I Tried Leaving White Space in My Week—Here’s What Actually Happened

April 16, 2026 in Slow Living - No Comments

Leaving white space in my week wasn’t something I planned to do long-term.

At first, it felt like an experiment — one I wasn’t sure I’d keep.

I didn’t cancel everything. I didn’t retreat from responsibility. I simply stopped filling every available hour.

Here’s what actually happened.

What I Thought White Space Would Feel Like

I assumed unscheduled time would feel:

  • unproductive

  • uncomfortable

  • awkward

  • slightly irresponsible

I expected guilt. Restlessness. The urge to fill the space with something “useful.”

What Happened Instead

The first thing I noticed wasn’t relief — it was resistance.

My body didn’t know what to do without a plan. I reached for tasks out of habit. I felt the pull to justify the space.

But slowly, something shifted.

My breathing deepened.
My thoughts slowed.
My reactions softened.

White space created room for regulation — not laziness.

The Unexpected Emotional Shift

Without constant movement, I became more aware of how tired I actually was.

White space didn’t create exhaustion.
It revealed it.

And that awareness allowed me to respond with care instead of denial.

What Didn’t Change

My responsibilities were still there.

Caregiving. Work. Advocacy. The never ending laundry. Daily life.

Leaving white space didn’t make me less reliable. It made me more present when I was engaged.

Urgency stopped being my default.

What I Kept

After a few weeks, I didn’t want to go back.

I kept:

  • one unscheduled block most days

  • space after emotionally demanding conversations

  • lighter transitions between commitments

  • the belief that time doesn’t need to be full to be valuable

White space became a form of self-trust.

Why This Matters for Feminine Energy

Feminine energy thrives in rhythm, not rigidity.

White space allows intuition, creativity, and restoration to surface naturally. It creates a life that feels lived — not managed.

Leaving space isn’t about doing less.

It’s about living more deliberately.

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Jaime

Jaime is a writer, editor, and lifestyle storyteller focused on modern womanhood, slow living, and life after survival mode. As the founder of The Wildflower Edit, she creates thoughtful, beautifully honest content at the intersection of motherhood, disability, emotional healing, and intentional living. Her work invites women to edit their lives with care — keeping what feels true and releasing the rest — for anyone learning to bloom in their own way.

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For the women blooming in unexpected places…..

For the women blooming in unexpected places…..

Hi Y'all

Hi, I’m Jaime — writer, mother, storyteller, and the heart behind The Wildflower Edit. For nearly a decade, I wrote online as The Princess and the Prosthetic, sharing my daughter’s journey with disability and the lessons our family learned along the way. It was a beautiful season — full of advocacy, connection, and community — but as my daughter grew older, I felt a shift. She deserved more autonomy. More privacy. More room to decide how she shows up in the world. And I realized something else: My own story was expanding too. Motherhood was still here. Disability was still here. But so were grief, healing, womanhood, nervous system care, feminine energy, homemaking, identity, softness… the fuller, deeper pieces of life that were ready to be spoken aloud. Whether you come for the cozy routines, the motherhood reflections, the disability advocacy, or the soft life inspiration — thank you for choosing to share this space with me. Pour a warm drink. Settle in. Let’s grow a life that feels like you again.

Jaime

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