It arrived at 4 AM
Peace arrives not when we stop treating ourselves like unfinished construction projects.
The Unfinished Project
At four o’clock in the morning, sitting on the side of my bed — that’s when it finally arrived.
Not a revelation. Not an epiphany. Just a quiet, bone-deep exhaustion that had apparently been waiting for me to get still enough to be heard.
Something had been building for days. And apparently four in the morning was when it decided to arrive.
As I made my way into the kitchen to make a pot of coffee, a car passed somewhere out in the dark, its headlights sweeping briefly across the wall and disappearing. Standing there in the half-dark with cold wood floors under bare feet, the thought arrived without fanfare:
How tired I am of carrying myself around like a problem to solve.
There was a time when that kind of fatigue would have been immediately converted into a project.
More discipline. That was always the answer. More discipline meant more mornings claimed before the rest of the world woke up, more systems put in place, more effort applied to the gap between who you were and who you were supposed to become. Discipline was the cure for softness, for wandering, for the uncomfortable suspicion that you were somehow behind on your own life. It asked you to grip harder. Push further. Rest less. And for a while — for a long while — it worked, in the way that gripping hard always works, right up until the moment your hands give out.
More clarity was the other one. As if the problem were simply a matter of vision — that if you could just see your life clearly enough, map it precisely enough, understand your purpose with sufficient granularity, the exhaustion would resolve itself into direction. So you read the books and listened to the podcasts and hired the coaches and answered the journal prompts and did the inner work and the outer work and somewhere in the middle of all that striving for clarity, the days kept passing and the coffee kept getting cold and the thing you were supposedly becoming kept receding toward a horizon that moved every time you got close.
Healing was supposed to come next. Then purpose. Then certainty. Each one a destination that would finally make the journey feel worth it.
Nobody mentioned that the journey itself was eating you alive.
Women of a certain age know something particular about this exhaustion.
They were handed the monitoring early. Long before the self-help industry formalized it into content and courses and five-step frameworks, the monitoring was already running in the background — quiet, constant, remarkably thorough.
The body first. Whether it was acceptable. Whether it was taking up the right amount of space. Whether it was aging correctly or incorrectly and what might still be done about that.
Then the home. Whether it was clean enough, warm enough, welcoming enough, a proper reflection of the woman maintaining it. Homes were not just places to live. They were evidence.
Then the moods. Whether they were appropriate to the situation. Whether the sadness was reasonable or excessive. Whether the anger was justified or simply difficult. Whether the joy was genuine or performative, and whether it mattered either way.
Then the usefulness. Whether enough was being contributed, enough being given, enough being produced to justify the space occupied and the resources consumed. Usefulness was the quiet currency of belonging. You paid it constantly. You were rarely told the balance.
And underneath all of it, running like a current beneath every other form of monitoring — the marriage, the children, the money, the face, the future — was the foundational question that nobody asked out loud but everyone understood:
Am I enough yet?
Decades of that question. Decades of its answer being perpetually deferred.
Something strange happens later in life, though.
The noise begins to thin.
The lunches no longer need packing. The jobs have changed or ended. The grocery lists have gotten shorter, the margins of the days wider, the obligations fewer and less urgent. And into that space — that unfamiliar, slightly disorienting space where the busyness used to live — something else moves in.
Silence. And inside the silence, breathing. Your own breathing, which you had apparently forgotten was there.
The world did not end when the noise thinned. The sun still came up. The coffee still smelled the way coffee has always smelled on early mornings. Outside the window, a tree was quietly becoming greener by the hour without consulting anyone, without a plan, without a coach or a framework or a measurable outcome attached to the greening.
Nature does not appear to struggle with self-improvement.
A tree does not wake at four in the morning and wonder if it is becoming the right kind of tree. It simply grows toward whatever light is available and lets the season do what seasons do.
The gurus never told you this part.
And some of us were the gurus. Stood at the front of the room or the top of the page and said: here is what worked for me, here is the framework, here is how you too can optimize the thing that is currently causing you pain.
With the best intentions. With genuine belief that the framework helped.
And maybe it did. Maybe it does.
But somewhere along the way the helping calcified into an industry, and the industry needed more content, and the content needed more problems to solve, and suddenly the message — quietly, gradually, without anyone deciding to send it — became: you are not finished yet. You still require work. There is still something wrong with you that the right practice could fix.
And a part of something — call it the soul, call it the exhausted animal self, call it whatever you need to call it — simply laid down on the floor and said: no more.
Not in despair.
Not in surrender.
Just in the particular tiredness that comes from having tried, sincerely and at great personal cost, for a very long time.
What if the remaining years are not for finishing the project?
What if they are for inhabiting the life that is already here?
Not the optimized life. Not the healed life. Not the life that finally makes sense once the last piece of inner work is complete.
This one. The one with the multiple unfinished - yet well intioned - projects never completed, the laundry yet to be folded, with the yardwork waiting for attention.
Maybe peace does not arrive when everything is finally fixed.
Maybe it arrives when we stop thinking of ourselves as needing fixing. We all want the best for ourselves, but nobody wants to make ourselves an eternal project of self improvemnt. I know I sure as hell don’t.
Not quit. Not collapse. Not disappear into resignation.
Just stop.
Sit down for a minute inside the life that is actually happening.
Let the coffee get warm. Watch the light change on the wall. Breathe in a way that has no agenda attached to it.
This is when I pull out my joy ledger — a small list of adjectives I keep, each one describing a single magical moment that was real. During those minutes of sitting down, I read through it. It never fails to restore something. It loosens the grip of all the endless should-dos that are supposedly building me a happy life.
It’s proof that life is already humming along. All that’s required is to notice.
Maybe that is enough.
Maybe that has always been enough.
Maybe we just couldn’t hear it over all the noise we were making trying to become something other than what we already are.
This isn’t resignation.
There is expansion available to us still — not just physical, but emotional. A growing capacity for presence, for honesty, for noticing what is actually here. Nurturing that expansion, I’ve found, is where the real juice lives.
Not in the fixing.
In the inhabiting.
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“There is expansion available to us still — not just physical, but emotional. A growing capacity for presence, for honesty, for noticing what is actually here. Nurturing that expansion, I’ve found, is where the real juice lives.”
Yes! It is enjoying what you have, who you are, breathing it in. So much focus is on fixing yourself, another goal, another "need" to buy something for that fix. Taking time to even know yourself, without comparing yourself to someone else is so important.