No rush to get back to yourself

You don't sprint back to yourself, your pace is dictated by the current state inside.

Haste can get into even the most delicate matters.

People want to understand quickly, let go quickly, move on quickly.

And yet returning to yourself is not a task to be ticked off, but a path that needs a breath between steps.

In a world that measures progress by pace, freedom from rush can be difficult.

Even internal transformation sometimes begins to resemble a project with a deadline.

People want to know when things will get better and how much is left, while the most important processes do not grow more quietly than ambition would like.

Recovery requires different measures.

It is not always visible in big decisions, but more often in the fact that one reaction is gentler than before, and sometimes even in the fact that a difficult thought no longer grips the whole day.

These are small signs, but very true.

No rush does not mean no movement.

It is rather a movement that does not cut off a person from feeling, because you can go slowly and yet deeply, you can do less and come back more.

And only this slower pace allows you to see where the road really leads.

What would the comeback be like if you didn't have to rush anything?