by Tawnia Lives
Healing isn’t loud.
It doesn’t always arrive as a breakthrough
or some dramatic awakening.
Sometimes it looks like standing in your kitchen
doing the dishes you were too tired to do yesterday.
Sometimes it’s replying to the text
you didn’t have words for last week.
Sometimes it’s noticing
that you didn’t brace
when someone said your name.
Recovery happens in the smallest decisions —
the ones no one will ever applaud you for.
Getting out of bed
when the weight is heavy.
Letting yourself go back to bed
when your body says no.
Saying, I can’t today,
without apologizing for it.
It’s in the deep breath before reacting.
In the pause
before pushing yourself too far.
It’s in choosing nourishment
over numbness.
It’s remembering to exhale
after months of holding your breath.
The quiet work is the hardest kind.
Because no one sees it —
and you still do it anyway.
You do it in the middle of your routines. It happens in the quiet spaces between appointments. You choose differently in moments where no one knows.
You do it when you stop apologizing
for the slowness.
You do it when you let rest be recovery
instead of a reward.
You do it when you forgive the part of you
that still measures progress by productivity.
The quiet work doesn’t shout.
It hums.
It builds a new kind of safety
one act of gentleness at a time.
It’s not about becoming someone new.
It’s about learning to live kindly
with the person you’ve always been.
The world may never notice these moments.
But your body will.
She’ll notice the softer mornings,
the steadier breath,
the less urgent heart.
And one day, without realizing it,
you will too.
You’ll feel the difference
between surviving and living —
and you’ll recognize it for what it is:
the quiet work
of coming home.
— Tawnia Lives
