I thought it would be exhausting.
Nine hours of driving—
highway, traffic, Seoul streets.
But something unexpected happened.
I didn’t push through the day.
I just kept… shifting.
And somehow—
I didn’t feel tired.
Leaving
That morning,
I was already moving.
Packing a simple lunch.
Making cinnamon toast for my son.

The day started quietly, like this.
Before leaving,
I lay down.
Just five seconds.
Stretching my arms and legs,
turning slowly to one side, then the other.
My version of a reset.
Nothing big.
But something shifted.
The Road Opens
The highway stretched wide.
Sky, mountains, trees—
my chest opened with it.
No effort.
Just space.
A Small Pause
At a rest stop,
my son stayed in the car eating toast.
I stepped outside.
Walked a little.
Ate a simple rice ball I had packed.
Cool from the ice pack.
Strangely—
it tasted better that way.
Better than at home.
Something Felt Off
In Seoul,
I tried to find a café.
Too crowded.
Too tight.
I almost stayed anyway.
But I didn’t.
I walked out.
Ordered coffee to go.
And without thinking—
I drank it while walking.
Too fast.
Ten minutes.
Suddenly—
I felt drained.
Then I realized:
it wasn’t the coffee.
It was the speed.
A Real Shift
When I met my son again,
we didn’t quite connect.
A little friction.
Instead of fixing it—
I stopped.
Just for a moment—
a small pause I’ve come back to often.
There was a small walking path nearby.
I put on music.
Walked.
Took photos of trees, stones, light.

We reset separately.
Almost an hour passed.
And everything softened.
Noise
Back in the car,
stopped at a light in the city—
I noticed something.
So many signs.
Restaurants, words, colors.
And suddenly—
I felt tired.
My eyes were reading everything,
even though I had food with me.
My son?
He didn’t even look.
He had already decided.
I hadn’t.
That difference—
felt clear.
Another Shift
Near the highway entrance—
traffic.
Heavy. Stuck.
Instead of waiting—
I turned,
and entered a gas station.
Refueled,
used the restroom.
Came back out.
Lighter.
But—
still crowded.
So I turned again.
No plan.
A quiet road.
A U-turn.
Then left.
And suddenly—
I was on the highway.
No stress.
No effort.
Space Again
After the tollgate—
everything opened.
Sky. Trees. Air.
I was talking again.
Laughing.
Without trying.
The Best Stop
At a rest stop,
the parking lot was full.
Hot. Crowded.
Not appealing.
Then I saw it—
a quiet corner.
Shade. Wind.
I turned the wheel.
Parked there.
Nearby—
an empty dog park,
a tree with purple flowers,
soft moving air.
I thought about sitting at a busy table.
Didn’t want to.
So I stood there.
Ate quietly.
Cold, spicy cucumber salad—
crisp, fresh.
Better than at home.
Again.
Rhythm
On the way back,
my son fell asleep.
The road was steady.
100, 110.
Smooth.
Manual driving tells you the truth.
If you’re tired—
the car shows it.
But that day—
no jerks,
no tension.
Just rhythm.
Ending
Nine hours.
No exhaustion.
At home—
My husband said,
“You’re like a driving master.”
My son said,
“I’m tired.”
My daughter said,
“That must have been hard.”
I smiled.
“It wasn’t.”
Because all day—
I didn’t push.
I didn’t force.
I just kept… shifting.
You don’t need one big reset.
Sometimes—
small shifts
change everything.
Closing
A reset isn’t something you schedule.
It happens—
when you turn,
when you pause,
when you choose differently—
even for a moment.
And then again.
And again.
—
This is where it became clearer for me.


