Bottom Line Up Front
You’ve outgrown the lie that productivity equals peace. What your nervous system actually craves isn’t more structure or more discipline — it’s play. And not the scheduled, adult-performative version… but the joyful, soul-awakening kind. Play is one of the most powerful regulators of stress, creativity, and emotional resilience you have access to — and here’s how to reclaim it.
If you had told me ten years ago that play would become one of my greatest tools for nervous-system regulation, creativity, and leadership… I would have laughed, closed my laptop, and returned to color-coding my Google calendar.
Back then, my life was all deadlines and diapers. Court filings, toddlers, a husband who worked long hours, and a law practice that felt like quicksand. Play was a luxury I didn’t have time for.
Somewhere along the way, I absorbed this belief that being a “grown-up” meant being serious, efficient, composed.
That play was childish or irresponsible. That productivity equaled worth.
But here’s what actually happened…
- The more “productive” I became, the more brittle I felt.
- The more efficient I was, the less alive I became.
- The more I optimized my time, the less I enjoyed my life.
And I see this same pattern in most high-capacity woman I coach — brilliant women doing all the “right things,” yet feeling more anxious, rushed, and disconnected than ever.
Rediscovering play is a reclaiming.
A reclaiming of something your nervous system was designed for.
A reclaiming of something your soul is starving for.
A reclaiming of joy for no reason.
Reason #1: Play Broadens Your Possibilities
Stress shrinks the mind. Literally.
When you’re overwhelmed, your amygdala takes over. Your prefrontal cortex — the part of your brain responsible for strategic thinking, intuition, and creative problem-solving — goes offline.
That’s why everything feels binary in stress:
- fight or flee
- push or collapse
- perfection or chaos
But play interrupts that pattern.
Play opens your mind.
Play expands perspective.
Play activates dopamine pathways that increase curiosity, flexibility, and motivation.
Think about where your best ideas come from:
In the shower.
On a walk.
Laughing with your kids.
Dancing in your kitchen.
Not hunched over your laptop at midnight.
Play is what gives you back your imaginative bandwidth.
Reason #2: Play Is the Natural Antidote to Stress
Your nervous system cannot tell the difference between:
• a tiger
• a Slack notification
• a screaming toddler
• your internal “Do more” monologue
Stress is stress.
And when you live in chronic vigilance — rushing, performing, hustling — your body is in a low-grade survival state.
Cortisol rises.
Breathing shortens.
Muscles tense.
You stay “on” long after the moment has passed.
Play disrupts that cycle.
Play signals safety.
Play releases tension.
Play activates the social engagement branch of your vagus nerve — the part of your system that tells your body, we are safe, we can soften.
MRI studies show that play decreases amygdala reactivity and increases activity in the hippocampus — improving learning, memory, and emotional regulation.
Translation:
You are literally smarter, calmer, and more grounded when you play.
Reason #3: Play Enhances Executive Function (Which Makes You Better at Everything You Care About)
Executive function is your adult superpower.
Planning.
Prioritizing.
Decision-making.
Initiating.
Delegating.
Problem-solving.
And play strengthens it.
During play, your brain activates both the prefrontal cortex (strategy) and the default mode network (creativity) at the same time.
This is the neurobiological sweet spot for innovation and leadership.
Especially for women navigating careers, parenting, marriage, home, and emotional labor — you need flexible cognition, not rigid perfectionism.
Play expands your capacity to lead yourself well.
Play makes you more resilient and less reactive.
Play softens the edges and restores the essence of you.
Your Invitation This Week
Mine your past for play memories.
What made time dissolve when you were a child?
Rollerblading? Dancing? Storytelling? Drawing? Singing? Creating games?
Recreate a sliver of it.
Just 5%.
- Dance in your kitchen.
- Color with your kids.
- Play a song you loved.
- Do something pointless on purpose.
Let it feel free, fun, and entirely yours.
Watch what happens in your mood… your relationships… your capacity.
Play isn’t the enemy of productivity — it’s the foundation of it.
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