🌑 When the Soul Says “Enough”
Theme: Release & Letting Go | Weekly Focus: Cutting the Cords | Sanskrit Word: Moksha (मोक्ष) — Liberation
🌙 The Threshold of “Enough”
There’s a moment in every soul’s journey when you stop negotiating with your own pain.
You stop asking, “How much more can I handle?”
And instead whisper, “Enough.”
It’s not dramatic. It’s not the big cinematic ending our minds expect.
It’s quiet — a slow unclenching.
A sigh that says, I’m done holding what isn’t mine.
That’s Moksha.
Not a victory march, but a sacred surrender.
Not escape, but the deep relief of finally putting the sword down.
🔮 The Breaking Point as a Beginning
I’ve hit that moment more than once. The day I walked away from the marriage that was eating me alive. The day I realized I couldn’t keep trying to fix people who didn’t want to heal. The day I looked at the reflection of DiAnna — survivor, daughter, caretaker — and said, “You can rest now. I’ve got this.”
When the soul says “enough,” it’s not weakness.
It’s wisdom.
It’s the realization that we are not meant to live in perpetual battle.
Even warriors lay down their weapons to look at the sunrise.
That breaking point isn’t failure — it’s the opening through which light enters.
🌕 The Myth of Endless Strength
The world romanticizes resilience — the grind, the hustle, the constant push.
We’re taught to wear exhaustion like a badge of honor.
But true strength isn’t in how tightly we hold on.
It’s in how gracefully we let go.
Yoga teaches this every time we step onto the mat.
The inhale gathers, the exhale releases.
The muscles engage, and then they soften.
Every pose, every breath, is a practice in surrender.
Witchcraft teaches it, too — that every spell, once cast, must be released into the universe to manifest. Holding on too tightly strangles the magick.
So why do we think life works any differently?
🪶 The Beauty of the Ending
The endings we resist most are often the ones that free us.
But our human hearts grieve even the necessary losses.
We grieve the comfort of the familiar, even when it hurt.
To practice Moksha is to honor that grief and still choose freedom.
To say:
“This chapter served its purpose.
I bless it, release it, and step forward with love.”
Letting go doesn’t mean we stop caring.
It means we stop carrying.
The soul doesn’t want perfection. It wants peace.
🌬 A Simple Spell for Surrender
Tonight, take a single piece of paper.
Write the word ENOUGH across the top.
Below it, list the things your soul is tired of carrying — expectations, old fears, obligations, self-blame.
When you’re done, fold it once, twice, three times.
Hold it to your heart and whisper:
“I release you. I thank you. I am free.”
Then burn it safely, letting the smoke rise like prayer.
Watch the ashes drift — that’s what letting go looks like.
🌕 The Quiet After
The space that comes after “enough” can feel strange — too quiet, too empty.
But in that emptiness is the hum of rebirth.
The universe rushes to fill the vacuum we create with something new — peace, creativity, love, expansion.
The soul always rewards surrender.
That’s the paradox of Moksha:
When we finally stop grasping, everything we’ve been chasing finds its way home.
Affirmation:
“I honor the endings that bring me peace.
I release with love, and I rise lighter than before.”
With love, always — from my altar to yours,
🌙 Di the Yoga Witch
#Moksha #ReleaseAndLetGo #SacredSpiralFlow #CutTheCords #YogaWithDiLynn #DiTheYogaWitch


