There's a particular kind of tiredness that doesn't come from doing too little. It comes from holding too much — too many open tabs in your mind, too many half-made decisions, too many quiet expectations you never agreed to.
Most of us try to solve that feeling by pushing harder. We make another list. We download another app. We promise ourselves we'll figure it all out this weekend. And for a moment, the motion feels like progress.
But clarity isn't something you force. It's something you allow.
Start by naming the noise
Before you reorganize your whole life, simply notice what's actually loud right now. Not everything that's unfinished — only what keeps tugging at your attention. When you name the noise, it stops being a vague cloud and becomes something you can look at directly.
Try this: write down every thought that's circling, without sorting or judging it. The goal isn't a to-do list — it's a release valve. Most overwhelm is just unspoken thoughts competing for the same small space.
Make space before making decisions
Clarity needs room. A walk without your phone. Ten minutes with tea and no agenda. A single deep breath before you reach for your inbox. These aren't indulgences — they're the conditions under which your own wisdom becomes audible again.