Posts

Clueless on Whether Your Problems Are Bad Enough to Ask For Help

The struggle is real but it doesn’t look serious enough to deserve attention. You are managing everything that needs managing. You are showing up. So asking for help feels wrong even though the need for help is also real. Both things are happening at the same time. Other people have bigger problems. That’s just true. So your problems feel smaller and therefore less worthy of taking up space. Telling someone you are struggling feels like complaining about nothing compared to what they’re dealing with. The comparison makes asking for help feel dishonest. The measuring stick for problems is broken. You don’t know if what you are experiencing is legitimate or if you are overreacting to normal life. Other people have names for what’s wrong with them. You just have a feeling that things are too hard but you can’t explain why they’re too hard when you are not dealing with anything objectively difficult. Reaching out to anyone feels premature. They would probably give advice that doesn’t...

Living With Everyone’s Wrong Version of You

The version of you that exists in other people’s minds is not you. You know this. They don’t. They’re confident that they know who you are and they’re completely wrong but their confidence makes them stick with their version. Correcting them doesn’t work. You tell them they’re wrong and they think you’re being modest or difficult or defensive. The correction gets absorbed back into the version so the version stays intact. You can’t fight the version because fighting it just reinforces it. The version has been built over time from limited information and first impressions and stories people told about you. The version is simpler than you are and more convenient for people to deal with. The real you is complicated and the version is not. People prefer the version. Your energy for correcting goes away after a while. It’s exhausting to be seen wrong and then have to correct it and have the correction be ignored. Eventually you stop correcting and just let the version exist without yo...

Realizing You Have Been Chasing the Wrong Thing

Years went into pursuing something and the realization lands that the something was never actually wanted. The work was real and the goal was clear but the desire to reach the goal was borrowed from somewhere else. Now the thing is almost possible and it doesn’t matter. The immediate problem is that stopping feels like wasting the work already done. All that time and effort would mean nothing if the goal doesn’t get reached, but reaching the goal means getting something that doesn’t matter. Both options feel like loss. What complicates this is that people are invested in the goal. They helped support it, believed in it, and maybe sacrificed for it. Admitting that the whole thing was built on false wanting means admitting that their investment was in a false direction. That creates guilt alongside the panic about wasted time. The work that’s been done isn’t completely wasted even if the goal doesn’t matter. Some skills got built, some connections got made, and some growth happened...

Not Sure Whether You Actually Changed or Just Convinced Yourself You Have

The pattern breaks once and it gets treated like the pattern is gone. One time of handling something differently becomes evidence of being someone different. The narrative gets built quickly and feels true immediately. Whether it’s actually true is a different question entirely. Looking back at all the times someone said they changed and believed it reveals something uncomfortable. The conviction felt real, the change felt complete, and the person felt different in every way. Then the same situation came back around and the exact same response happened again. All that change vanished like it never existed. This makes new attempts to change feel suspect from the beginning. Maybe this one will stick and maybe it won’t, or maybe the person is actually different and maybe they are just telling themselves a story that feels better than the old story. The uncertainty sits underneath the attempt without making the attempt impossible. The changes that feel most dramatic might be the leas...

That Numb Feeling That Might Be Depression or Might Just Be Life

Everything is fine and also nothing is fine and somehow both of these things are true at the same time. The life that exists is the life that was supposed to be wanted and it’s here and the feeling about it is completely absent. Whether that’s clinical or whether that’s just accuracy is unknowable. Waking up and going through the day and going to bed happens the same way it happened yesterday and will happen tomorrow. The routine is established and working and the person inside it is completely disconnected from it. Everything gets done without any enthusiasm or resistance, just the steady motion of time passing while someone watches it pass. Other people seem to feel things about their lives and that seems normal and fine and some people also seem to feel nothing and that seems normal too. It’s unclear which version is the default and which version is broken. Maybe everyone feels nothing and just talks about it differently. Maybe everyone feels everything and this person just has ...

The Person in the Mirror Clocks Out Sometimes

The face is there, correct in every measurable way. Same geometry, eyes, and mouth arranged in the usual order, but the recognition that this face belongs to whoever is doing the looking has packed its things and left without notice, the way a word you have used a thousand times suddenly looks spelled wrong and refuses to look right again no matter how long you stare at it. Living inside the body during these periods feels like correspondence with someone who takes days to reply. The instruction to move arrives, movement eventually happens, but somewhere between intention and action there is distance that shouldn't exist, a lag in a connection that used to be seamless. The body is cooperative. It does what it's told. It simply no longer feels like home to whoever is giving the instructions. Other people remain unconvinced anything is wrong. They direct conversation at the face, receive appropriate responses from the voice and conclude a person is present. They are not entirel...

Doing the Thing When You Have Zero Desire to Do the Thing

Motivation isn’t coming. It’s been waited for long enough. The task still needs doing and the desire to do it is completely absent. What now? The trick most people don’t want to hear is that the task gets done without motivation. Not because motivation secretly appears mid-way through, though sometimes it does. The task gets done because the alternative is worse than the discomfort of starting without wanting to. Starting is the hardest part and it helps to make starting so small it’s almost stupid. Not starting the project. Opening the document. Not writing the report. Writing one sentence. Not cleaning the house. Picking up one thing. The brain resists big starts and barely notices tiny ones. Tiny starts often turn into actual starts without anyone deciding to begin. Time limits change something. Committing to ten minutes, actually setting a timer, working until it goes off, then stopping if wanted. Ten minutes is survivable. Ten minutes is so short that the brain doesn’t bothe...

Finally Reached Your Goal But You Feel Nothing

Crossed the finish line. Did the thing. Years of work paid off. The goal that seemed so important for so long is finally done. And it feels exactly like it felt before it was done. Nothing changed. The thing that was supposed to create meaning created nothing. Just another day except now this thing exists that's supposed to matter and doesn't. Looking at it feels strange. This object, this achievement, this whatever it is. It's real, it happened, it's done. The feeling that should attach to it isn't there. Just blank space where emotion should be. The emptiness is louder than the thing itself. People keep asking how it feels. The answer that wants to come out is that it doesn't feel like anything. That can't be said so something appropriate gets said instead. Great. Amazing. So happy. The words come out hollow because they're describing feelings that aren't happening. The celebration happens and someone is watching themselves go through it like...

Do The People Closest to You Actually Know You?

Telling family about something important and watching them completely miss the point. They hear the words and understand nothing. They respond to something that wasn’t said. They make it about something it isn’t about. The conversation ends and they think they get it and they are so far off it’s almost funny except it’s too sad to be funny. This happens constantly. With parents, with siblings, or with people who’ve known someone their entire life. They think they understand. They reference history like that history tells them who someone is. They bring up childhood like that childhood explains everything. They know so little it’s shocking they don’t realize how little they know. Friends aren’t better. They have their idea of who someone is and that idea is set. New information that contradicts it gets ignored. Growth that changed things gets missed. They are still relating to whoever someone was three years ago, five years ago, whenever the friendship formed and their understanding...

Coming Face to Face With the Hurt You Left Behind

The weight of it doesn’t lift. Days pass and the guilt sits exactly where it sat before. Weeks go by and the knowledge of harm caused doesn’t fade. Months later and the memory of their face, pain, and their version of events where the villain is familiar, it’s all right there, fresh as the day it landed. Sleep brings dreams about it and waking brings remembering. Throughout the day it surfaces randomly during meetings, conversations, and moments that should be about other things. The mind returns to it compulsively, i.e. what was done, what was said, how it landed, and how it hurt. The apology was made but it doesn’t matter. The apology changes nothing about what happened. It acknowledges the harm without erasing it. They accepted it or didn’t, and either way, what was done stays done and the mark left stays left. Everyone else has moved on. They don’t bring it up and they don’t reference it. Life continues around this guilt like it’s not there, and yet it’s there constantly, a b...