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    Accepting What is.  This post is a foundation guide about accepting what is happening in your life right now & how acceptance gives you more power & less vulnerability.

    Person in a knitted sweater holding a chunky teal blanket, illustrating comfort and mind body connection, featured in an article by Tess Rene Coaching.

    Your body remembers what the mind forgets. This guide helps you reconnect with body-based practices.


    1.  Accepting What Is – A Foundation Guide

    Illustration of brain with electric energy, symbolising thought patterns, in article on acceptance and accepting what is present by Tess René Coaching.

    Your brain is wired for survival, awareness brings freedom.

    Accepting What Is can feel like one of the hardest lessons in life. We resist what’s happening because it doesn’t match our hopes, our plans, or our sense of fairness. Yet the more we resist reality, the more exhausted, anxious, and powerless we feel.

    “Acceptance does not mean liking it but meeting reality without the extra suffering of resistance.”

    This post is a cornerstone guide on accepting what is happening in your life right now. You’ll learn why your brain struggles with acceptance, how your emotions respond when you resist them, and how body-based practices create real change.

    Your body remembers what your mind forgets. That’s why we need more than just mental advice, we need nervous system practices that allow acceptance to live in our whole being.


    Accepting What Is and Unwanted Thoughts

    Woman holding her head in an office setting, used in an article by Tess René Coaching on accepting what is and calming unwanted thoughts

    Accepting what is begins with noticing how often the mind repeats negative thoughts.

    Your brain is not broken, it is wired for survival. That wiring explains why your mind replays painful memories (like of past rejection) and why unwanted thoughts stick.

    “Awareness creates freedom: when you see your thoughts for what they are, they lose their grip on you.”

    Why the Brain Replays the Past

    “How do I stop replaying the past?”

    If you pause to notice your inner dialogue, you’ll likely see far more critical or negative thoughts than positive ones. This is not a character flaw; it’s called the negative bias. The brain is built to spot what could go wrong because, for most of human history, survival depended on it.

    Missing a sunset wasn’t a threat. Missing a predator hiding in the bushes was. Your brain learned to overvalue what is dangerous and undervalue what is safe.

    The Tribal Roots of Negative Thinking

    Woman sitting at home with hand on forehead, included in an article by Tess René Coaching on tribal roots of negative thinking and accepting what is

    Our tribal brains are wired to overvalue danger, which makes accepting what is harder.

    For three million years, humans lived in tribal communities where belonging meant survival. Without the tribe, you could not gather food, build shelter, or defend yourself. Only in the last 12,000 years have we shifted into more independent living.

    This means your brain is still running on tribal software:

    • Am I safe?

    • Do I belong?

    • Will I be rejected?

    When you replay a conversation or obsess over a mistake, your nervous system is echoing an ancient fear: that exclusion equals death.

    Practising Compassion Toward Thoughts

    Before you judge yourself for negative thinking or chronic indecision, offer grace. These thoughts are ancient survival signals. They don’t define your worth, and they aren’t always relevant to your current reality.

    Give yourself compassion.  Allow the thought to come & leave again, realizing the perception of danger you feel is there for good reason but not based on your current reality.

    Rather than trying to “think positive,” practise allowing the thoughts to come and go. Notice them as passing clouds instead of commands you must follow.

    “What you resist will persist. What you allow can pass.”

    Acceptance doesn’t mean you agree with your thoughts it means you stop battling them. This frees your nervous system to rest and makes space for more creative responses.


    2.  Accepting What Is – Unwanted Emotions

    Gentle ocean waves symbolising emotions, in article on accepting what is by Tess René Coaching.

    Like waves, emotions will move through when you allow them.

    If thoughts are sticky, emotions can feel overwhelming. Many people fear that if they allow emotions, those emotions will consume them.

    “Emotions are not enemies. They are waves of energy that move through when we make space for them.”

    The Myth of Overwhelm

    We often believe: If I let myself feel sadness, it will never end. If I allow anger, it will explode. If I touch grief, I will drown in it.

    But emotions, by nature, are simply energy.  They rise and fall and are never permanent.

    When we make space in our bodies to feel & to allow emotion, it creates a sense of compassion for that emotion.  The feeling quiets down because it “feels heard.” We feel heard.  We learn how to be with emotion in a way that doesn’t take us completely out of our conscious minds.

    The way emotions last long is when we suppress or resist them. When we allow them, they pass quickly and with less intensity.

    The Science of Feeling

    Neuroscience shows that an emotion’s physiological wave often lasts about 90 seconds unless we keep fuelling it with thoughts. The body wants to process, but the mind recycles.

    “You can’t embrace reality if you’re still at war with yourself.”

    When we give our body space to feel, through breath, grounding, or gentle movement, the energy completes its cycle. What once felt unbearable becomes bearable.

    Accepting what is as a Path to Change

    Woman meditating with palms together, featured in an article by Tess René Coaching about accepting what is as a path to change

    Compassion and awareness open the door to change when we practise accepting what is.

    Many people worry: If I accept what I feel, won’t I get stuck here?

    The truth is the opposite. Fighting emotions creates stuck-ness. Allowing them creates movement. Change doesn’t come from hate; it comes from compassion.

    • You can’t shame yourself into healing.

    • You can’t bully yourself into joy.

    • You can’t reject yourself into growth.

    Accepting what is, especially your emotional state, is always the first step toward transformation.

    Takeaways

    1. We can’t hate or suffer ourselves into change.
      Real transformation begins with compassion. If we want to reach new goals or shift something within ourselves, we first need to allow  what is happening for us right now, not fuel the journey with self-criticism.

    2. Acceptance always comes before change.
      Growth happens when we learn to appreciate the parts of ourselves we like and begin to extend that same appreciation to the parts we usually reject.

    3. Forcing change is not sustainable.
      When we push ourselves forward out of dislike for where we are, we often end up burning out or slipping back into old patterns.

    4. Rejecting habits isn’t enough for long-term action.
      Simply wanting to remove a thought or behaviour because we dislike it rarely sustains change on its own.

    5. Sustainable change grows from love, not rejection.
      True, lasting transformation happens when we add something positive to ourselves, rather than trying to strip away what we dislike.


    Free Gift FOR DEEPER EMOTIONAL SUPPORT

    If your nervous system feels stuck in overdrive, you don’t have to figure this out alone.

    My free guide 7 Days of Regulationgives you simple, acceptance practices to let go of resistance, calm your body and build safety.

    Client testimonial featured in Tess René Coaching article on Accepting What Is, highlighting growth from fear to self-acceptance.

    Free download on calming the nervous system in an article by Tess Rene Coaching


    3.  Accepting What Is – Self-Compassion

    Person standing at ocean shore, symbolising solitude, accepting what is and self-compassion, in article on acceptance by Tess René Coaching.

    Self-compassion creates space to accept reality as it is.

    Self-compassion is the inner stance that allows you to stop fighting reality.

    “Compassion opens the door to acceptance; criticism keeps it locked.”

    It’s the moment you stop treating yourself as the enemy and begin relating to your experience with gentleness instead of judgment. Self-compassion tells your nervous system, “It’s safe to feel this. I don’t have to resist myself anymore.”

    This softening makes accepting what is possible because you can’t embrace reality if you’re still at war with yourself.

    Why We Resist Reality

    Many of us quietly think: “I fight reality all the time.” This fight shows up as:

    • Arguing with what has already happened.

    • Resisting what we feel in our body.

    • Demanding that life look different before we can rest.

    The paradox is that resistance doesn’t change anything—it only adds tension.

    What Self-Compassion Shifts

    When compassion enters, something opens. You realise you are more than this moment. What once felt like a tidal wave is now one ripple in a vast sea of experience.

    With compassion:

    • Your nervous system settles.

    • Your creative problem-solving increases.

    • Your sense of possibility expands.

    Self-compassion is not indulgence; it’s intelligence. It gives your system the safety to accept reality and respond with steadiness instead of panic.


    When You’re Tired of Going It Alone…
    Acceptance gets easier with the right support.

    Tess helped me calm my nervous system to find lasting change & focus again.” — Cindy S.


    4.  The Time Accepting What is Takes

    Hourglass on wooden table, symbolising patience and time, in article on acceptance by Tess René Coaching.

    Accepting what is takes time & patience and this allows change to unfold.

    Acceptance is not a one-time decision. It’s a practice that takes patience, repetition, and gentleness with yourself.

    “Discomfort in the beginning is not failure, it’s a sign that you’re learning a new way.”

    You don’t wake up one morning and suddenly master Acceptance. Instead, acceptance grows like a muscle  strengthened through small, repeated choices to meet reality as it unfolds.

    Why It Feels Wrong at First

    At first, acceptance feels uncomfortable. Your brain is used to resisting. Your body is used to bracing and emotions might intensify at first.

    Sitting with what is can feel wrong, even unsafe. But this is simply the nervous system learning something new.  Your new choices may feel awkward because your mind and body are used to fighting against what you don’t like.

    But with each repetition: each time you pause, soften, and let things be as they are, you create new pathways in your nervous system. Over time, the practice of acceptance becomes more natural, and with it comes a steadier sense of calm and trust in yourself.

    Releasing Expectations of Life

    Woman outdoors with arms wide open, placed in an article by Tess René Coaching on releasing expectations of life through accepting what is

    When we release expectations, we meet life with openness and strength.

    Many of us expect that if we work hard, life will reward us. When that doesn’t happen, we feel betrayed and blame ourselves. But outcomes are rarely in our control. What is in our control is how we show up in the process.

    When you shift your focus from outcome to presence, you begin to:

    • Find calm and moments of joy in the moment.

    • Take pride in your efforts.

    • Build resilience no matter what happens.

    Accepting what is as an Ongoing Practice

    Acceptance is not about giving up. It’s about choosing mindfulness and surrender again and again. Each time you practice, you carve a new groove in your nervous system that says: I can be safe here. I can live fully here.


    5. Letting go of how it should be

    Woman outside breathing deeply in sunlight, shown in an article by Tess René Coaching on letting go of how life should be and practising accepting what is

    Accepting what is grows easier when we release the grip on how life should be.

    Plans fall apart. Dreams shift. Life surprises us. The question is not whether this will happen, but how we meet it when it does.

    “The freedom of accepting what is comes from shifting focus from what’s fixed to what’s flexible.”

    Moving Beyond “Should Be”

    When things don’t go as planned, we often ask: “Why can’t I accept what I can’t change?”  The reason is expectation. We grip tightly to how we think it should be and fight when it isn’t that way.

    But what if, instead, you asked: What can I still influence?

    • Can I pivot toward a new goal?

    • Can I slow down the pace?

    • Can I meet the deeper need another way?

    Sometimes, a simple way of rephrasing the questions you ask creates more options.

    The Power of Flexibility

    When you loosen your grip on outcomes, something surprising happens:

    • You gain more influence over your emotional state.

    • The process becomes lighter and more enjoyable.

    • The present moment opens up, because your wellbeing is no longer chained to one outcome.

    This is the essence of acceptance: releasing control over what you cannot change and focusing on how you show up in what you can.


    Accepting What Is – Your Questions Answered

    Q1. Why is it so hard to accept what I can’t change?
    A. Resistance feels protective like if you fight reality, you’ll regain control. But resistance drains energy and traps you in stress. Accepting what is, without judgment, brings release and calm.

    Q2. How does acceptance help my nervous system? 
    A. Acceptance lowers the fight response. When you stop battling what’s happening, your body can shift into safety, lowering cortisol and calming your nervous system.


    Done With Doing It Alone…

    If you’ve read this far, you probably know acceptance isn’t easy especially when your body and mind feel at odds. That’s where support makes the difference. You don’t have to figure it out on your own.

    Tess helped me calm my nervous system and find lasting change.” — Christine S.


    Cheering you on,

    Cheering you on,

    Tess

    Tess

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