5 Gentle Ways to Live Slowly This Winter Season
January 5, 2026

Every winter season, around the same time, I start wondering if something is wrong with me.
I want to go to bed earlier.
I cancel plans more often.
I feel quieter, slower, less interested in being “on.”
For a long time, I thought this meant I was unmotivated, lazy or just bad at winter.
But eventually, I realized:
Winter isn’t about keeping up. It’s telling me to slow the heck down.

IN THIS ARTICLE
What If Winter Isn’t the Problem?
We live in a culture that treats winter like an inconvenience — something to endure until life can start again.
But when you look at nature, winter is doing exactly what it’s meant to do.
Trees aren’t failing because they aren’t blooming.
They’re resting.
And we’re allowed to rest too.
Seasonal living in winter is really just the practice of letting yourself live differently when the days are darker and quieter — without judging yourself for it.

The Winter Shift I’m Loving
This winter has been the first season where I’ve intentionally made new habits feel familiar — not in the “speed demon” way that used to send me reaching for my phone and forcing productivity, but in a calmer, more grounded way that supports slow living and winter wellness.
Every evening, I turn off the bright overhead lights, light a lamp, make a mug of tea, and sit down without doing anything else.
I know, I know… it’s not life-changing, but man, does it feel good.
My body relaxes in a way it hasn’t all day.
Now, I do this almost every night in winter—not because it’s a routine, but because my nervous system recognizes the repetition.
It’s like saying, “You’re safe. You can slow down now.”
What Winter Seasonal Living Actually Looks Like
It’s not complicated. And I’m definitely not living an aesthetic lifestyle.
For me, winter seasonal living means:
- Eating warmer, heartier meals because my body craves them
- Going to bed earlier without explaining myself to anyone, which I normally fall asleep on my husband while he’s up later lol
- Saying no to plans that feel like too much
- Letting my creativity rest instead of forcing output
- Spending more evenings at home — and actually enjoying them
Winter seasonal living isn’t just about doing less for the sake of slow living — it’s about doing what makes sense, what actually feels good.

A Simple Framework I’ll Come Back to Every Winter Season
When winter feels overwhelming, I try to come back to these five things:
1. Warmth
Warm food. Warm lighting. Warm clothing. Warm conversations.
If something feels cold or draining, winter is your cue to soften it.
2. Less
Fewer plans. Fewer inputs. Fewer expectations.
Winter doesn’t need more — it needs space.
3. Gentle Rhythm
Later mornings when possible. Slower evenings. Built-in pauses.
Not strict routines — just listening to your energy.
4. Looking Inward
Journaling. Thinking. Remembering.
Winter is for reflection, not rushing toward answers.
5. Rest Without Earning It
This one’s hard, but important.
You don’t have to prove anything to deserve rest in winter.

Winter Wellness Isn’t Loud
Winter self-care isn’t about huge transformations — it’s about small, steady ways of taking care of yourself.
It looks like:
- Stretching instead of intense workouts
- Warm soup instead of smoothies
- Canceling plans instead of powering through
- Feeling more emotional — and letting that be okay
If winter makes you quieter, that doesn’t mean you’re disappearing.
It means you’re turning inward, like everything else in nature. And I’m pretty sure that’s completely normal.
A Little List to Save for Later
When the winter season feels like too much, I come back to this:
- Dim the lights
- Eat something warm
- Go to bed earlier
- Cancel one, two or three unnecessary things
- Sit and just relax without distraction for a few minutes
- Remind yourself that this season won’t last forever
That’s it. That’s the reset.
The Thing I Wish Someone Had Told Me Sooner
The winter season isn’t asking you to fix yourself.
It’s telling you…
To move slower.
To expect less.
To trust that rest is part of the cycle — not a detour from it.
And when the light returns in the spring, you’ll feel it — the kind of feeling that reminds you you made it through, even if you can’t quite name why.

Seasonal Living:
Aligning Life with the 4 Natural Cycles of the Year
Seasonal living is about honoring the natural rhythms of the year—renewing in spring, expanding in summer, grounding in fall, and resting in winter. When we align our energy and habits with these four cycles, life feels more balanced, intentional, and sustainable.
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