A Life That Doesn’t Require Context
Context provides justification. It explains why you are the way you are, why your life looks the way it does, why your choices make sense. With enough context, almost anything becomes understandable. Without it, you risk being judged on surface appearances alone. For years, you might have provided context preemptively. Setting up your stories with background, explaining your decisions before anyone asked, or making sure people had the information they needed to see your life as reasonable, your choices as valid, and your path as legitimate. Then comes the recognition that context, while sometimes useful, isn’t essential. Your life doesn’t need to make sense to everyone. Your choices don’t require justification to people who aren’t living them. The validity of your path doesn’t depend on others having enough information to approve of it. A life that doesn’t require context is one that stands on its own. It exists as lived experience rather than as something needing to be framed, e...