restful productivity to live deliberately & avoid overwhelm

From Mental Fog to Focus – Making Space for Clarity

Mental fog isn’t failure. It’s a signal. A chance to slow down, make space, and remember what really matters.


So many of us are overcome with mental fog on a regular basis that it has become the new normal.

When did we all agree that adult life would mean being stressed out, pushed to the limits financially, having no downtime, and surrounded by people but feeling so alone?

Mental fog creeps when we have no room for margin. It overwhelms us with all the tasks and settles in our minds when we no longer have time for hobbies, connection, or fun.

We go from full speed to sick on the couch and then shame ourselves for not doing enough.

The fog invades when we are being pulled in too many directions, or trying to please too many people.

It surrounds us when our best is never going to satisfy the standards that have been set.

photo credit: Jason Paige

I believe that small changes can move us forward without the pressure of perfection. I wrote a whole book on it actually, Subtle Resistance – practical tips to live deliberately & avoid overwhelm.

I know that we can find clarity and focus one small step at time.

A big piece of clearing the mental fog is making space for what truly matters to us. Not so that we can go faster and be machines, but so we can slow down and enjoy what is in front of us.

Clearing the fog isn’t about becoming more productive, it’s about becoming more present.

When we make space for rest, creativity, and honest connection, we begin to remember who we are underneath all the noise.

Sometimes it looks like:

  • saying no without guilt
  • doing one thing at a time
  • turning off the constant input so we can hear our own thoughts again
  • making space for hobbies we enjoy just because
  • going to bed earlier instead of pushing through
  • making eye contact and really listening
  • choosing a slower route on purpose
  • writing down your thoughts instead of carrying them all inside
  • protecting your weekend like it matters (because it does)
  • embracing quiet moments without trying to fill them

What’s one small change that might help you step out of the fog today?

You don’t have to fix everything at once. You just need to notice what’s weighing you down and give yourself permission to try something different.

reflection questions:
What activities leave me feeling more clear-minded, not more drained?
When do I feel most connected to myself?
What have I stopped doing that used to bring me joy?

a road with trees on the side
Photo by Olena Zolotukhina on Unsplash

You don’t have to keep pushing through the fog.

You can pause.

You can listen.

Where in your life are you craving more breathing room?
What does “enough” look like for you right now?

Start there.


New to this space? Here’s a quick intro.

Hello! My name is April Edwards.

I write for the quietly overwhelmed, for those feeling like adulting is just one long To-Do list, and anyone feeling frustrated with hustle culture.

I love getting to the heart of what needs to change and then creating simple, practical tips that make an impact. (Often with free PDFs)

I write on Substack at Embracing Home and my book Subtle Resistance – practical tips to live deliberately & avoid overwhelm is now available.

Welcome! 💙


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