The Quiet Release of Control
Learning to let go of what was never mine to carry
The Library: Mini Blog Entry
February Read: The Let Them Theory – Mel Robbins
There’s something humbling about reading a book and recognizing yourself on almost every page. Not in a dramatic or shame-filled way, but in a quiet, honest way that makes you pause longer than you expected.
The Let Them Theory has been confronting me gently. It doesn’t accuse or condemn. It simply reveals — past versions of me, present habits I’m still unlearning, and a version of growth that suddenly feels within reach.
The message is deceptively simple: let them.
Let them misunderstand you. Let them leave. Let them think what they want. Let them choose what they choose.
And instead of spiraling, controlling, fixing, proving, or over-explaining — let me.
Let me choose peace. Let me redirect my energy. Let me stop auditioning for spaces I’ve already outgrown. Let me grow without resistance.
Five years ago, I might have agreed with this intellectually while quietly resisting it emotionally. I wasn’t ready to release control disguised as care. I still believed that managing outcomes was the same thing as loving well.
Now, it feels different.
This book doesn’t feel like instruction. It feels like confirmation — like God whispering, “You don’t have to hold everything together anymore.”
And maybe that’s what this season is really about.
With Love, Always - La O.
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