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If today has felt heavy, I want to offer you something simple tonight.
Not a mindset shift.Not a long plan.Just one boundary that can lower stress almost immediately.
Here it is:
Stop deciding tonight what tomorrow at work will require from you.
That’s it.
When work is stressful or unsafe, your nervous system doesn’t clock out when you do. It keeps scanning. Replaying conversations. Anticipating emails. Running scenarios. Trying to prevent the next hit.
So one of the fastest ways to lower stress is to give your body a clear signal that work is not being solved right now.
That doesn’t mean you don’t care.It means you are containing the harm.
If a thought about work comes up tonight, you don’t have to push it away. Just try saying, quietly or out loud:
“I’m not making decisions about this right now.”
You can come back to it during work hours.You’re allowed to.
This boundary matters because earlier today we talked about what happens when your nervous system is under constant strain—how everything starts to feel urgent, how your body stays on alert, how rest stops feeling restorative.
And this afternoon, we talked about how people slowly disappear inside bad jobs. Not by leaving—but by adapting. By staying mentally on call all the time. By never fully being anywhere else.
This one boundary interrupts that pattern.
It reminds your nervous system that there is a difference between being employed and being consumed.
You don’t have to solve the job tonight.You don’t have to prove anything tonight.You don’t have to endure anything tonight.
If all you do today is let your body stand down for a few hours, that’s not avoidance.
That’s care.
Unlearning endurance doesn’t mean quitting tomorrow or confronting everything head-on. Sometimes it starts with something quieter: choosing not to give work your nervous system after hours.
And if that feels hard, that’s information—not failure.
Be gentle with yourself tonight.
Your nervous system is not a company resource—and you’re allowed to protect it.
Deep breath. You’ve got this.
By Elizabeth ArnottIf today has felt heavy, I want to offer you something simple tonight.
Not a mindset shift.Not a long plan.Just one boundary that can lower stress almost immediately.
Here it is:
Stop deciding tonight what tomorrow at work will require from you.
That’s it.
When work is stressful or unsafe, your nervous system doesn’t clock out when you do. It keeps scanning. Replaying conversations. Anticipating emails. Running scenarios. Trying to prevent the next hit.
So one of the fastest ways to lower stress is to give your body a clear signal that work is not being solved right now.
That doesn’t mean you don’t care.It means you are containing the harm.
If a thought about work comes up tonight, you don’t have to push it away. Just try saying, quietly or out loud:
“I’m not making decisions about this right now.”
You can come back to it during work hours.You’re allowed to.
This boundary matters because earlier today we talked about what happens when your nervous system is under constant strain—how everything starts to feel urgent, how your body stays on alert, how rest stops feeling restorative.
And this afternoon, we talked about how people slowly disappear inside bad jobs. Not by leaving—but by adapting. By staying mentally on call all the time. By never fully being anywhere else.
This one boundary interrupts that pattern.
It reminds your nervous system that there is a difference between being employed and being consumed.
You don’t have to solve the job tonight.You don’t have to prove anything tonight.You don’t have to endure anything tonight.
If all you do today is let your body stand down for a few hours, that’s not avoidance.
That’s care.
Unlearning endurance doesn’t mean quitting tomorrow or confronting everything head-on. Sometimes it starts with something quieter: choosing not to give work your nervous system after hours.
And if that feels hard, that’s information—not failure.
Be gentle with yourself tonight.
Your nervous system is not a company resource—and you’re allowed to protect it.
Deep breath. You’ve got this.