04 April, 2026

Becoming Warm Again

There is cold, and then there is New-York-waiting-for-the-above-ground-N-train-in-deepest-February cold.
 
Ah yes! Welcome back you vicious breeze! You have discovered the one gap in my coat! I hear your raspy whisper threaten: “You will never be warm again...” Y'all? I weathered the Polar Vortex of 2018 in Chicago (where it was -53ºF and colder in Chicago than on the surface of Mars), and I've been to Siberia, and this New York winter kicked my ass. So I would like to formally submit a complaint: hear ye hear ye, no human being is meant to stand on an open-air platform while the wind weaponizes itself against your femurs. 
 
I don’t care how cold it is in the Arctic Circle, Vladivostok or Fargo—are those people waiting for the bus? 
 
Because that’s what this winter felt like.
Not just meteorologically. Spiritually
Good ol' 2026. Making itself known. It's not enough that the world is at war, everything is unaffordable and the spine of America has been crushed beneath an orphaned mack truck no one can afford to drive because gas is $5 a gallon. 
No. We also had to have when-will-it-end winter whilst stuck on the 6 train. 
 
This was a winter of sub-zero temperatures, multiple snowstorms, and me, once again trying-and-failing to quit show business like a woman calmly exiting a casino before she sets her own wallet on fire. I called it a “dramatical sabbatical,” which sounds elegant and intentional, like I was sipping tea and reading Strinberg, but in reality? I was horizontal a lot, working, sure, reading books on trauma recovery and googling things like "how long does it take to emotionally stabilize after a lifetime of avoidance?"
 
All to say: I finally did (and remain "doing"), the trauma work. And not the chic, go-to-the-woods-for-a-retreat kind. I mean the kind where you sit inside things you have spent decades outrunning. The kind where your body (which has been quietly holding receipts since childhood) decides it’s time to present the bill. Dad, his parents, disordered eating, ulcerative colitis. All all all. All of it, apparently, has been living in my proverbial basement like emotionally charged raccoons, waiting for me to finally turn on the light. There was a lot of sitting and remembering. A lot of realizing that I had built an entire life around highly functioning.
 
And also—and I want to be clear about this—there were still, like, errands. Getting your shit together does not cancel your CVS obligations. You can be mid-epiphany about your childhood and still have to pick up a prescription and stand behind a man arguing about coupons. 
 
But something began to shift. Very slowly, like thawing. At first, it was physical. I realized one morning that I was not clenching my jaw. Then I noticed I could sit still without immediately reaching for an activity to "accomplish." Then—and this felt revolutionary—I took a full breath without it catching halfway through like a Windows 95 error. 
 
All to say: 
Warmth, I am learning, is not just temperature. 
It might just be your nervous system lowering its weapons, and the body deciding, at last, that it is not under siege.
I did not know, until this winter, how deeply unrested I have been for most of my life. How much of my productivity was powered not by inspiration, but by fear. Fear of stopping. Fear of feeling. Fear of what might catch up to me if I ever stood still long enough to let it.
And now, having stood still—truly still—I can say this:
Nothing caught up to me.
I caught up to myself.

Because when you emerge—and you do emerge—you are not the same person who went in.
You are warmer.
You are rested.
And perhaps most importantly, you are no longer estranged from yourself.
 
This is a kind of abundance that has nothing to do with money or accolades or even opportunity. 
It is the abundance of being present in your own life.
Of feeling your breath fully.
Of trusting your body again.
Of knowing that whatever comes next, you will meet it as yourself — not as a performance of yourself.
 
So here I am.
Standing on the edge of a season that feels, for the first time in a long time, not like something to survive—but something to live

If winter was the pulling back of the bow, then this moment is the breath just before release.
 
Not frantic.
Not forced.

Ready.
© hula seventy


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