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Pull Up a Chair: March 20, 2026

Mar. 20, 2026

Pull Up a Chair: March 20, 2026

Pull up a chair. This week feels quieter in a different way. Not heavy like February. Not uncertain like the beginning of March. Just quieter. As if the noise in my head has lowered a few notches and I can finally hear myself think.

I am still finding my footing. That has not magically changed. But something inside me has softened. The panic I felt about not being fully settled has eased. I am beginning to understand that balance does not arrive all at once. It builds slowly, almost invisibly, through repetition.

You get up.
You move through the day.
You do it again tomorrow.

And one morning you realize it feels slightly less foreign than it did before.

Living in the Middle Without Fighting It

There is a strange freedom in admitting that I am still in the middle of this adjustment. I am not fully comfortable here. I am not fully uncomfortable either. I am simply in between.

The middle is not glamorous. It does not come with big announcements or dramatic shifts. It is just steady, ordinary living. And maybe that is what I have been resisting.

I wanted clarity. I wanted certainty. I wanted to wake up and feel rooted. Instead, I have been given slow acceptance. That acceptance has not come with fireworks. It has come with small, almost boring routines that quietly stitch the days together.

I make the bed now without sighing.
I know where the good light falls in the afternoon.
I have stopped flinching when I walk into the living room.

Those things matter more than I realized.

Emotional Fatigue Is Fading, Not Gone

I will not pretend that the fatigue has disappeared. It has not. Some days still feel heavier than others. Some mornings I still hesitate before stepping into the day. But the heaviness is not swallowing me the way it was.

It feels manageable.

That word alone feels like progress.

There is something comforting about recognizing that I do not have to be fully restored to function well. I do not have to wait for perfect motivation. I can move forward even while I am still healing.

Life at Shady Pines Keeps Rolling

Life at Shady Pines has continued as it always does. Ma has found a new arrangement for the kitchen table that she insists is “temporary,” though I suspect it will remain that way for at least three months. Uncle R has declared the backyard “improving,” which seems to mean he has accepted it.

Their ability to adapt in their own quiet ways has taught me something. They do not overanalyze the discomfort. They adjust, complain a little, and then continue living.

There is wisdom in that.

I tend to sit with feelings longer. To dissect them. To understand every angle. But maybe finding footing sometimes means doing instead of analyzing.

The Smallest Signs of Stability

This week I noticed something simple. I planned ahead without anxiety. It was not a major plan. Just a small calendar note for next month. But it felt like a sign that my mind is beginning to stretch forward again instead of staying locked in survival mode.

Survival mode is exhausting. It narrows your focus to the immediate. You stop thinking about what is next because today is enough to manage.

Planning, even in small ways, tells me that part of me feels safe again.

That realization surprised me.

Spring Is Trying

The air has shifted just slightly. Not enough to declare winter over, but enough to hint that it will not last forever. I stood outside for a few minutes this week and noticed the difference. It was subtle. The light lingered longer. The breeze felt less sharp.

That small shift outside mirrors what is happening inside.

I am not blooming. I am not bursting with new energy. But I am thawing.

And thawing is enough for now.

Naming Growth Without Pressure

I used to measure growth by how different I felt. Now I measure it by how steady I feel.

Steady does not mean happy all the time. It does not mean energetic or inspired. It means I am no longer fighting the ground beneath my feet.

I am learning to stand without bracing.

That is a quieter form of strength than I expected, but it feels more sustainable.

If You Are in the Middle Too

If you are in your own middle season, not at the beginning of struggle and not at the end of it either, I want you to know that this space counts.

You do not need dramatic change to prove that you are growing. You do not need to be fully settled to move forward. Sometimes progress looks like surviving a month that once felt unbearable. Sometimes it looks like doing ordinary things without resistance.

Sometimes it looks like simply staying.

Closing Thoughts

March is not asking me to reinvent myself. It is asking me to stand more comfortably where I am.

I am still finding my footing. But I can feel the ground now. It does not feel as unstable as it did a few weeks ago. It feels familiar. Imperfect, but familiar.

Pull up a chair. Sit with me in this steadier space. We do not need grand resolutions today. We do not need certainty.

We just need enough balance to take the next step.

And this week, I have that.

Category: At Home Tags: Caregiving, Life at Shady Pines, Midlife, Pull Up a Chair

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Steps to Getting your Life Back on Track
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Letting the Windows Open Again

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Regina says

    March 20, 2026 at 11:21 am

    Thank you for sharing your heart. I can relate.

    Reply
  2. Audrey Stewart says

    March 21, 2026 at 1:56 pm

    I get it. Peace is what I want in my life. I have lived, endured and survived alcoholic abusers. I am in the situation now, but I am left alone and I would leave, but the animals would all die.

    Reply

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I live in a small Georgia town that you most likely have never heard of and I LOVE it! I am a does to the beat of her own drum woman. Welcome to My Southern Life! Grab a glass of sweet tea and brace yourself as I share the craziness.

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