Filed in Wellness

follow along
I'm Kathleen Huebner, a transformation mindset and wellness coach here to guide you on a journey of self-discovery and empowerment.
Welcome to the Blog
You know that feeling when you’re walking along and something tiny shifts in your shoe?
At first it’s just a little annoying. You think, I’ll deal with it in a minute. But then a minute becomes ten minutes, and ten minutes becomes an hour, and before you know it that tiny little pebble has worked its way into your heel and every single step hurts.
That’s what unresolved emotions do to us. And that’s what being around certain people can do to us. Has someone ever come up in conversation and something in your body just… tightens. Maybe something happened between you that you haven’t been able to fully let go of, no matter how much time has passed. Maybe you feel like they are just living in your head rent-free, and showing up in your thoughts at the most inconvenient times.
I first heard this metaphor at a seminar, where someone described anxiety as the pebble in your shoe. If you don’t address it, it only gets worse. And I thought — yes. That’s exactly it. Because like anyone else, I’ve had my share of pesky pebbles, and I know firsthand what it truly costs to ignore them.
So today I want to talk about what it actually feels like to carry one, why leaving it there is hurting you far more than you realize, and most importantly, what you can do to finally remove it for good.
Because what’s waiting for you on the other side of this work is inner peace. And you deserve nothing less than that.
When you’re holding unresolved tension with someone, it doesn’t just sit quietly in the background. It takes up energetic space in your body and your day.
The best way I can describe it is it genuinely feels heavy. You can tell you’re out of alignment. And you’re not at peace because you’re carrying that weight around everywhere you go. It holds you back, holds you down, and keeps you from opening up space for something bigger and better.
But the thing that most people don’t realize is that there are actually two kinds of pebbles, and knowing which one you’re dealing with matters.
The first kind is the mildly irritating pebble. This could be someone who just rubs you the wrong way, a situation that stings a little, or a comment that stuck with you longer than it should have. This kind of pebble you can usually work through on your own with some gratitude journaling and positive affirmations. All it needs is a little mindful attention, and it loosens on its own.
But the second kind is different. And that’s the deeply embedded pebble. This one has dug in. It lives in you like a lump in your stomach. You might not even think about it consciously all the time, but it’s there, no doubt. It shows up in your body, your reactions, and in the way you feel when that person’s name comes up. This one takes a little more intention and persistence to release.
If you’re not sure which one you’re dealing with, check in with your body.
Does it feel like a passing/fleeting irritation? Or does it feel like something you’ve been carrying for a long time that you just haven’t found a way to put down?
When you get quiet and really reflect, you’ll realize that your body already knows the answer.
I’ll be honest, I’ve tried to bury a pebble before. I told myself I was fine, moved on, kept going.
But eventually, it came back. And at that point, it was bigger and looked more like chaos.
And that’s what happens when we ignore what’s unresolved; it doesn’t disappear. It waits. And then it resurfaces at the worst possible moment, (usually when our defenses are down and we’re already running on low) with even more force than before.
What happens next is what I call the negative loop-spiral. You start replaying the recording on a loop in your head. You see their face, and you replay what they said, what they did, how it made you feel. And getting stuck in that loop is disorienting and exhausting.
Because until you deal with it, it just stays in you.
And the hard truth is, it’s not hurting them. They’re out there living their life, probably not thinking about it at all. You’re the one carrying it. You’re the only one paying the price for holding on.
Which also means you’re the one who has the power to put it down.
I know what you’re thinking…
Why would I want to send love and light to someone who hurt me?
I thought the exact same thing the first time I encountered this practice. It felt strange. Actually, it felt unfair. But then I came to understand something that changed everything:
The other person doesn’t need to be in the room. They don’t even need to know you’re doing it. And they certainly don’t need to deserve it. This practice has nothing to do with them and everything to do with releasing what you’re holding so that you can finally feel lighter.
Find somewhere comfortable to sit or lie down. Uncross your arms and legs. Close your eyes and take a slow, deep breath. Bring the person to mind. And then, for five minutes, repeat these four statements:
That’s it. That’s the whole practice!
Now, be prepared, because the first time you do this, your subconscious is most likely going to fight it. It’s going to want to pull you right back to the recording of what they did, what they said, how it made you feel. That’s completely normal. It’s just your nervous system doing what nervous systems do. Protecting you!
So when that happens, don’t judge yourself, just breathe. Use 4-7-9 breathing: inhale for four counts, hold for seven, exhale for nine. This breathwork practice calms your nervous system down enough that you can actually focus on the words. Then come back to the four statements. Breathe, repeat. Breathe, repeat.
Keep going until you feel like you almost don’t care anymore. For some people that takes two rounds. For others it takes ten or more. There’s no wrong answer here, just keep going until you feel something shift in the way you feel.
When the release comes, you’ll know it. It feels like something has literally been lifted off of you. Energetically lighter. Emotionally lighter. Think about how you feel waking up on Christmas morning with nowhere to be versus rushing out the door late for work, everyone knows the difference between those feelings. This is about learning to recognize that lighter feeling and understanding that you have the power to cultivate it.
Sometimes one tool isn’t enough. And for the pebbles that are really dug in, (and especially if you have to see this person regularly) there are a couple of additional practices worth having in your toolkit.
This is a meditation practice I recommend for deeply embedded pebbles that are actively causing pain.
Start by closing your eyes, then bring the person to mind and visualize an energetic cord connecting the two of you. Then, with one hand extended, use your other hand like a pair of scissors and cut that cord. Visualize it clearly — the cord being severed, the connection dissolving. You may need to do it more than once, and that’s completely okay. Each time you do it, you’re releasing a little more of what you’ve been holding.
This is an ancient Hawaiian practice of reconciliation that works by breaking the cycle of negativity within yourself.
I recommended it to my son during one of the hardest seasons of his life. I told him to just turn it on while he was working, let it play for ten minutes a day, and not worry too much about it. About a week later he called me and said, “Mom, I don’t know what’s happening but I feel lighter. I don’t feel so angry anymore.”
And that’s exactly how it works. It works with whatever you’re dealing with. Whether that’s a difficult ex, a painful friendship, a family member, business stresses, or anyone or anything else that has become a pebble in your shoe.
Sometimes the pebble is so fresh and so raw that sitting down to meditate feels genuinely impossible. Maybe you’re too activated, too angry, too wound up. And that’s okay, you can be there for as long as you need. Just don’t stay there.
If this is where you’re at, start with your body first.
Go for a run. Punch a bag. Dance. Move your body and exert that energy in any way you know how, because sometimes you have to get the toxicity out physically before your nervous system can settle enough for anything else. Then do your breathwork and come back to meditation.
The most important thing is not to stew in it. Even if you don’t know if it will help, try something. Anything is better than staying stuck in the loop of replaying the hurt.
If it’s not anger but pride or resentment that’s keeping you stuck, that feeling of “why should I have to be the bigger person here” remember this: you get back what you put out. If you’re putting out resentment, you’re going to get more of it.
So start small. Set a timer for two minutes and repeat three things you’re grateful for — out loud, in your head, written down, whatever works. Replace the recording that’s been playing with something positive. It doesn’t have to be big. It just has to interrupt the loop.
You can’t release something with more of the same energy that created it. Gratitude is how you actually shift the frequency.
One of the most important things I’ve learned from doing this work is that when you do your inner work, your outer relationships change. And it’s not because the other person changed. But because you did.
Let me give you a simple example. Say your partner does something that really irritates you in the morning. They walk out the door and you’re fuming. Instead of stewing in it all day, you sit down and do the practice for five minutes — maybe twice. You breathe. You send them love and light. And by two o’clock in the afternoon, you’ve completely let it go. When they walk back in the door at five, you don’t even remember or care what it was about. You just let it go. For real.
Now, this doesn’t mean you don’t speak up when something truly matters. If something is a dealbreaker, you absolutely need to have that conversation. But if it’s not a dealbreaker sometimes all it takes is a perspective shift and five minutes of intentional practice to completely change the energy of your day.
I want to address this directly, because I know it’s what a lot of you are thinking.
It’s not.
Sending love and light to someone who hurt you has absolutely nothing to do with excusing what they did. It’s not about them at all. It’s about you — so that you can feel better, release that toxic energy, and stop letting it pull you down.
Think about it this way. The other person might be out there on the beach flying a kite. They’re living their lives, moving on, and probably not thinking about it at all. Meanwhile, you’re over there drowning in the lake, holding onto something that is only hurting you.
Letting go is not the same as forgetting. And it’s definitely not the same as saying what happened was okay. Letting go is choosing yourself over the weight of what you’ve been carrying. It’s deciding that your peace matters more than your resentment. And that is one of the most powerful decisions you will ever make for yourself.
Here’s a distinction I want you to sit with, because it changed everything for me.
The goal of this practice is not forgiveness. The goal is inner peace.
Here’s the difference. You can say you forgive someone and still not feel it in your body. Forgiveness as a concept is easy. Forgiveness as something you actually feel is what takes work. But when you genuinely do the inner work, when you use these practices consistently and start to feel lighter and more aligned in yourself, forgiveness tends to follow on its own. You don’t have to chase it. It just comes.
So work on the peace first. Work on feeling lighter, releasing what you’re carrying, and just let everything else unfold from there.
And here’s why this connects so deeply to everything I talk about in Whispers Within Us… When you quiet the pebble, you clear the channel. The resentment that was clouding your vision lifts. The noise that was drowning out your inner guidance quiets down. And suddenly the signs start coming through again! The synchronicities appear. A song comes on the radio and it lands exactly the way you needed it to. You start to hear your own inner whispers again, because you’ve finally made room for them.
I want to close with this, because I want you to feel it and not just understand it intellectually.
When you do this work, what’s waiting for you on the other side is true inner peace.
A lighter body. A quieter mind. More positive energy flowing toward you because you’ve finally closed the door on the toxic energy that was taking up all that space. You start attracting what’s actually meant for you, because you’ve finally made room for it.
So here’s what I want you to do today…
Find five minutes. Sit or lie down somewhere comfortable. Bring that person to mind, and begin to release by saying:
May you be safe, may you be healthy, may you be happy, may you live a life with ease.
And see how you feel when you’re done.
Remember, you’re not letting them off the hook. You’re setting yourself free! 🦋
And you deserve the inner peace that comes to you when you do release your pesky pebble. 💫
Want to go even deeper into this work? My book Whispers Within Us is your guide to going inward, listening to your inner whispers, and living a life that feels aligned from the inside out.
Ready to work through this together?
Love, Light, and Gratitude, 🩵
— Kathleen
Next Post
Previous Post
Keep Reading
follow along
I'm Kathleen Walton, a transformation mindset and wellness coach here to guide you on a journey of self-discovery and empowerment.
Welcome to the Blog
grab it here
My brand and website were lovingly crafted by Aubre at Artisan Kind in her 100% solar-powered design studio
Brand Photography by Christy Janeczko Photography
©2023 Whispers Within Us
My brand and website were lovingly crafted by Aubre at Artisan Kind in her 100% solar-powered design studio
brand photography by christy janeczko photography | ©2023 WHISPERS WITHIN US
schedule your assessment
Head home | Meet Kathleen
Work with me | Read the blog
Explore books | Get in touch
Review terms/privacy
Find your way around
sign up
follow along
Become unstoppable and embrace each day with passion, purpose, and determination. Serving clients worldwide from Wisconsin.