Your Nervous System Is Talking. Are You Listening?
Rest, Recovery & the Art of Coming Back to Yourself — at the Half-Year Mark

Take a moment to notice where you might be holding tension in your body.
Your jaw. Your shoulders. The place just behind your eyes. Maybe a low hum of alertness you have been carrying so long you no longer notice it until someone asks you to stop and check.
July has arrived, and with it a quiet invitation: to pause long enough to hear what your body has been trying to tell you. It has been a year that feels like it is moving faster than most, I hear this from almost everyone I work with, and honestly, I feel it too. Perhaps it is fitting that 2026 is the Year of the Horse: swift, restless, always moving. Six months in, many of us are carrying accumulated stress, broken sleep, and the kind of tired that a good night’s rest just does not seem to fix. That is not weakness. It is what happens when we keep going without really stopping and understanding that is the first step toward actually recovering.
Your Nervous System Was Not Built for This
Here is something worth knowing: your nervous system is always, quietly, scanning for threat. Not in a dramatic way: it is just doing its job, checking whether you are safe. This happens completely below the surface, before your thinking mind gets involved. Neuroscientist Stephen Porges called this process neuroception, and it explains a lot about why we feel the way we do even when we cannot quite name why.
When life keeps throwing pressure at us such as deadlines, difficult conversations, financial worry, the sheer pace of things, the body responds the way it was designed to. It gears up. Stress hormones rise, energy mobilizes, and we go into a kind of high-alert mode. This is helpful in short bursts. The problem is that most of us are not dealing with short bursts. We are dealing with months of it, back to back, with very little real recovery in between.
Over time, the nervous system stops being able to find its way back to calm. It gets stuck in ‘on’. And when that happens, rest starts to feel oddly out of reach even when you desperately want it.
The Signs You Might Recognize
When our nervous system is struggling, it rarely shows up as a dramatic breakdown. More often it is quieter than that: a collection of small things that are easy to brush off or push through:
• Waking up at 3am with your mind already racing
• Feeling exhausted but somehow unable to switch off
• Getting irritated by things that normally would not bother you
• Going through the motions but not really feeling present
• A general flatness or numbness that is hard to explain
That last one is worth pausing on. When we have been running on high alert for too long, the nervous system can shift into a kind of protective flatness. Almost like it is conserving what little energy is left. It is not laziness, and it is not depression in the way most people think of it. It is the body putting the brakes on because it has simply had enough. If you have felt oddly disconnected or unlike yourself lately, this might be what is going on.
What It Actually Means to Regulate
When I talk about nervous system regulation in my work, I want to be clear about what I mean because it is not about being calm all the time. That is not realistic, and honestly, not the goal. Regulation is more about flexibility: being able to move through different states. For example, be alert when you need to be, be at ease when you can be and be able to find your way back to a settled place without it taking enormous effort.
What I find most useful to share with clients is this: the nervous system responds to the body, not just the mind. You cannot always think your way to calm. But a slow breath, a moment of genuine connection with someone you trust, even just letting your eyes settle on something in the room. These things can actually shift your state, because they speak directly to the part of the nervous system that handles safety. It is one of the reasons somatic and body-based approaches can be so effective when talking therapies alone feel like they are not quite reaching the root of things.
Rest, in this light, is not just doing nothing. It is actively giving your nervous system the conditions it needs to recover.
A Mid-Year Check-In Worth Taking
In my practice, the half-year mark is something I always encourage clients to use, not as a performance review, but as a genuine check-in with themselves. When our system is depleted, our thinking narrows, our patience shortens, and we lose touch with what actually matters to us. So before you start mapping out goals for the rest of the year, it is worth asking something more basic:
• How am I really doing — not the ‘fine’ answer, but the honest one?
• What has my body been signalling that I have been too busy to listen to?
• Am I making choices from a clear, grounded place — or from survival mode?
• What would the second half of this year feel like if I went into it actually rested?
These are not soft questions. Everything else such as your work, your relationships, your ability to think clearly, flows from the answer.
Small Things That Actually Help
You do not need to overhaul your life. The nervous system responds well to small, consistent signals that things are okay. Here are a few that I come back to, both personally and in my work with clients:
• Breathe out for longer than you breathe in. A slow exhale activates the part of the nervous system that calms things down. Try breathing in for four counts and out for six or eight. Even just a few rounds of this can take the edge off.
• Look around the room. When you feel scattered or on edge, slowly let your gaze move around the space you are in. This simple act, sometimes called orienting, tells the nervous system you are physically safe. It sounds almost too simple, but it works.
• Spend time with people who feel safe. We regulate with and through each other. Being around someone who is genuinely calm and present has a settling effect on your own system. This is not just a nice idea : it is how we are wired.
• Give yourself transition time. Moving straight from one demand to the next without any pause keeps the stress response running. Even five minutes between things, a short walk, sitting quietly, stepping outside makes a real difference.
• Consider getting support. When exhaustion has become the baseline, self-care practices help but often are not enough on their own. Working with a therapist or coach especially one who understands the body as well as the mind can help you get underneath it in a way that is hard to do alone.
You Are Allowed to Rest
Your nervous system is not something to push through or manage your way around. It is the foundation of how you think, how you connect, how you show up. When it is in a good place, everything feels more possible. When it is not, even ordinary things can feel like a lot.
This July, I want to offer a simple reframe: rest is not a reward for getting everything done. It is part of how you get everything done. It is not self-indulgent. It is necessary and you do not have to earn it.
The Horse will keep galloping. You get to choose when to pause and breathe.










