What It Feels Like to Stay

Silhouetted figure standing beneath full moon against teal sky, representing solitude and the contemplative practice of staying present with emotions

It feels like both nothing and everything.
Like silence with weight in it.
Like being in your own body without armor.
Like standing barefoot on the floor of your life and realizing the ground is solid, even if you’re shaking.

To stay, really stay…
means you stop managing the feeling and start letting it be what it is.
Not to wallow.
Not to dramatize.
Just to be with it.

To stay is to notice the tightness in your throat and not clear it away.
To feel the grief behind your eyes and not blink it back.
To sense the rising panic and not reach for distraction, not reach for productivity, not reach for performance.

Presence doesn’t mean peace.
It means contact.

It means you stop telling the story about the emotion and make space for the emotion itself.

It might ache.
It might crack something open.
It might feel like too much for three seconds and then, strangely, …okay.

Because staying doesn’t trap the feeling.
It lets it move.

When you stay, you start to learn that emotions aren’t dangerous.
They’re just visitors.
Some loud.
Some quiet.
Some so old they don’t even know what year it is.

And you, the one who’s noticing become the safe place they land.

That’s what presence does.
It says, “I see you. I can hold this. You don’t have to leave.”

And sometimes, that’s all that part of you ever needed.
Not to be healed.
Just to not be sent away again.
That’s what it feels like to stay.

Not a breakthrough.
Not a fix.
Just the slow recognition that what’s here is allowed to be here.

And you are, too.

Embracing Shadows, Illuminating Hope,
Chelsey Fjeldheim, LCSW
Empowering Souls on the Path of Healing

Copyright © 2025 Chelsey Fjeldheim, Courage Speaks Counseling

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