Rest & Rhythm
Embodied practice, cycles, presence, and daily coherence
13 posts

The Fallow That Isn't Empty
What looks like doing nothing — the long illness, the 'baby brain,' the gap on the resume — may be the body restructuring at a level the culture can't see or credit.

The Dangerous Green
When energy returns after a depleted season, not everything that grows back is nourishing. The desert greens teach us that recovery demands discernment.

The Fast That Sets the Clock
Roughly 2.5 billion people changed their daily clock today. Not by willpower — by stepping into a structure older than the one you're following.

The Machine You Work Inside
Your exhaustion isn't a personal failure. It's the predictable output of a workplace designed in the 1880s for machines — and never redesigned for the human inside one.

Community as Infrastructure
The potluck isn't a break from the work. It's the work in its quiet phase—building the network before you need it urgently.

The 32-Year Mirror
A college student calculated he'd spend 32 years on screens. The number changed him—not because it was advice, but because it was a mirror.

The Rest You Can't Retreat Into
The nervous system doesn't speak the language of events. It speaks the language of pattern. The retreat alone won't save you. The daily practice will.

The Exhausting Conversation
Some conversations deplete not because they're hostile but because they matter. The exhaustion isn't failure—it's proportional to the weight you're carrying.

The Privatization of Recovery
Recovery was never supposed to be a solo project. When the infrastructure that holds us withdraws, it doesn't create a neutral gap—it creates a cascade.

The Half-Word We Lost
We kept the accidents. We lost the sagacity.

The Micro-Season Permission
What if nothing is wrong? What if you're just in winter?

Carrying Masterpieces for Decades
Tatsuya Nakadai spoke of carrying 'the load of everyone's masterpieces' in his twenties. How did some people learn to stay resourced for decades?

The Five-Minute Reset Beats the Twelve-Hour Push
Short, deliberate resets restore clarity faster than strained sprints. Attention first, then action. The day gets easier without getting shorter.