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Showing posts with the label If-My-Soul-Could-Speak"

The myth of being yourself--- the identity we create vs. the one we live

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The Myth of “Being Yourself”: The Identity We Create vs. the One We Live      “Just be yourself.” It’s one of the most comforting lies we’re told. Not because it’s cruel—but because it assumes there is a single, stable “self” waiting patiently inside us, fully formed, untouched by fear, survival, or expectation. As if identity is something you discover, not something you negotiate with every single day. But what if “being yourself” is not a destination? What if it’s a contradiction? The Self We Create From the moment we become aware of being watched, we begin to edit. Psychology tells us this is normal. The human brain is wired for belonging. We learn quickly which versions of us are rewarded and which are quietly rejected. Smiles earn approval. Silence avoids conflict. Confidence hides insecurity. Over time, these adjustments harden into personality. Carl Jung called this the persona —the mask we wear to function in society. Not a lie, exactly, but not the whole tr...

"If My Soul Could Speak"

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                "If My Soul Could Speak" If my soul could speak, it wouldn’t whisper sweet nothings. It wouldn’t paint pretty pictures or hide behind hopeful clichés. It would scream — loud, ragged, relentless — like a storm tearing through the darkest parts of me where light barely reaches. It would shout the names of all the things I bury every single day: The fear that drags me from sleep at 3 a.m., The loneliness that sticks to my skin no matter the crowd, The shame I wear like a second skin — thin, suffocating, and always there. If my soul could speak, it wouldn’t beg for forgiveness. It wouldn’t sugarcoat the truth just to make it easier for you to hold. It would spill out everything I keep locked inside — all the broken pieces I hide behind a smile, all the cracks spiderwebbing beneath the surface I try so hard to keep intact. If my soul could speak, it would confess how exhausting it is to wear masks — the ones I show the wo...