
When Slowing Down Feels Uncomfortable Why your body resists rest—and how healing changes that
For many women, slowing down doesn’t feel peaceful.
It feels uncomfortable.
Restless.
Even unsafe.
You sit down to rest—and your mind starts racing.
You try to pause—and your body feels tense.
You finally have a quiet moment—and instead of relief, you feel unease.
This isn’t because something is wrong with you.
It’s because your nervous system has learned something very specific:
Being “on” feels safer than slowing down.
Why Slowing Down Can Feel Unsafe
If you’ve lived through stress, trauma, instability, incarceration, or long seasons of responsibility, your body adapted to stay ready.
Ready to respond.
Ready to fix.
Ready to protect.
Slowing down wasn’t always an option.
So your body learned:
Movement = safety
Stillness = risk
Even when your life becomes calmer, your nervous system may not immediately recognize that change.
Rest Isn’t Just Physical—It’s Nervous System Safety
Rest isn’t just about stopping activity.
It’s about your body feeling safe enough to soften.
And that takes time.
Your body doesn’t respond to logic—it responds to experience.
So healing isn’t about forcing yourself to relax.
It’s about gently teaching your body that it’s safe to slow down.
This Is Why You Feel “On Edge” When Things Are Calm
Many women say:
“Nothing is wrong, but I still feel anxious.”
That’s because your body is used to scanning for what’s next.
When there’s no problem to solve, your system doesn’t know what to do with the quiet.
So it creates movement.
Thoughts.
Worry.
Restlessness.
Not to harm you—but to keep you prepared.
You Can Learn a New Way
Slowing down is not something you master overnight.
It’s something you practice.
In small moments:
* one deep breath
* one pause before reacting
* one moment of rest without guilt
Each time you slow down and nothing bad happens, your body learns something new:
“I am safe here.”
Begin Here
You don’t have to force yourself into stillness.
You can meet yourself where you are.
A little slower.
A little softer.
A little more present.
And over time, slowing down won’t feel unsafe.
It will feel like coming home.
With compassion for your journey,
Terry De Aragon, RN, BSN
Trauma-Informed Holistic Nurse Coach
Awaken Your Lioness
