for more “offbeat” love related topics this February!
And if you share this post, make sure to pass it to someone who hates โself-loveโ content. ๐