Mindset

The Art of Letting Go: Making Peace With What You Can't Control

A gentle guide to releasing control, old grudges, and outcomes you can't change — and the surprising space that opens up when you finally loosen your grip.

A single dandelion seed drifting away on the breeze against a soft sky
Photograph via Unsplash

There's a particular kind of tiredness that comes from gripping too hard. The clenched effort of trying to control what won't be controlled — other people's choices, the past, outcomes that were never fully in your hands. We hold on because letting go feels like giving up, like losing, like admitting defeat. So we keep our fists closed, even as it wears us down.

But I've come to believe that letting go isn't surrender at all. It's a kind of wisdom — the quiet recognition that some things were never yours to carry, and that setting them down might be the most freeing thing you ever do.

Letting go is not giving up#

Let's clear up the biggest misunderstanding first, because it stops so many people from ever loosening their grip. Letting go does not mean you stop caring. It doesn't mean you abandon your goals or roll over and accept whatever happens. It means you stop spending your energy on the parts you cannot change, so you have energy left for the parts you can.

There's a difference between I'm releasing this because it's hopeless and I'm releasing this because it was never mine to control. The first is despair. The second is clarity. You can let go of needing a specific outcome while still showing up fully for the effort. You can release the result without releasing the care.

The things we hold too tightly#

Most of what we grip falls into a few familiar categories.

Control over other people. You cannot make someone change, understand you, love you back, or behave the way you wish. You can influence, invite, and ask — but the choosing is always theirs. Trying to control another person's inner life is like trying to hold water in your hands. The harder you squeeze, the faster it slips away.

The past. What happened, happened. No amount of replaying it will edit a single moment. You can learn from the past, grieve it, make peace with it — but you cannot revise it. Holding the past in a clenched fist doesn't change history; it just keeps your hand from holding anything new.

Outcomes you can't change. Some doors close. Some plans fall through. Some things simply don't work out, for reasons that have nothing to do with how hard you tried. Continuing to fight a settled reality only exhausts you.

On grudges: the weight you carry for someone else#

Grudges deserve their own gentle word, because they're so heavy and so common. When someone hurts us, holding onto the anger can feel like justice — like we're making them pay. But here's the quiet truth: most of the time, the person we resent has moved on, unaware. The grudge isn't punishing them. It's living in us, taking up space, coloring our days.

Resentment is like carrying a stone in your pocket to throw at someone who's long gone. You can put it down. The path is lighter without it.

Letting go of a grudge is not the same as saying what happened was okay. It wasn't, perhaps. Forgiveness, in this sense, isn't a gift to the other person; it's a release for yourself. You're not excusing the harm. You're declining to keep carrying it.

Acceptance without approval#

This is the idea I'd most want you to take away: you can accept a reality without approving of it.

Acceptance gets confused with agreement, but they're entirely separate. Accepting that something has happened — that a relationship ended, that a chance has passed, that a person is who they are — doesn't mean you think it's good or fair. It simply means you stop arguing with what already is. And that's not weakness. That's where your power actually begins.

Because as long as you're at war with reality, all your energy goes into the fight. The moment you accept the facts as they are, that energy comes back to you, freed up for the question that actually matters: given that this is true, what do I want to do now?

This is why acceptance so often feels less like defeat and more like relief. The struggle you were waging against the unchangeable was costing you something every single day, even when you couldn't feel the price. Setting it down doesn't mean you've lost. It means you've stopped paying a toll on a road that was never going to take you anywhere.

Small ways to practice loosening#

Letting go is rarely a single dramatic moment. It's usually a slow, repeated loosening. A few small practices that help:

  • Name what's yours and what isn't. When you feel the grip tightening, ask: is this actually within my control? Often, the answer alone brings relief.
  • Let yourself grieve. You can't let go of something you haven't fully felt. Give the loss room before you ask yourself to release it.
  • Open your hands, literally. It sounds almost too simple, but unclenching your fists and breathing out can cue the same softening in your mind.
  • Return to it gently. You'll pick the thing back up. That's normal. Just set it down again, as many times as it takes.

The space that opens up#

Here's the part nobody tells you about letting go: it doesn't leave you with emptiness. It leaves you with space. When you stop pouring yourself into what you can't control, you discover how much you have left for what you can — your own choices, your own next step, your own peace.

A small note of care, as always: if you're holding onto a grief, a loss, or a hurt that feels too heavy to set down no matter how you try — if it's pulling you into persistent low mood or distress — this kind of gentle guidance isn't enough on its own. Please reach out to a qualified mental-health professional or a local support line. Some things we're not meant to release alone.

But for the everyday weight — the grudges, the worry over the uncontrollable, the past you keep rehearsing — try opening your hands, just a little. You may be surprised by how much lighter the path becomes. Growth here is slow and uneven, and that's perfectly all right. You're allowed to let go one small loosening at a time.

Lena Iverson
Written by
Lena Iverson

Lena writes about the inner game — the self-talk, the fear, the quiet beliefs that decide how far we'll go. A former perfectionist, she's more interested in courage than in confidence, and in progress than in polish. She thinks most people are far braver than they give themselves credit for.

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