
Last week, we waded through the thick of the chaos. We stood face-to-face with the friction of the empty space—that deeply uncomfortable territory where we intentionally stop rushing, clear out the noise, and force ourselves to just sit with the quiet.
If you tried to hold that empty space over the weekend, you know exactly how brutal it is. I personally kept my laptop closed and worked on some things around the house, cleaning, rearranging, and spent some time with my husband. I baked a chocolate cake Sunday afternoon that didn’t quite turn out how I had hoped. But it was a learning experience.
And as the laptop lid lifts open this Monday morning, a brand-new monster is waiting for us.
Welcome to Duality and Doubt.
Once you choose to clear out the chaos, your brain doesn’t just automatically hand you a crown of peace. Instead, a massive internal friction sets in. We find ourselves living a double life inside our own heads.
One version of you—the wise, grounded version—knows deep in your bones that protecting your space is a matter of survival. But the other version, the one conditioned by a world that demands a constant production line, stands over you whispering that your stillness is a failure.
The moment the weekly schedule kicks into gear, these two versions collide, bringing a swift, heavy wave of doubt.
You open the inbox, you look at the tasks ahead—the insurance training and compliance updates, the lesson plans to map out, the physical home to maintain—and the second-guessing begins. Did I lose ground by slowing down? Am I already behind? Did I actually earn the right to breathe?
We are so hooked on constant motion that when we finally create an empty space, we treat it like a crime we have to pay for on Monday morning. We feel the urge to sprint out of the gate at a million miles an hour, frantically overcompensating just to prove we are still worthy.
But true reclamation isn’t about clearing the chaos on Friday just to drown in the doubt on Monday.
The duality we have to master this week is learning how to hold onto our internal stillness while we do the work. It is knowing you can be deeply productive without being frantic.
As you step into the demands of this week, don’t let the Monday morning backlash trick you into running a race you weren’t meant to run. The work will always be there, but your peace belongs to you. Pace yourself today.
Did the doubt hit you the second you opened your screen this morning? How is your brain trying to make you pay for the empty space you kept this weekend?