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In Alaska, June feels electric. The sun lingers deep into the evening, and the land responds. Trails thaw. Trees stretch. Energy pulses through the air like it’s been waiting all year to be released.
It’s a season that invites motion.
And yet, even here, especially here, your body still needs rhythm. Your soul still needs pause, and your spirit still needs breath. Rest is not a sign that something is wrong. It’s often the clearest sign you’re paying attention to what’s right.
We live in a culture that equates activity with purpose. Stillness gets confused with weakness. Even when you know rest is good, your thoughts may start spinning. You feel the weight of unreturned emails, unfinished projects, and unmet goals. The guilt of slowing down arrives long before your muscles have stopped moving.
But this response isn’t personal failure. It’s wiring.
Your brain has been trained to alert you when familiar patterns shift. When motion stops, the amygdala sends warnings, trying to protect you from imagined threats. The problem is that the perceived threat is simply stillness, and stillness is where renewal begins.
Rest, as I’ve learned to live it, is not about withdrawal or collapse. It is not shutting down or giving up.
It is a return to presence.
Sometimes rest looks like hiking across a muddy trail while the sunlight bounces off snow still clinging to the highest ridge. Sometimes it’s laughter around the fire with people who hold space without needing you to perform. Sometimes it’s simply taking a morning to breathe and move slowly, not because you’re behind, but because you’ve chosen to be fully here.
Rest is a break from striving. Not from strength. It’s where your next chapter gets clarified.
You don’t need to burn out to earn rest. You don’t need to be depleted to justify slowing down.
And you don’t need permission from your calendar to recover what’s been slipping. The strongest leaders I know are not the ones who never stop. They’re the ones who have learned to stop well. They listen early. They build pause into their pace. They trust that sustainability matters more than appearance.
Rest is not weakness. It is wisdom wrapped in rhythm.
If you’ve been white-knuckling your way through growth, pushing through fatigue, and telling yourself there’s no time to stop, this is your reminder.
You are allowed to pause. You are allowed to protect your peace without forfeiting your mission. You are allowed to feel the light on your skin without letting it burn you out.
Let June be full. Let it be bright. But let it also be steady.
Because you can rest without quitting.
Dr Barbara
I write about this in Two Streets Named Hard, especially in Chapter 7. If rest has felt out of reach—or like something you have to “earn”—this chapter might help you rethink what it really means to lead from alignment.
And if you’ve already read the book, thank you.
Post a quick review, reply here, and I’ll send you an invitation to my private book club where we explore how to make these shifts stick—not as theory, but as daily rhythms that support your real life.
There comes a point when strategy isn’t enough. When the only way forward is full alignment. Instead of chasing more, pivoting to reclaiming
what matters most: Peace. Purpose. Presence. This comes from building a business that rises with you, instead of resting on you. If that’s the
shift that you’re craving too, YOU’RE NOT ALONE. You’re in the right place. Let’s start your transformation and build what last
There comes a point when strategy isn’t enough. When the only way forward is full alignment. Instead of chasing more, pivoting to reclaiming
what matters most: Peace. Purpose. Presence. This comes from building a business that rises with you, instead of resting on you. If that’s the
shift that you’re craving too, YOU’RE NOT ALONE. You’re in the right place. Let’s start your transformation and build what last
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