Thereās something about waking up to rain that makes everything feel slowerāsofter, even. The sound of it tapping on the windows, the sky pulling a blanket of gray over the world like itās telling us all to just pause for a second. On sunny days, thereās a kind of pressure to be out, to be social, to do something that looks like a movie montage. But on rainy mornings? The rules change.


I stayed in bed longer this morning, just listening. No sun blaring through the blinds, no rush. It felt like permission to move gently. No hurry to perform, no obligation to āmake the mostā of the day.
Thereās this underrated magic in rainy days: you donāt have to be chipper or charming. You can be thoughtful, or tired, or quiet. You can wear socks that donāt match and eat soup for breakfast. You can listen to sad songs and not explain why. You can cry a little and it feels like the world is crying with youāor better, for you.
And honestly? Some of my favorite walks happen on rainy days. Not the freezing, torrential kindābut those mild, steady-rain days that feel like the worldās been muffled. I have a select rotation of rain jackets and boots (yes, thereās a system), and something about putting them on feels like an intentional little ritual. It makes stepping outside in the rain feel like a choice, not a chore. Like Iām part of the weather instead of avoiding it.
Rainy days feel like a reset. Like a soft space in between the hustle. They let you rest without guilt. Create without pressure. Breathe without performance.
So yeah, Iām kind of a fan. Not of storms or floods or dramatic weather eventsājust the plain, slow, steady kind of rain. The kind that hushes the world for a bit. The kind that reminds you that sometimes the best thing you can do is nothing at all. Or maybe just go for a walk in your favorite raincoat.
