Recently, I had a cold that lasted just over a week. It was objectively just a head cold and a few days of DayQuil/Nyquil got me through it. Nevertheless, this minor cold contracted my world. It threw off my sleep schedule, my appetite, and my workout routine. My thoughts and steps slowed to the small stretch between my couch and the kitchen. It was a quiet and strangely peaceful week. It made me realize how often we take our health for granted and reminded me to place health back at the top of what matters most.
I used to see these periods as setbacks. They felt like pauses between the real chapters of life. Over time, I’ve come to see them differently. They represent an opportunity for us to reevaluate our priorities and help to show us what matters most. Health, our families, and our communities suddenly feel a little closer to the center of life than they did before we were knocked off step by illness or disruption.
Time seems to slow to a crawl during these stretches. You might feel as if you’re moving through your day underwater, dragging through your usual tasks. This is to be expected. Life rarely pauses when you need it to, but you can step back, call out from work, and cancel your evening plans. You will probably notice that gratitude for health is highest when you’re unhealthy. I imagine the same goes for wealth when you’re un‑wealthy.
Nature offers the same reminder. Trees shed their leaves before winter out of preparation, not exhaustion. What looks like loss is required maintenance and storing of energy for the next season of growth. Stillness is often an essential stage of a successful strategy that leads to progress.
Think about a time when your life grew smaller. Maybe it was through illness, transition, or loss. What did you notice when the unnecessary fell away? When life’s layers peel back like an onion, we find that the core is simpler and far more essential than we imagined.