Chapter 10: Lazy Girl Summer

Let’s get one thing gloriously straight: she didn’t work for this vacation.

She didn't embark on a 30-day detox. Didn't religiously hit the gym or yoga studio to sculpt a "summer body." Not a single squat or Downward-facing dog was performed, nor did she choke down that $20 green sludge she had popped into her shopping cart in a moment of sheer madness.

Nope. She simply packed her swollen feet, unwashed hair, and a suitcase of wrinkled clothes she'd forgotten were too tight, and she boarded the plane anyway. And saints be praised, she brought her burnt-out, under-moisturized, gloriously bloated, beautiful self to one of the most soulful places on earth.


Bali Whispers Truths

Because it is so contradictory: at once peaceful and chaotic, wildly beautiful and wonderfully unkempt, a land of ancient temples to the gods and new sanctuaries for hedonists, hippies, and free spirits chasing ephemeral dreams.

Kanto Lampo. The waterfalls here don't just whisper; they roar truths. Not in picture-perfect, Insta-glow moments, but in generous splashes of cold water that smacked her awake, shouting: You are here. You are allowed joy. Especially like this.

She arrived a stressed-out masterpiece. Her shoulders still carried the phantom weight of a hundred unmarked papers. Her hands faintly smelled of whiteboard markers. Her stomach churned with a mix of caffeine, quick bites, and a wild, enduring ache that begged: Feed me anything, please. I beg you.

She hadn't waxed. Hadn't plucked. Hadn't exfoliated since Eid. She’d even forgotten her "good side." And then, thank God, she simply stopped caring about it, about that elusive "one good angle" she used to contort herself into.

She wore the same soft black top three days in a row, and had the sheer audacity to feel deeply comfortable. Imagine that.

By Day Three, something wild began to unfurl within her. She looked in the mirror -belly rolls grinning back, thighs unapologetic - and didn't flinch. She devoured ramen like it was a birthright, a sacred ritual. Toasted herself with sweet iced tea, the condensation cool against her palm. Took a long, delicious nap in the middle of the day. Woke up soft, unburdened by guilt.

And for once, she wasn't just surviving. She was living. Gently. A little wildly.


The Unspoken Truths

Because here’s the truth no one tells the girls who do too much and rest too little:

You don’t have to be a size zero to live large. You don’t have to earn rest by breaking yourself first. You don’t need lashes to see beauty. Or blowouts to be seen.

So she waddled up waterfall steps, her FUPA jiggling like an ovation from the gods themselves. She took selfies with no filter and posted precisely nothing. She napped without a flicker of remorse. She danced like she used to in her twenties—bad knees, good hips, middle finger unapologetically in the air.

She let her feet blister. Let her mascara smudge. Let her hair frizz in the Balinese humidity like it was born for this climate, for this freedom.

She wasn't pretty. She was radiant.

And maybe that’s what Big Lazy Girl Summer is truly about.

It’s not sloth or indulgence or giving up. It’s giving IN.

To joy. To softness. To messy, middle-aged magnificence.

Because this body, the one with stretch marks and a soft belly and laugh lines, has more than earned the right to chase waterfalls. To lie in bed till noon. To drink the full-fat coconut milk and lick the spoon clean. To show up to life, not camera-ready, but soul-deep present.


 A New Era of Freedom

So here’s to her. To the woman who forgot herself for a while in the relentless hustle, but found her way back in the steam rising off a hot spring. In a sarong tied too tightly and a pair of sandals that gave her a blister but also a new story. To the one who stopped sucking in and started exhaling.

May she never again apologize for being tired. For not being tiny. For taking up space in a world that insisted 60 was the time to shrink.

And when she returned? A little softer. A little rounder. A little more irreverent. She looked at her body, her schedule, her heart and said: “We’re doing it differently from now on.”

She wasn’t a goddess. Or a saint. Or an influencer. She was something far richer: A woman who finally knew how to rest, and claim joy for herself!

A woman who, in her glorious fullness, was finally…truly…free.


I will end my "Elder Diaries" series on a Call to Action:

"This isn't just her story; it's an invitation. 

What part of your magnificent self are you ready to celebrate, starting today?"

 

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