“That
which you hold, holds you.”
—Tom Robbins
Jeanne Marie
had moved her wedding shoes from apartment to apartment, home to
home—for more than fifteen moves over thirty-five years.
In her
twenties, she’d shopped exhaustively for the right pair, trying on
dozens of shoes before landing on the perfect strappy sandals, the pair
that would follow her around for the next three and a half decades.
She’d always
hoped to wear them again, maybe for an anniversary or a special date.
But it had been years since those shoes fit, and on top of that, she and
her husband had long since separated.
The day
before trash day, she put the shoes in her trash bin—knowing in her gut
that it was time to part with them. They weighed her down.
“I looked at
the shoes laying there in the trash, taunting me, reminding me of my
wedding day, and I pushed them in deeper. I instantly panicked, but I
took deep breaths and walked away.”
The next
morning, though, she found herself next to that trash bin. She dug
through egg shells, coffee grounds, and dirty paper plates before
spotting them toward the bottom.
The Weights
We Shoulder
Do you ever
feel the weight of your physical belongings resting on your chest? Or
maybe for you, it’s your shoulders or lower back. When I feel like I own
too much, I feel it on my chest—right over my heart. I can’t breathe as
deeply or move as freely.
But if
there’s one thing I know, it’s that with every item I get rid of, I
lessen that weight.
Whether it’s
a stack of papers I no longer need or the nine kitchen utensils I’ve
never used, with each piece of clutter I send out of my home, I can
inhale deeper. Move freer. Jump higher.
It almost
feels like magic.
Our physical
belongings have weight, indisputably. But they’re not the only things we
hold on to long past their usefulness. What other weights are you
carrying?
7 Things We
Hold On To…
1.
Relationships
Do you
have a relationship in your life where every interaction leaves you
feeling drained or diminished? It could be a co-worker, a boss, a
friend, or a family member, but what marks this relationship as a weight
on your chest is how you feel after each interaction. Pay attention to
this.
2. Worry
How
much mental and emotional energy have you wasted worrying about
something that’s beyond your control? It’s amazing how our worries can
come to feel like old friends. We allow our brains to follow the same
pathways over and over, to the point where we’ve tricked ourselves into
believing that worrying helps—that it’s even a way of showing love.
But wouldn’t
it be ten times more powerful to ask ourselves if there’s anything we
can do to improve the situation? This gives us the option of acting, not
just worrying. And if there’s really nothing we can do—if the situation
is 100 percent outside of our sphere of influence—what good does it do
to hold on to worry?
“Worry is
like a rocking chair: it gives you something to do but never gets you
anywhere.” — Erma Bombeck
3. Social
Media
Do you
follow any social media influencers who tend to leave you feeling like
what you have—or who you are—isn’t enough? Or it could be an entire
platform; maybe you’ve noticed that you feel down on yourself every time
you open a certain app.
4. Habits
What’s
one habit you long to kick but aren’t sure if you can? Maybe it’s the
amount of sugar you eat after dinner or the never-enough hours of sleep
you get at night. Maybe it’s the tone of voice you use when you’re tired
or the amount of time you spend looking at a screen in your hand instead
of the faces around you.
5. Thoughts
Do you
have any thoughts that regularly cross your mind but are only holding
you back? Are any of the following familiar?
This is
emotional clutter.
6. The Past
Our
memories can bring us so much joy… but also so much pain. Especially if
we’re refusing to let go of past wounds, whether inflicted by others or
inflicted by ourselves. Forgiveness is power.
7. Clutter
From
paper to furniture, from digital files to expired pantry goods… Too many
of us are holding on, for far too long.
A
Visualization Exercise to Help You Let Go
To help you
let go, can you imagine—with as much detail as you can possibly
summon—that each item you get rid of reduces the weight on your chest?
Imagine that every piece you donate—every toxic relationship you
navigate away from, every limiting thought you decide to stop
believing—takes you closer to a lighter, freer, purer version of
yourself.
Finally
Saying Goodbye
That
morning, an hour before the garbage truck would rumble through her
neighborhood, Jeanne stopped just short of grabbing her shoes out of the
bin and darting inside with them in hand.
I could save
the heels, she thought in that moment. But I know I can’t save us.
Parting with
the shoes was painful, but in this case, holding on felt worse.
A few hours
later, she watched, standing next to the sheer curtains of her front
window, as the garbage truck carried those shoes away.
And just as
she’d hoped, she felt lighter as those shoes—and the emotional weight
they carried—finally left her sight.
—
Is there
something you’re holding on to? If so, check here for more support: 15
Questions to Ask Yourself When You Struggle to Let Go
And of
course, I would love to hear from YOU in the comments section.