Abolicious is a philosophy of rest, care, and intentional pace.
It is a writing practice about how we live, how we relate to place, and what becomes possible when urgency is no longer the default.
Care is a practice. It shows up in pace, choices, and how we treat what is near.
Place shapes us. Land, room, and routine all teach a kind of truth.
Rest is not reward. It is a condition for clarity, repair, and honest attention.
Featured essay
Rest is not an escape
Rest is not a reward for productivity. It is a condition for clarity, regulation, and the ability to return to the world with strength.
Recent writing
Care without performance
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Place and the nervous system
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Returning with clarity
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What Abolicious is
Abolicious is a philosophy-led practice concerned with rest, care, and the conditions that allow people to return to the world with clarity and strength.
It begins from a simple understanding: when bodies are supported rather than strained, people can think more clearly, move with integrity, and build lives that are aligned rather than reactive.
This work is expressed through writing, reflection, and, at times, place-based experiences designed to support restoration and return.
How this shows up
Abolicious pays attention to how space, pace, and care shape what people are able to feel, imagine, and carry forward.
Long-form writing and reflection
Thoughtful approaches to rest and return
Place-based expressions rooted in care and integrity
IN PLACE
Abolicious is expressed in place at Trillion Getaway, a quiet retreat in Lockhart, Texas designed for rest, renewal, and intentional pace.
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Read the writing
Essays and reflections exploring rest, care, and the relationship between body, place, and time.
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