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🔗 Affiliate Disclosure
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Why You Need to Slow Down
The Science of PacingI used to think that “slowing down” meant doing nothing. It doesn’t. It means moving at a speed that doesn’t break your soul. I learned this the hard way after trying to “biohack” my way out of exhaustion with $400 supplements that did nothing. Real healing started when I finally accepted that I was “so ambitious for a juvenile,” even at 36. 💡 Pro Tip Set a “musical boundary” by playing one specific Billy Joel song before opening your email. It acts as a Pavlovian signal to your brain to stay calm. //www.nourishedlivingtoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/billy_joel_7.webp” alt=”billy joel – relevant illustration” />
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Facing “The Stranger”Shedding the Corporate Mask
| The Price of Authenticity
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Key Takeaways
Facing “The Stranger”Feature
15 minutes of active singing per day.
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During your commute or while prepping dinner.
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Worrying about being on key. The healing comes from the vibration
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The Awareness Phase. Listen to The Stranger from start to finish twice. Notice which lyrics make your chest tighten. That’s where your work is.
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The Somatic Phase. Incorporate singing. Choose one “belt-able” song (mine was “Scenes from an Italian Restaurant”) and sing it daily.
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The Movement Phase. Walk along the beach or a park while listening to An Innocent Man. Let the 50s-style rhythms dictate your pace.
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The Integration Phase. Write down three things you’ve learned about your “stranger” (the hidden you).
I used to think that quote was just a romantic sentiment. Now, I see it as a mandate for self-compassion. In a world that constantly tells us we need to be thinner, richer, and faster, Billy reminds us that we are enough. Sometimes the simplest solution—a needle on a record, a familiar melody, and a moment of stillness—is the one staring you in the face. ✅ Key Takeaways
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