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There’s a particular kind of tiredness that comes from thinking too much.
It isn’t physical tiredness.
Instead, it’s the weariness that comes from running the same thoughts again and again. You may be trying to reach certainty, clarity, or the “right” answer before you allow yourself to rest. From overthinking to inner knowing, the shift often begins when effort finally runs out.
If this reflection resonates, you’ll feel at home in our Soulful Explorer group. It is a warm space for gentle practices. You will find seasonal insights and develop a deeper connection with yourself and nature.
Overthinking often feels responsible.
At times, it can even feel like care. However, very often it’s a sign that we’ve moved away from inner knowing and into mental control.
Inner knowing does not push.
It does not argue.
And it does not arrive through analysis or mental effort.
Instead, inner knowing tends to show up quietly. You might notice it as a sense of ease in the body. Or as a gentle “yes” or “no”. Sometimes, it appears as a feeling that something is settled, even if it isn’t fully explained yet.
For many people, this can feel unfamiliar. After all, we’re often taught to rely on thinking, problem-solving, and logic. Inner knowing, by contrast, offers orientation rather than certainty.
Here’s the part many of us were never taught:
You don’t move from overthinking to inner knowing by thinking harder.
Instead, you move there by creating enough inner space for knowing to be heard.
That space can take many forms. For example, it might come from pausing before you respond. It might come from stepping outside for a few minutes. Slowing the breath can help too. Sometimes, it’s simply about letting a decision rest instead of forcing it.
This isn’t avoidance.
Rather, it’s an understanding that clarity often arrives after stillness, not before it.
Overthinking tends to tighten the body and narrow perception. Inner knowing, on the other hand, emerges when there is softness, openness, and room to listen.
If you’ve been caught in overthinking recently, nothing has gone wrong.
Very often, it simply means something in you is asking for more time. Or more space. Or more gentleness. The mind may be trying to help, even if mental effort is no longer the right tool.
What if this moment isn’t asking you to decide?
What if it’s asking you to listen instead?
🌱 Practice for the week

This week, notice one small moment when you don’t try to resolve anything. Pause. Breathe. Then notice what feels steady, or quietly true, underneath the noise.
✨ Final reflection
Inner knowing doesn’t demand attention.
It waits for willingness.
Often, it begins to speak the moment effort softens.
💗 Is overthinking loud for you recently? If so, you might also find it helpful to explore how breath can support a return to steadiness.
I’ve written a short reflection on Breath as a Bridge. It’s about using the breath as a quiet way back to presence when the mind feels busy.
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There are times in life when the spark we once felt seems to dim. Motivation fades. Joy feels muted. Even things that once mattered can feel strangely distant. This doesn’t mean anything has gone wrong. Often, it simply means you have been living, adapting, carrying, and responding to more than you realise.
Losing your spark is not a personal failure. It is often a signal that something within you is tired, overstretched, or quietly asking for care rather than effort.
If this reflection resonates, you’ll feel at home in our Soulful Explorer group. It is a warm space for gentle practices. You will find seasonal insights and develop a deeper connection with yourself and nature.
When life feels flat, it is easy to believe that energy must be chased or recreated. Yet more often, energy returns when we stop demanding it. The spark is not something that needs to be forced back into life. It is something that responds to attention, honesty, and gentle presence.
Sometimes the spark fades because you have outgrown an old way of being. Sometimes it dims because you have been meeting the needs of others for a long time without meeting your own. And sometimes it disappears simply because you are in a season that calls for rest rather than renewal.
When motivation drops, many of us respond by pushing harder. We tell ourselves to be more disciplined, more positive, more committed. Yet this often deepens the sense of flatness rather than relieving it.
Reconnecting with your spark does not begin with effort. It begins with permission. Permission to feel flat without judgment. Permission to move more slowly. Permission to let joy return in its own time, rather than on demand.
Often, the spark comes back quietly. It shows up as a moment of interest. A brief sense of curiosity. A feeling of relief when you stop pushing. These are not signs of weakness. They are signs that something alive within you is beginning to breathe again.
When you allow space instead of pressure, energy has somewhere to land. Not all at once, but steadily, in ways that feel sustainable rather than forced.

🌱 Practice for the week
Once this week, give yourself a few quiet minutes. Ask a simple question:
What feels draining right now? What feels even slightly nourishing?
You don’t need to act on the answer. Just notice it. Let the question open a little space without trying to resolve anything.
✨ Final reflection
You are not broken because your spark has faded. You are human. Energy ebbs and flows, just as life does. When you meet yourself with kindness rather than pressure, the spark often finds its way back. It’s not as a burst of excitement, but as a steady, honest warmth that can be trusted to grow again.
Looking for some more hints and tips on re-energising yourself? Try this
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Reflection rarely happens by accident.
In busy lives, thoughts and feelings move quickly from one task to the next. As a result, they are rarely set down. Over time, inner awareness becomes crowded out. A soulful space for reflection is not about withdrawing from life. Instead, it offers a small place to pause and arrive.
If this reflection resonates, you’ll feel at home in our Soulful Explorer group. It is a warm space for gentle practices. You will find seasonal insights and develop a deeper connection with yourself and nature.
Without a place to land, listening becomes harder.
Noise, responsibility, and habit take over easily. However, even a small, dedicated space creates a gentle boundary. In that space, you can listen rather than react.
A soulful space doesn’t need to look special.
It isn’t defined by décor, ritual, or spiritual tools. Instead, what matters is how it feels to be there. A soulful space is somewhere you associate with honesty. There, you don’t need to be productive or improving yourself.
Often, the most effective spaces are ordinary ones.

For many people, this may be a chair by a window. It could also be a corner of the table early in the morning. It could also be a familiar place outdoors. In my garden, there is a cedar tree that has bent over. I love to stand in the space under the bent boughs. It feels like the tree is hugging me. Over time, when a space is used gently and repeatedly, it begins to carry permission: here, I can slow down.
Reflection isn’t about analysing your life.
More often, it’s about noticing what is already present. For example, what feels heavy, what feels clear, or what is quietly asking for attention. A soulful space gives these things somewhere to land. Importantly, it does so without demanding answers.
Over time, clarity emerges naturally.
This rarely arrives as a dramatic insight. Instead, it shows up as a growing sense of orientation. Decisions feel simpler. Reactions soften. Gradually, you begin to hear your own voice again beneath the noise.
Choose one small place that feels calm enough to pause. Visit it once a day, even briefly. Then sit, breathe, and notice what it’s like to be there without an agenda.
You don’t need to change your life to reflect on it. Sometimes, all that’s needed is a quiet, faithful space where you can meet yourself — and let that be enough.
Do drop a comment on where your sacred space is…. I would love to hear from you.
Thinking about what you want the New Year to bring into your life? This article might help you to about how you frame your desires: Start Fresh: Why Setting Intentions Outshines Resolutions
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