The Healing Power of Letting Love In 💛


The Healing Power of Letting Love In

Why receiving is just as important as giving

This week, I found myself feeling strangely closed off to love. It wasn’t anything dramatic — no huge fight or heartbreak — but rather a quiet noticing: when my partner tried to do something sweet for me, I brushed it off or overexplained why it wasn’t necessary. I realized I wasn’t just resisting his gestures, I was resisting receiving love itself.

It made me pause. I thought about how, in healing, we often focus on giving — giving energy, giving care, giving effort — but receiving is just as sacred. For me, this week’s lesson came in recognizing that receiving is an act of trust. It means saying, “I am worthy.” And it turns out, I was forgetting to say that to myself.


What This Means in Practice

Receiving love is a practice just like breathing or movement. Our nervous system is wired to protect us, so sometimes we unconsciously resist it to avoid vulnerability. But healing grows in the space where giving meets receiving.

When we open ourselves to receive, we complete a cycle. Giving becomes sustainable. Our body and mind learn that we are safe. And we begin to rewire not just our relationships — but our relationship to ourselves.

Here’s why it matters:

  • For you: When you allow yourself to receive, you affirm your own worthiness. It rewires the nervous system to feel safe, easing stress and supporting emotional regulation. Studies show that openness to receiving love can lower cortisol levels, improve immune function, and reduce inflammation. Your body literally thrives when you feel safe enough to receive.
  • For your relationships: Receiving changes the dynamic. If we can accept love without guilt or over-explaining, we create a flow of connection that deepens intimacy. It invites others to give more freely, because they feel their love is wanted and valued.
  • For collective healing: When one person learns to receive love, it ripples outward. We model vulnerability and worthiness, inviting others to do the same. It becomes a subtle but powerful way to shift the culture around connection and care.

Try this:

Tonight, before bed, think of one moment someone gave you love — even something small, like making you coffee or sending a kind message. Close your eyes and let yourself fully receive it. No explaining. No justifying. Just receiving.


Wishing you a nourishing week,

Zoe

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