What Happens When You Stop Saying You Are Fine
The automatic “I’m fine” has been the default for so long that stopping it feels impossible. What would even come out instead? The truth is messy, uncomfortable, harder to package into a response that keeps conversation flowing, but the cost of fine is too high now. Something has to give. Here’s what actually happens when the performance stops. The first time someone answers honestly instead of saying fine, it feels like jumping off a cliff. “How are you?” gets met with “Honestly, not great” or “Struggling lately” or just “Not fine.” The pause that follows feels eternal. The other person wasn’t expecting honesty. They were expecting the script. Now they have to decide what to do with this information they didn’t ask for but technically did. Some people won’t know what to do with it. They’ll get uncomfortable, change the subject, or offer surface-level reassurance that misses entirely. “Oh, it’ll get better” or “At least it’s not worse” or some other phrase that ends the discomfort ...