You Don’t Have To Rescue Sadness
You Don’t Have To Rescue Sadness There is a reflex many of us carry that we rarely question. When sadness shows up, we treat it like an emergency. We grab tools. We search for meaning too quickly. We try to correct it, reframe it, outrun it, or bury it beneath productivity. Somewhere along the way we learned that sadness is a problem that needs solving. It is not. Sadness is not a fire that must be extinguished. It is not a character flaw. It is not evidence that you are ungrateful, weak, or regressing. Sadness is information. And information is meant to be understood, not attacked. Before going further, something needs to be said clearly. Clinical depression, prolonged despair, and trauma related dysregulation are not the same as adaptive sadness. When mood becomes pervasive, impairing, and disconnected from specific events, that is not simply feeling sad. That is something that d...