Softening as a Path to Emotional Safety

By Soul Essence New Eltham London UK

What Emotional Safety Really Means

Emotional safety is not about never feeling upset or challenged. It is about feeling secure enough to experience emotions without fear of being judged, overwhelmed, or rejected. When emotional safety is present, we can be honest with ourselves and with others. When it is missing, we often protect ourselves by hardening or shutting down.

Many people believe safety comes from control or strength. In reality, emotional safety often grows from softness, from the ability to relax and stay present with what we feel.

Why We Harden When We Do Not Feel Safe

Hardening is a natural response to feeling unsafe. It might show up as emotional distance, constant self-control, or physical tension. The body tightens to protect itself. The mind stays alert, scanning for problems.

This response can be helpful in difficult situations. However, when it becomes a long-term pattern, it keeps the nervous system in a state of vigilance. The body rarely gets the message that it is safe to rest. Over time, this can create exhaustion and emotional numbness.

Softening offers another option.

How Softening Supports the Nervous System

Softening is closely linked to the nervous system. When the body softens through slower breathing, relaxed muscles, or grounded awareness, the nervous system receives signals of safety. This helps shift the body out of constant defence.

Softening does not require forcing calm. It begins with noticing. You may notice tightness in your shoulders or jaw and allow it to ease. You may slow your breath or place your attention on your feet. These small acts tell the body that it is safe enough in this moment.

Over time, these moments of softening help rebuild a sense of inner security.

Emotional Safety Begins Within

Many people look for emotional safety in relationships alone. While supportive relationships matter, emotional safety also depends on how you treat yourself. If you criticise your feelings or push yourself past your limits, your system learns that it is not safe to feel.

Softening towards yourself looks like curiosity instead of judgement. It means allowing emotions to exist without rushing to fix or suppress them. When you respond to yourself with care, your body learns that it does not need to defend against your own inner world.

This inner safety becomes the foundation for safer connections with others.

Softening Without Losing Boundaries

A common concern is that softening will make you vulnerable in unsafe ways. Softening does not mean ignoring your boundaries or staying open when something feels wrong. True emotional safety includes knowing when to step back and protect yourself.

Softness and boundaries work together. When you are present and softened, you are often more aware of your needs and limits. You can say no with clarity rather than tension. Emotional safety comes from choice, not from constant openness.

Practising Softening in Daily Life

Softening can be practised in simple ways throughout the day. Pause and notice your breath. Let your shoulders drop. Slow your movements. Give yourself permission to rest before you are exhausted.

You can also soften in conversation by listening without preparing a response, or by allowing silence without discomfort. These moments of gentleness create safety both inside and between people.

Choosing Safety Through Gentleness

Softening is not a weakness. It is a pathway to emotional safety. By allowing yourself to soften, you teach your body and mind that it is safe to be present, to feel, and to connect.

Emotional safety grows through small, consistent acts of gentleness. Over time, these acts create a steady sense of trust within yourself and in your relationships.

Reflection Prompt

Take a few quiet minutes to reflect in writing or thought:

  • Where do I notice myself hardening when I feel emotionally unsafe?
  • What does my body need in those moments to soften?
  • How could I respond to my feelings with more gentleness today?

There is no rush. Emotional safety is built slowly, one soft moment at a time.

Receive one of my e-books free about ChakrasMeditation TipsInner Child or Skincare

If you want to join a meditation group, Soul Essence runs small groups. There are fortnightly online groups on Tuesday evenings and face-to-face groups on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday evenings.

The Friday morning meditations on the fourth week of the month start at 11 am.

Contact Rosemary for more information.

The Role of Tenderness in Authentic Relationships

By Soul Essence New Eltham London UK

What We Often Mistake for Strength

In many relationships, strength is shown through independence, emotional control, or always being the one who copes. We learn to keep things together, avoid being “too much,” and handle our feelings privately. While this can look strong on the surface, it often creates quiet distance.

Tenderness is rarely taught as a relationship skill. Yet it plays a vital role in creating an authentic connection. Tenderness allows us to meet each other as we are, without armour or performance.

What Tenderness Really Means

Tenderness is not about over-sharing or becoming emotionally exposed without care. It is not about losing boundaries or putting others before yourself. Tenderness is a quality of presence. It shows up as gentleness, honesty, and a willingness to be affected by another person.

Tenderness allows feelings to be seen without being dramatic or hidden. It creates space for sincerity. When tenderness is present, there is less need to impress, defend, or control the connection.

How Tenderness Builds Authenticity

Authentic relationships depend on trust. Trust grows when people feel safe enough to be real. Tenderness creates this safety. It communicates, often without words, that there is room for truth.

When tenderness is absent, relationships can become functional but shallow. Conversations focus on tasks, roles, or surface-level updates. When tenderness is present, there is space for emotion, silence, and shared vulnerability.

This does not mean relationships are always calm or easy. Disagreement and difficulty still arise. The difference is that tenderness keeps the connection intact even when things are challenging.

The Nervous System and Feeling Safe Together

From a bodily point of view, tenderness helps regulate the nervous system. When someone speaks gently, listens fully, or offers calm attention, the body responds. Breathing slows. Muscles relax. The sense of threat decreases.

This felt safety allows people to open without forcing it. Authentic connection is not created through effort, but through ease. Tenderness invites the body to settle, making honesty and closeness more accessible.

Tenderness Towards Yourself Matters First

It is difficult to offer tenderness to others if you are harsh with yourself. Many people carry inner criticism, pressure, or emotional neglect. This inner hardness often spills into relationships, even when intentions are good.

Self-tenderness looks like noticing your limits, respecting your feelings, and responding to yourself with care rather than judgement. When you feel safer inside yourself, you are less likely to protect yourself through distance or control in relationships.

Authentic relationships begin with an authentic relationship to yourself.

Practising Tenderness in Everyday Relationships

Tenderness is expressed in small ways. It might be slowing down to really listen. Letting your tone soften. Allowing a pause instead of rushing to fix or respond. Acknowledging feelings without trying to change them.

These small gestures communicate respect and care. Over time, they build a foundation of trust and openness. Tenderness becomes the quiet thread that holds the relationship together.

Choosing Connection Over Control

Control can feel safer than tenderness, but it limits intimacy. Tenderness requires courage because it allows you to be seen. Yet it is this willingness that makes relationships feel real and nourishing.

Authentic relationships are not built on perfection. They are built on presence, honesty, and care. Tenderness is not a weakness in connection. It is what allows connection to deepen and last.

Reflection Prompt

Take a few moments to reflect gently:

  • Where do I hold back tenderness in my relationships?
  • What am I afraid might happen if I allowed more of it?
  • How could I practise tenderness with myself or others in a small way today?

There is no rush. Authentic connection grows through gentle, consistent presence.

Receive one of my e-books free about ChakrasMeditation TipsInner Child or Skincare

If you want to join a meditation group, Soul Essence runs small groups. There are fortnightly online groups on Tuesday evenings and face-to-face groups on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday evenings.

The Friday morning meditations on the fourth week of the month start at 11 am.

Contact Rosemary for more information.

Learning to Relax Your Guard Without Giving Yourself Away

By Soul Essence New Eltham London UK

Why We Keep Our Guard Up

Most of us learn, at some point in life, to keep our guard up. This guard may show up as emotional distance, constant self-control, or a habit of staying strong and capable no matter what is happening inside. Often, this is not a conscious choice. It develops as a way to protect ourselves from hurt, judgement, or disappointment.

Keeping your guard up can be useful. It helps you function in difficult situations and prevents you from feeling overwhelmed. But when guarding becomes a constant state, it can also limit how fully you experience life and connection. Relaxing your guard does not mean removing it completely. It means learning when it is safe to lower it.

The Difference Between Protection and Armour

Protection is flexible. It responds to what is happening in the moment. Armour, on the other hand, is rigid. It stays in place even when there is no real threat. Many people live in armour without realising it. The body remains tense, emotions are filtered, and reactions are carefully managed.

Relaxing your guard is about moving from armour to protection. It allows you to stay connected to yourself while remaining aware of your boundaries. You do not need to be fully open with everyone. You simply need to be present with yourself.

How the Body Holds the Guard

The body often reveals where the guard is held. Tight shoulders, a clenched jaw, shallow breathing, or a constant sense of alertness are common signs. These patterns can become so familiar that they feel normal.

When the body is always guarded, the nervous system stays in a low-level stress response. This makes it harder to rest, to feel safe, and to respond calmly. Softening the body, even slightly, can begin to relax the guard without removing it altogether.

Simple actions like slowing the breath, noticing your feet on the floor, or allowing your shoulders to drop can send a message of safety to the nervous system.

Relaxing the Guard Without Losing Yourself

A common fear is that if you relax your guard, you will give too much away. You may worry about being misunderstood, taken advantage of, or emotionally exposed. These fears are understandable. Relaxing your guard does not mean sharing everything or ignoring your limits.

Instead, it means staying connected to your inner experience while choosing how much to share and with whom. True safety comes from self-awareness, not from constant defence. When you are present with yourself, you are often better able to sense when something feels right or wrong.

Practising Gentle Openness in Daily Life

Learning to relax your guard is a gradual process. It happens in small moments rather than big changes. You might notice when you are holding your breath during a conversation and allow yourself to exhale. You might pause before responding instead of reacting quickly.

You may also practise being honest with yourself, even if you are not ready to be fully open with others. This inner honesty builds trust. Over time, it becomes easier to lower your guard in safe situations because you know you can look after yourself.

Choosing Trust Over Constant Control

Keeping your guard up is often a form of control. It is an attempt to manage how life affects you. Relaxing your guard is not about losing control, but about trusting your ability to respond. It allows for more ease, connection, and authenticity.

You do not need to give yourself away to be open. You can stay rooted in yourself while allowing softness to exist. This balance is where true strength lives.

Journaling Prompt

Take a few minutes to write gently and honestly:

  • Where do I notice my guard in my body or behaviour?
  • What do I fear might happen if I relaxed it slightly?
  • What would safe, gentle openness look like for me right now?

There is no rush. Learning to relax your guard is a practice, not a performance.

Receive one of my e-books free about ChakrasMeditation TipsInner Child or Skincare

If you want to join a meditation group, Soul Essence runs small groups. There are fortnightly online groups on Tuesday evenings and face-to-face groups on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday evenings.

The Friday morning meditations on the fourth week of the month start at 11 am.

Contact Rosemary for more information.

The Art of Staying Open in an Overstimulated World

By Soul Essence New Eltham London UK

Living in Constant Stimulation

Modern life is loud, fast, and demanding. Many of us move through our days surrounded by noise, screens, notifications, and expectations. Even when we are physically alone, our attention is often pulled in many directions. This constant stimulation can leave the nervous system overloaded and the mind restless.

In this environment, staying open can feel difficult. The natural response to too much input is to shut down, withdraw, or harden. While this can provide short-term relief, it often comes at the cost of connection, presence, and emotional ease.

Why We Close When We Are Overwhelmed

When the nervous system is overstimulated, the body looks for ways to protect itself. Closing off is one of those ways. You may notice it as emotional numbness, irritability, or a desire to be left alone. You might feel less patient or less interested in conversation.

This closing is not a failure. It is a signal that your system needs support. The problem arises when closing becomes a habit rather than a response. Over time, it can make life feel flat, disconnected, or tiring.

Openness Does Not Mean Taking in Everything

Staying open does not mean absorbing every demand, emotion, or piece of information. True openness includes discernment. It is the ability to stay present while choosing what you engage with and what you let pass by.

Openness is a flexible state. It allows you to respond rather than react. Instead of pushing everything away or letting everything in, you remain grounded in yourself. This kind of openness supports clarity and emotional balance.

The Body’s Role in Staying Open

The body plays a key role in how open we feel. When the body is tense or rushed, openness becomes harder. Muscles tighten, breathing becomes shallow, and attention narrows.

Small physical shifts can help. Slowing the breath, relaxing the jaw, or feeling the support of the ground beneath you can calm the nervous system. These moments of grounding create space for openness without overwhelm.

Staying open begins with feeling safe enough in the body.

Creating Space in Daily Life

You do not need to change your whole life to stay open. Small choices can make a difference. Pausing between tasks. Taking short breaks from screens. Allowing moments of silence during the day.

You can also practise openness in conversations by listening fully, without planning your response. Letting there be pauses. Noticing when you feel the urge to withdraw and gently staying present instead.

These small practices help balance stimulation with rest.

Openness as a Form of Strength

In an overstimulated world, staying open is an act of strength. It requires awareness, boundaries, and self-care. Openness is not about pushing yourself to cope. It is about knowing when to engage and when to step back.

When you stay open in a grounded way, you are more available to life. You notice beauty, connection, and meaning, even in simple moments. Life feels fuller, not because there is more happening, but because you are more present.

Choosing Gentle Presence

Staying open does not mean never closing. It means knowing how to return to openness once you have rested or protected yourself. Gentle presence allows you to meet the world without being overwhelmed by it.

This balance is an ongoing practice. Each moment offers a new chance to soften, to pause, and to choose how you show up.

Journaling Prompt

Set aside a few quiet minutes and write without editing or judging your thoughts.

  • Where in my daily life do I feel most overstimulated or overwhelmed?
  • How does my body let me know when it has had too much input?
  • In what moments do I notice myself closing off, withdrawing, or hardening?
  • What helps me feel safe enough to stay open, even gently?
  • What is one small change I could make today to create more space, ease, or presence?

Write slowly. Let your answers unfold in their own time. Staying open begins with listening.

Receive one of my e-books free about ChakrasMeditation TipsInner Child or Skincare

If you want to join a meditation group, Soul Essence runs small groups. There are fortnightly online groups on Tuesday evenings and face-to-face groups on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday evenings.

The Friday morning meditations on the fourth week of the month start at 11 am.

Contact Rosemary for more information.

Why Hardness Creates Distance—and Softness Creates Trust

By Soul Essence New Eltham London UK

Living Behind a Protective Edge

Many of us move through life with a subtle hardness. It may show up as emotional control, physical tension, or a habit of staying guarded in relationships. Often, this hardness is not a conscious choice. It develops as a way to protect ourselves from disappointment, conflict, or being hurt.

Hardness can help us cope in the short term. It gives a sense of strength and control. But when it becomes our default way of being, it quietly creates distance. We may feel safe, yet disconnected — from others and from ourselves.

How Hardness Affects Connection

When we are hardened, our bodies and nervous systems are on alert. Muscles stay tense, breathing becomes shallow, and our attention is often focused on managing situations rather than being in them. Others can sense this state, even if they cannot explain it.

Conversations tend to stay on the surface. Listening becomes more about responding correctly than truly hearing. Touch, if it happens at all, can feel careful or limited. Hardness sends an unspoken message: I am protected, but not fully available.

This is how distance is created, not through words, but through energy and presence.

Why Softness Builds Trust

Softness changes the quality of how we meet others. When we soften, even slightly, the body relaxes and the nervous system settles. Breathing deepens. Attention widens. We become more present.

Softness communicates safety. It tells others, often without words, that we are open and grounded. This openness invites trust. People feel more at ease around us because there is less defence and less control in the space between us.

Trust does not come from perfection or strength alone. It grows when people sense that they can meet us as we are, without having to perform or protect themselves.

Softness Is Not the Same as Weakness

Many people fear that softness will make them vulnerable in unsafe ways. This is a misunderstanding. Softness is not collapse, and it is not the absence of boundaries. True softness includes awareness and choice.

You can be soft and still say no. You can be open and still protect your energy. In fact, softness often makes boundaries clearer, because you are more connected to your own needs and signals.

Hardness closes everything equally. Softness allows for discernment.

Turning Softness Towards Yourself

The way we treat ourselves shapes how we relate to others. When we are hard on ourselves — pushing through exhaustion, criticising our emotions, ignoring our limits — we learn to relate from tension rather than care.

Softness towards yourself looks like curiosity instead of judgement. It may mean resting before you are burnt out or allowing feelings to move without rushing to fix them. This inner softness creates a sense of safety inside your own system, which naturally extends into your relationships.

Trust begins within.

Practising Softness in Everyday Life

Softness does not require big changes. It begins in small moments. Notice when your jaw is clenched or your shoulders are raised. Allow a slow exhale. Pause before responding in conversation. Let silence exist without filling it.

These simple practices gradually change how others experience you — and how you experience yourself. Over time, they replace distance with ease and control with connection.

Choosing Trust Over Protection

Hardness protects, but it also separates. Softness requires courage, but it creates trust. When you soften, you allow yourself to be present rather than defended. You allow the connection to grow naturally.

Trust is not something you demand or force. It is something you create through how you show up. Softness is the bridge.

Reflection Prompt

Take a few quiet minutes to reflect in writing or thought:

  • Where do I notice hardness in my body or relationships?
  • What has this hardness been protecting me from?
  • What might change if I allowed a little more softness in safe moments?

Let your reflection be gentle. Trust grows slowly, through small, honest shifts.

Receive one of my e-books free about ChakrasMeditation TipsInner Child or Skincare

If you want to join a meditation group, Soul Essence runs small groups. There are fortnightly online groups on Tuesday evenings and face-to-face groups on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday evenings.

The Friday morning meditations on the fourth week of the month start at 11 am.

Contact Rosemary for more information.

When Progress Feels Invisible: Trust the Process

By Soul Essence, New Eltham, London, UK.

There are times when it feels like all your efforts are going unnoticed, even by yourself. You’re showing up, doing the work, and trying your best, but there are no big wins or clear signs of success. It can feel discouraging. You might even start to wonder, “Is this even working?”

But the truth is, progress isn’t always something you can see right away. Sometimes it’s quiet. Sometimes it’s slow. And often, it’s happening underneath the surface, preparing you for the moments when everything clicks into place.

Think of a seed planted in the soil. For a long time, it looks like nothing is happening. But underground, roots are growing, strength is building, and life is taking shape. Your growth is no different.

Why Progress Feels Invisible

Progress often happens in the form of small shifts — a change in mindset, a bit more patience, a quieter inner critic. These are easy to overlook because they’re not loud or dramatic. But they are meaningful. They show that something inside you is beginning to shift.

We’re used to measuring progress by results: a finished project, a number on a scale, a big breakthrough. But real transformation often begins long before the results arrive.

How to Trust the Process

  • Notice the effort, not just the outcome. Showing up for yourself — even on tough days — is progress.
  • Keep a small record. Jot down wins, no matter how tiny. Over time, they add up and remind you of how far you’ve come.
  • Look for signs of inner change. Are you more patient? Less reactive? Calmer in certain situations? These quiet signs matter.
  • Stay consistent. Progress may not be instant, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t happening. Keep going. Keep showing up.
  • Give yourself grace. You’re allowed to have days when nothing feels clear. Rest is also part of growth.

A Gentle Reminder

You are not behind. You are not failing. You are simply in a part of your journey where the results are still forming. Keep trusting the process. Just because you can’t see the outcome yet doesn’t mean it’s not on its way.

This July, try to hold space for unseen progress. Let yourself believe that the effort you’re putting in matters, even if the rewards are still unfolding. Your dedication, your care, your quiet steps forward — they are all creating something valuable.

So breathe. Keep going. And trust that the seeds you’ve planted are growing — even if you can’t see the sprouts just yet.

🪞 Reflection Prompt:

What is something I’ve been working on — internally or externally — that may not have clear results yet, but still deserves recognition and patience?

Consider:

  • A mindset shift you’ve been trying to embrace
  • A habit or routine you’re gently building
  • A part of your healing or growth journey that feels slow but important
  • Anything you’re doing that requires quiet strength or persistence

Write from a place of kindness and let your words remind you that unseen progress is still progress.

Receive one of my e-books free about ChakrasMeditation TipsInner Child or Skincare

If you want to join a meditation group, Soul Essence runs small groups. There are fortnightly online groups on Tuesday evenings and face to face groups on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday evenings.

From September, the monthly Friday morning meditations will be back at 11 am.

Contact Rosemary for more information.

The Art of Believing in What’s Still Possible

By Soul Essence, New Eltham, London, UK.

As we reach the middle of the year, it’s natural to reflect on what has — or hasn’t — happened so far. Maybe some of your plans have changed, or life didn’t unfold the way you thought it would. But here’s the beautiful truth: the story isn’t over yet. There is still time, still hope, and still space for possibility.

Believing in what’s still possible is an art — one that takes patience, trust, and a gentle kind of courage. It means holding onto hope, even when progress feels slow. It means allowing yourself to dream again, even if things didn’t go to plan the first time.

We often think we need to have it all figured out before we take a step forward. But sometimes, all we need is a little belief — the kind that whispers, “Maybe it could still happen” or “Let’s try again.”

Why Possibility Still Matters

Possibility keeps us open. It reminds us that change can happen, that new paths can appear, and that growth can come from the most unexpected places. It gives us a reason to keep going, not with pressure, but with gentle purpose.

No matter what your year has looked like so far, there’s still room for something meaningful to take shape. A project can still be started. A habit can still be built. A relationship can still grow. A dream can still be nurtured.

How to Believe in What’s Still Possible:

  • Let go of “shoulds.” You don’t need to be where others are. Your timeline is your own.
  • Revisit your dreams. What’s one thing you wanted this year that still lights you up inside?
  • Start small. A single action — one email, one walk, one new thought — can reignite your sense of direction.
  • Surround yourself with encouragement. Spend time with people, stories, or spaces that remind you of what’s possible.
  • Be kind to yourself. Belief doesn’t mean forcing a smile. It means allowing hope to sit gently beside your uncertainty.

A Gentle Reminder

Believing in what’s still possible isn’t about blind optimism. It’s about choosing to trust that your future holds more than your past. It’s about giving yourself permission to keep hoping, even quietly.

So if you’ve been feeling stuck, behind, or unsure, let this July be a turning point. You don’t need to rush. Just take one small step back towards belief.

What you want may still be possible. Who you want to become is still unfolding. There is more life ahead, more joy to feel, more lessons to learn.

Stay open. Stay kind. And most of all, stay curious about what might still be waiting for you.

📝 Journaling Prompt:

What is one hope, goal, or dream I still hold in my heart — even quietly — that I would like to give more attention to this month?

You might explore:

  • Why this matters to you
  • What small step could you take toward it
  • What might be possible if you trusted in your ability to grow and begin again

Write without judgment — this is a space for honesty and gentle curiosity.

Receive one of my e-books free about ChakrasMeditation TipsInner Child or Skincare

If you want to join a meditation group, Soul Essence runs small groups. There are fortnightly online groups on Tuesday evenings and face to face groups on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday evenings.

From September, the monthly Friday morning meditations will be back at 11 am.

Contact Rosemary for more information.

Soul Essence Newsletter July 2025

By Soul Essence, New Eltham, London, UK.

July has arrived; go forth and thrive!

This month’s meditations will help you cultivate trust in life and reawaken possibilities.

Meditation dates:

Tuesdays online via Zoom @ 7:30 pm. 22nd July, 12th and 26th Aug.

Wednesday’s face-to-face @ 8 pm. 2nd July, 13th and 27th Aug.

Wednesday meditations will always be on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday of the month.

Friday morning Meditations will return in September on the 4th Friday of the month at 11 am.

Contact Rosemary for information or to book any therapy sessions.

More information on the therapies I do can be found on my website.

If starting meditation was one of your goals for 2025, Soul Essence runs small groups. Contact Rosemary for dates and information. There are fortnightly online groups on Tuesday evenings and fortnightly face to face groups on Wednesday evenings.

Article for the month………..

🌞 July Joy: Celebrating Progress and Possibility

As the golden days of July stretch before us, there’s a special kind of energy in the air — one that hums with warmth, momentum, and quiet transformation. July is often a turning point in the year: halfway through, yet still brimming with potential. It’s a perfect moment to pause, reflect on how far we’ve come, and gently realign with the possibilities still ahead.

🌱 The Mid-Year Mirror: Reflecting on Progress

Too often, we barrel through the months, measuring success only by major milestones. But progress often wears a quieter face. Perhaps it’s a habit you’ve consistently kept up, a fear you’ve faced, or a lesson that finally clicked. July invites us to celebrate these small, soulful victories.

Take a moment to look back at the first half of the year. What surprised you? What strengthened you? What shifted within? Even amidst uncertainty or slow seasons, there is growth happening — in our thoughts, our actions, and our resilience.

🌈 Possibility in Bloom

With summer in full swing, July also brings renewal — a chance to reignite goals, dream boldly, and stretch gently beyond comfort zones. Whether you’re building something new, rediscovering an old passion, or simply making space to breathe, the possibilities are abundant.

July joy isn’t just about sunshine and socialising (though those certainly help!). It’s about embracing life’s evolving journey — knowing that every step forward, no matter how small, is worth celebrating.

🔆 Your Invitation

This month, give yourself permission to feel proud. Honour your progress without judgement. Celebrate not just where you’re going, but how you’ve grown.

And as you move through the month, ask yourself:

  • What am I proud of so far this year?
  • What possibility feels exciting to explore next?
  • How can I bring more joy into my everyday moments?

July reminds us that joy and growth are not separate paths — they walk hand in hand. Let’s celebrate both.

Here’s to your July joy — and all the progress and possibility it holds.

With warmth and encouragement.

Receive one of my e-books free about ChakrasMeditation TipsInner Child or Skincare

If you want to join a meditation group, Soul Essence runs small groups. There are fortnightly online groups on Tuesday evenings and face-to-face groups on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday evenings.

Friday morning Meditations will return in September on the 4th Friday of the month at 11 am.

Contact Rosemary for more information