The 10-15 minutes I spend in the shower have come to mean a lot to me. In the shower, I can't check my phone. Can't check my email. Can't talk to anyone -- can't ignore anyone. I have no obligation to be doing anything that isn't washing my hair or body. I don't have to think of where else I'm supposed to be or what else I should be doing, because I'm doing something that needs to be done. Like a child, I like to pretend that everything that stresses me out, everything that makes me anxious or sad or hurt or angry, goes down the drain with the suds and water. And I breathe.
Sometimes throughout the day, I feel like I forget to breathe. The moment the water hits my scalp, though, I grow conscious of the fact that I am breathing effortlessly. It comes in gasps at times. It's like seeing the sun for the first time after days of rain, or coming up from under a wave crashing over you in the ocean -- a sense of calm, a sense of relief. It's permission to stop for a while and take care of me. It's 15 minutes where I'm allowed to be okay. Or, maybe, it's 15 minutes where I'm allowed to not be okay.
2 comments:
This is good
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