By Mindfully Modern
There’s a version of this year where you handle everything.
You meal prep on Sunday. You answer emails at 11pm. You say yes when you mean no because you don’t want to seem difficult. You’re tired — genuinely, bone-deep tired — but tired has started to feel like proof that you’re doing enough.
That’s not strength. That’s survival. And a lot of us have been calling it productivity.
The soft life is the antidote to that story — and before you scroll past thinking it’s a TikTok trend for people who don’t have bills, stay with me for a second. Because the soft life isn’t about luxury. It’s not about aesthetics or linen sheets or pretending rent isn’t real. It’s about building a life that doesn’t require you to white-knuckle your way through every single day.
What the Soft Life Actually Means
The phrase started gaining traction in Black women’s communities, particularly on Nigerian Twitter, as a direct rejection of struggle culture. The idea was radical and simple at the same time: you don’t have to earn rest. Rest isn’t a reward for suffering. Ease is allowed.
What that looks like in real life is less Instagram and more ordinary. It’s deciding that you don’t have to attend every meeting that could’ve been an email. It’s cooking something easy on a Tuesday because you’re tired, without the guilt spiral. It’s creating enough white space in your week that you can actually think — and then act from that clarity instead of reacting from exhaustion.
It is, at its core, a boundary practice. And boundaries, if we’re honest, are still deeply countercultural for women.
Why Busy Women Resist It
Here’s something worth naming: most women who intellectually understand they need more rest and less hustle feel genuinely uncomfortable taking it.
Because what happens when you stop being busy? What does it say about you? If you’re not running at 80%, are you even trying?
This is what doesn’t get talked about enough in the soft life conversation: visible productivity has become a stand-in for self-worth. If I’m not visibly working hard, am I even valuable? That question is exhausting before you’ve even gotten out of bed.
The shift isn’t just behavioral. It’s a belief shift. You have to genuinely begin to believe — not just intellectually accept, but actually feel — that you are worth caring for even when you’re not producing anything.
That sounds simple. It is not simple. It’s some of the most significant inner work a woman can do.
Where to Start (Without Overhauling Your Life)
The soft life doesn’t begin with a spa weekend. It starts with smaller, more honest choices.
Stop glorifying the overscheduled. When someone asks how you’re doing and “busy” is the first word out of your mouth, notice that. Busy has become a social currency, and we’re all a little addicted to it. You don’t have to perform exhaustion to prove you matter.
Create at least one daily buffer. One pocket of time that isn’t spoken for. Not a task. Not a call. Not content you need to consume. Just a gap — even twenty minutes where nothing is required of you. This is the soil the soft life grows in.
Start asking what you can let go of, not add. Most wellness advice points you toward adding something: a new habit, a new routine, a new app. But the soft life often lives on the other side of subtraction. What responsibility or standard are you holding onto that isn’t really yours to carry?
Let ease be a metric. Instead of measuring your days only by how much you got done, try occasionally measuring by how you felt moving through them. Just to check in.
If you want to go deeper on all of this — the mindset work, the practical tools, the honest conversation about what choosing softness actually costs and what it gives back — I’ve built out a dedicated Soft Life Hub that’s worth bookmarking.
The Part Nobody Talks About
Here’s what I’ve learned from actually living this, not just writing about it: the hard part isn’t the naps or the slower mornings. The hard part is the guilt. The nagging voice that says you should be doing more. The comparison to women who seem to hustle endlessly without cracking.
I wrote a candid piece about the truths I learned from a season of extreme softness — the things I didn’t expect, the ways it pushed back on me, and what actually changed on the other side. If you’re skeptical or if you’ve tried to slow down and felt worse, not better, that post is for you.
The Permission Slip You Didn’t Know You Needed
You are allowed to want a life that feels good to live in. Not just a life that looks good from the outside. Not just a life where you’ve checked every box and survived every season. An actual, daily, felt experience of this being worth it.
That’s what the soft life is pointing at. Not ease as an escape from your responsibilities, but ease as the ground you stand on while you meet them.
You don’t have to earn the right to feel okay. You already have it.
Start there.
Bio: Mindfully Modern (mindfullymodern.blog) is a blog about building a quieter, more intentional life in a loud, overstimulating world — for women who are done performing okay and ready to actually be it.