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The War Is Over — Teaching the Body to Stand Down

There comes a day when you realize the battle ended, but your body didn’t get the memo. The sounds are gone, yet the flinch remains. You wake up braced for a blow that never lands, rehearsing defenses for a fight that no longer exists. Hypervigilance masquerades as protection, but it’s really exhaustion wearing armor.

Healing doesn’t erase memory; it reassigns purpose. The same strength that kept you alive now learns to keep you well. Today is not about forgetting what happened. It’s about telling your nervous system the truth: you are safe enough to rest. Safety isn’t a feeling at first; it’s a practice that slowly becomes one.

So we trade watchtowers for windows. We trade scanning the horizon for noticing the light in the room. We give the soldier inside of us a new assignment—hold peace, not positions. The discipline now is gentleness, the weapon is breath, and the victory is softness.

If your shoulders rise when the room goes quiet, place a hand on your heart and answer your body back: “It’s over. I made it.” Repeat it until your muscles believe you. Peace doesn’t shout; it keeps showing up until you recognize its voice.

Today’s Action Step (3–4 minutes)

  1. Stand-down breath: Inhale for 4, hold 2, exhale for 6 — repeat 4 cycles.
  2. Release scan: Unclench jaw → drop shoulders → open hands. Whisper, “The war is over.”
  3. Choose one softness ritual: warm tea, a short walk in daylight, or 5 quiet minutes by a window. Protect it on your calendar.
Cinematic Blaxploitation-style still of a Black couple sheltering as explosions fade—a metaphor that the war is over and peace is returning.