journala space to follow what’s emerging.Through everyday experiences, working with life through food, herbs, and practice, patterns begin to reveal themselves. Not all at once, and not always clearly, but enough to follow.
reflections. questions. staying in conversation with what’s unfolding
The Slow Transformation
What begins as a simple jar becomes something else entirely. This reflection on vanilla explores slow transformation, patience, and the quiet process of becoming… where nothing is rushed, and everything deepens over time.
This reflection explores slow transformation through the senses (smell, taste, and time) as a way of understanding how life unfolds.
I didn’t expect vanilla to teach me anything. I bought the beans because I love the scent. Vanilla has always followed me. One of my first perfume oils from the Body Shop, the scent I’m most particular about, the one that never quite feels right unless it’s just right.
So, when the beans arrived, I did what many people do.
I split them open.
Placed them into a jar. Poured the alcohol over them. Sealed it.
And then… nothing.
There was no immediate transformation. No instant reward. No visible shift. Just a jar sitting in my growing medicine cabinet.
The beans themselves have no aroma when first harvested. They must be cured… through heat, through sun, through time. Handled again and again. Sweated. Dried. Rested.
Only then does the scent emerge. And even then, it’s not finished. Because once in the jar, the process begins again.
The alcohol draws something out. Not all at once. Not forcefully.
But gradually extracting what was already there, waiting. When I looked at the jar after 24 hours, I noticed the shift. A soft amber color had begun to form. The scent had deepened slightly. It wasn’t finished.
But it was becoming.
and that’s when it hit me.
How often do we expect things, like growth, clarity, and change, to happen immediately? How often do we forget that some transformations require time, warmth, repetition, care, and attention?
Vanilla doesn’t rush its sweetness. It develops it.
There’s something incredibly humbling about that. A plant that can produce for decades… yet still requires hand pollination, careful curing, and months of waiting. Nothing about it is rushed. And yet, it gives so much.
Even after the extract is made… the bean continues to give.
The seeds can be used. The pod can be infused again. Placed into sugar. Added to recipes. Used, reused, and transformed. There is no single moment where it is “done.” It keeps offering. I began to see something in that. A kind of quiet philosophy that’s been a part of my journey over the past decade. To slow down. To allow the process. To trust that what is being drawn out of you doesn’t need to be forced. To understand that depth isn’t immediate.
It’s cultivated.
This jar is still sitting in my cabinet. And I find myself returning to it… not to check if it’s ready, but to remember: Not everything needs to happen right away. Some things are meant to deepen.
Slow down and notice the smells, the tastes, the colours, the feelings.
be like vanillaa slow practice
After beginning the jar, I realized something important. This recipe revealed something about relationships… how we meet what is unfolding, and how we learn to support it. Vanilla invites participation. It asks for patience, attention, and care.
The process is like life. It’s always changing, always evolving.
So, this is not just how to make vanilla extract, but how to be present with it while it transforms.
Vanilla doesn’t begin with sweetness… it begins with a process. This simple extract is a slow infusion that deepens over time, both in flavour and in practice.