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Choosing a Slower Pace in a World That Rewards Burnout

We live in a world that praises endurance more than wisdom.

The one who keeps going.
The one who pushes through.
The one who handles it all without asking for less.

Burnout, here, is often reframed as dedication. Exhaustion as proof of worth. And slowing down can quietly feel like opting out of relevance.

Especially if you’ve spent years being needed.

When Speed Is a Survival Skill

For a long time, moving quickly wasn’t a personality trait for me — it was a necessity.

Medical systems reward urgency. Advocacy requires clarity and follow-through. When your child’s body, safety, or access is involved, delays feel dangerous. I learned how to respond fast, decide quickly, and stay several steps ahead.

After my daughter’s disability diagnosis, there wasn’t space for spaciousness. There were appointments to manage, recovery timelines to monitor, accommodations to secure. Slowness felt irresponsible.

So my nervous system adapted.

Efficiency became comfort.
Alertness became default.
Rest became conditional.

The Problem With a Burnout-Rewarding Culture

The world we live in doesn’t question this pace — it incentivizes it.

We are praised for:

But what this culture rarely acknowledges is the cost.

A fast life often disconnects us from our bodies. From intuition. From desire. From feminine rhythms that aren’t linear or urgent.

Slowing down, then, isn’t just a lifestyle preference.
It’s a quiet form of resistance.

Of rebellion even.

Why Slowing Down Feels So Uncomfortable

For women — especially caregivers — choosing a slower pace can trigger guilt before relief.

Because slowness asks different questions:

When your value has been reinforced through how much you carry, slowing down can feel like becoming irrelevant.

But that discomfort isn’t a sign you’re doing something wrong.

It’s a sign you’re interrupting a pattern.

Feminine Pace Is Not Passive

There’s a misconception that a slower pace means disengagement.

It doesn’t.

A feminine pace is responsive, not reactive.
Intentional, not idle.
Rooted, not rushed.

It allows room for discernment. For rest that restores rather than delays. For action that comes from alignment instead of adrenaline.

Choosing this pace doesn’t make you less capable.

It makes your capacity sustainable.

What Slowing Down Has Looked Like for Me

Slowness didn’t arrive all at once for me. It came in fragments.

It looked like:

Slowing down didn’t mean I stopped caring.

It meant I stopped living as though everything was an emergency.

You Don’t Have to Earn a Slower Life

One of the biggest lies we’re taught is that rest and slowness must be earned after burnout.

But feminine wisdom doesn’t work that way.

You are allowed to choose a slower pace:

Slowness doesn’t require collapse as permission.

A Different Measure of Success

What if success wasn’t how much you endured — but how well you lived inside your own life?

What if the quieter pace wasn’t a retreat, but a return?

Choosing slowness in a burnout-driven world isn’t about doing less for the sake of it.

It’s about doing what matters — without abandoning yourself in the process.

And that choice, made consistently, changes everything.

Sending you love and light,
Jaime

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