You’re keeping up.
You’re functioning.
From the outside, it probably looks like you’re doing fine.
But inside?
Everything feels a little tight.
You’re craving room — to breathe, to think, to not be needed for a moment.
This is your sign:
You may need more space — not more strategy.
Why You Might Not Notice It at First
When you’re high-functioning, you can override your own signals for a long time. The world keeps praising your capacity, your availability, your reliability — even as your nervous system starts whispering, too much.
And because you’re still “coping,” it can be hard to recognize that you’re also leaking energy at every turn.
Related: How to Support Your Energy Without Changing Everything
Subtle Signs You May Need More Space
It doesn’t have to be a crisis to count. Here are early cues that your system is stretched too thin:
You feel reactive over small things — a message, a tone, a task
You fantasize about canceling everything — not out of laziness, but exhaustion
You crave silence but avoid it — screens, noise, or busyness fill every pause
You keep saying “I just need to get through this week” — every week
You’re “on” all the time, even when alone — unable to fully exhale
The idea of being asked for one more thing makes you tense
Contrary to what you might think, these are not signs of failure.
They are invitations — to soften, to pull back, to realign.
What “More Space” Can Actually Look Like
You don’t have to disappear or cancel your life.
More space might mean:
Protecting a 15-minute morning window just for you
Turning notifications off for a few hours each day
Pausing before replying, deciding, or committing
Saying “I’ll get back to you tomorrow” instead of “sure”
Taking a day each month with nothing scheduled
Letting silence be enough
Why This Matters for Your Nervous System
When your nervous system doesn’t get space, it doesn’t get to regulate.
It stays stuck in management mode — productive (for now), reactive, never truly resting.
Over time, this leads to burnout, emotional numbness, or resentment. But when you start to create intentional pockets of space, your system gets the message:
We’re safe now. We can soften.
That’s when clarity returns. That’s when creativity and calm start to rise again.
If this post stirred something in you — a spark, a question, a longing — you’ll love Wild & Still.
It’s my monthly creative letter, full of stories, rituals, and reflections to help you find your rhythm again and create bravely from a place of calm and connection.
💌 [Join the journey here.]
