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Owned by Michelle

The Inner Edge

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From overthinking to calm, confident action. A community for high achievers who are tired of getting in their own way.

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6 contributions to Enough, Already
I goofed!
I filmed the video for a daily savasana practice for you today. I had some explanation first, and then went down to the mat to demonstrate different ways to do it. And….my head was cut out of the video when I went down to the floor. I’m taking the evening off and won’t be able to re-record until Monday, most likely. But it’s coming. I promise! In the meantime, have you had any experience doing savasana? Have you ever done it outside of a yoga class? Do you have any questions about it?
0 likes • 2h
No worries! I really enjoy savasana. I haven't really done it intentionally outside of yoga. The closest is that I tried transcendental meditation for a bit and would lie down on the floor to do it - which was really calming for my brain. However, I do sometimes fall asleep during this time if I'm doing yoga at home.
START HERE: Welcome to Enough, Already 🌿
I am so glad you're here. If you've landed in this community, chances are you're tired. Tired of fighting your body, tired of all the noise, tired of feeling like you're never quite doing it right. Maybe you've been searching for something that feels softer, safer, and more real. This is that place. Enough, Already. was built for women who are ready to stop pushing and start listening. To heal their nervous system. To find peace with food. To come home to their bodies. That's what we'll do here together. Here's how to get the most out of this space: 1️⃣ Explore the Classroom. Here is where you'll find the Intuitive Eating 101 course and other practices and resources to support you on your journey. 2️⃣ Jump into the community feed. Read what others are sharing. Comment. Connect. 3️⃣ Check out the support options in this community: https://www.skool.com/enough-already-3530/plans 4️⃣ Introduce yourself below. Tell us what brought you here. 🎉 I'll go first 👇🏻 I'm Michelle — the physician, weight-neutral coach, yoga teacher, and Body Trust provider behind this community. I built Enough, Already because I lived through the exhaustion of knowing all the right things and still not being able to find the peace with food and my body I was searching for. I'm a woman in midlife, navigating perimenopause, and rediscovering what it means to feel at home in my own skin. This community is as much a part of my journey as it is yours. I'm here, I'm in it with you, and I'm so glad you've joined me. Michelle
START HERE: Welcome to Enough, Already 🌿
1 like • 3d
Thanks for creating this community. I'm another Michelle! My background is in Chemistry. Got my PhD in Chemistry from Yale. Stayed on to build programs for high achieving high school students and then became Managing Director for a STEM dual degree program. I became an ICF certified coach because I saw the toll that high achievement took on me as a graduate student and that it takes on the students in my program every day. My work focuses more on metacognition (thing about your own thinking) but I think there's a lot to be learned at the intersection of our thoughts and our body. Oftentimes sleep is sacrificed in the name of more productivity, which ironically decreases our ability to think well. I started moving my body every day (yoga, pilates, and running) and it's made a world of a difference for me. Excited to be here!
1 like • 19h
@Michelle Tubman Yes, absolutely agreed. Constant pushing/improving becomes the default - but how realistic is that actually? I previously would go to bed whenever I felt sleepy (and often late into the night if I was in flow with something I was working on or honestly if my husband was still awake). For the past few months, I've been setting an alarm for when to go to bed and realizing how sleep deprived I had been before - and how much more clearly my brain worked when I wasn't. Sleep is one of the first things I learned to sacrifice as a student and didn't quite realize how different I would feel when it became a priority.
This weekend reminded me why I do what I do
After one of the most nerve-wracking talks of my career last week, I had a choice to make about how to take care of myself. In this video I share what that weekend actually looked like, and why it felt like the perfect example of everything I teach inside this community. Here's what's inside: 👉 Why what you do after a stressful event matters just as much as getting through it 👉 The difference between numbing out and actually tending to your nervous system 👉 Why slowing down isn't the opposite of being productive — it's what makes everything else possible 👉 How to start recognizing what your body needs, and giving yourself permission to follow that 👉 Why stillness and movement aren't at odds — and how both can be exactly the right medicine at the right time Watch it now below. If you're not already a paid member, I want to invite you to join us for just $7/month. Inside, you'll find yoga and somatic classes designed to help you slow down, feel safe in your body, and build the kind of inner resilience that makes the hard days more manageable: https://www.skool.com/enough/plans Now I want to hear from you: When life gets stressful, what's your go-to way of unwinding. And do you think it's actually helping your nervous system, or just getting you through to the next day?
This weekend reminded me why I do what I do
1 like • 19h
Great video, thanks for sharing! I resonated with a lot of this - especially the idea that our nervous systems get activated and primed for potential judgement, and I love that you felt it and recognized it but did the thing anyway. I think too often when we experience that kind of negative emotion, we make it mean a lot of things -- "I am going to be bad at this" or "I shouldn't do this". I'm experiencing a bit of that right now as I'm launching into a whole different avenue of building my business. And practicing getting comfortable with the discomfort. I also like what you said about slowing down building our capacity for resilience. We get a lot of messages from society (especially in capitalist societies) about what we should be doing -- ie, always working, always productive, always busy -- and internalize it as fact, when it's actually just what we're socialized to do. I don't know how many answers to the question "How are you?" I've received which are some form of "Good but tired" or "Good but busy"... What I'm curious about is -- what if we didn't measure our success by how MUCH we did, but by how WELL we did it?
Slowing down
Today was a busy day! We did our first somatics class and I filmed the first video for the “Start Here” classroom (it’s up there now for you to view!). I also had patients in the morning to see, and I had a session with my personal trainer. It was a lot. Too much. It just goes to show that I’m still a work in progress too! Slowing down is the work. If you’re keen on finding balance, if you have health goals, if you want a better relationship with your body, slowing down is always the first step. It just so happens to be the hardest thing to do. We all have busy lives. Most of us are probably overcommitted. Work demands. Family demands. It adds up, and it often doesn’t leave a lot of space for us to just…be. Up here in Canada, we have a long weekend coming up. My husband and I are going camping and I plan to do a lot of slowing down. Also a hike and some fun. But plenty of time to relax, reset and tune it. Camping just so happens to be my favorite way of slowing down. I’d love to hear how you slow down. Let me know in the comments!
1 like • 2d
My husband helps me slow down. From random hugs to taking some time for myself after breakfast with the kids. I'm also usually fast-paced - which I enjoy. I like getting stuff done. But sometimes it's easy to be in that mode without really thinking about if something actually NEEDS to get done then. It's usually because I haven't given priority to the rest as something that is actually more important in that time.
What do you do when you're tired?
Today was a rough day for me. I didn't sleep well last night at all (I hurt my foot and couldn't get comfy - I'm fine now). I had to be up at 4:30 this morning for work, and of course it was a super busy shift in the ER. By the end of the shift I was exhausted. And ALL I could think about was chocolate. I had some. Then I wanted more. I recognized that this craving was because I was tired. This is ALWAYS my pattern when I'm super tired. So I gave my body what it needed - a nap. Now I feel so much better and the craving is gone. I'm giving a talk to a bunch of doctors on Friday, and I was "supposed" to work on my slides for it this evening. A younger version of me would have powered through the fatigue and eaten all the chocolate I needed to get the slides done. The current version of me allowed myself the rest I needed. I'm curious to know what signals your body gives you when you're exhausted? Do you recognize when you're tired, or are you like me, where it took those familiar chocolate cravings before I checked in to see what my body needed? Do you allow yourself rest when you're tired? Let's talk it out in the comments.
0 likes • 3d
I often wake up in the middle of the night or at least an hour before my alarm and roll around in bed. On these days, I can feel my brain slow down and it's like I feel it the tiredness in my bones. I'm usually good about following a self management routine and putting it in my calendar, but on those days I notice that I sometimes throw it out the window without noticing. I've systematically tried removing some of these triggers, and it's gotten a bit better over time. I notice that if I have an idea and am pursuing it right before bed, these are often times when I wake up in the middle of the night and keep thinking about the idea - so I've tried to be better with setting boundaries of stopping work/Skool by a certain time.
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Michelle Hutchings
2
15points to level up
@michelle-hutchings-1523
I help high achievers learn how to work more strategically so they can stop overthinking and take calm, confident action

Active 15m ago
Joined May 26, 2026
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