
“Not until we are lost do we begin to find ourselves.” ~Henry David Thoreau
I’ve spent most of my life feeling like I was standing just outside the circle.
Not always, but whenever I stepped back and looked at the whole of my life, the thread running through has been a sense of being on the outside looking in.
I think that feeling drove me for a long time. I wanted to prove something, to earn my place through effort and excellence. I wanted to be the kind of person people were glad to know.
I pushed myself in sports, trying to make great plays to draw appreciation from the crowd. I dreamed of playing my bass guitar with such energy that the people listening would feel it moving through them. I built up my resume and did all I could to become a great teacher, the kind who changes lives.
Those desires came from a deep place in me. The love of the game, the pull of music, and the joy of teaching well were all true expressions of my heart. But woven into all of it, underneath all of it, was also a longing for connection.
Each of those aspirations became realities in one form or another, and I gave myself to them fully. What I found inside them, though, was something I hadn’t expected. The belonging I’d been striving for wasn’t something I could will from the outside.
I was in my early twenties when I arrived in Philadelphia for graduate school, still carrying all of this with me without knowing it. A friend brought me to a party one cold night, a gathering of close friends in someone’s backyard, and we were all standing around a pool.
The group was chatting away and enjoying the evening. I tried moving from one small conversation to another, searching for a way in. Nothing worked.
After an hour or so, I stood at the edge of the pool, and something moved me.
Without thinking, I stepped off the edge into the deep end. Fully dressed. The cold water closed over me, and I stayed under for a few long seconds.
My friend was embarrassed. I was numb. We drove home in silence, me soaking wet in the passenger seat.
I couldn’t explain what I’d done, not that night and not for a long time after. The memory sat with me for thirty years, surfacing from time to time, painful and strange. And beneath the strangeness of it, there was something else, a layer of embarrassment I hadn’t yet found the courage to look at directly.
The embarrassment went deeper than the act itself. Underneath it was something I had kept hidden even from myself, which was how badly I had wanted to belong that night and how exposed that wanting had left me.
For years, I carried shame about that night, as though needing to be seen and valued was a weakness or a flaw in my character. It took me decades to understand that the need itself was never the problem.
I read something a while back that made me think. For nearly all of human history, people lived in small bands, twenty or thirty or fifty people, and your place in that group was everything. It determined whether you ate, whether you were protected, whether you and your children survived.
I also read that the brain processes the pain of being excluded through the same pathways it uses for physical injury. So, while my cold plunge was odd and unexpected even for me, it was also a response to something ancient and true.
Researchers who study this have put the need to belong in the same category as hunger and thirst. Needs that every human being has, whether we recognize it or not.
I didn’t know any of this when I stepped into that pool in Philadelphia. And after much painful reflection, I’m realizing now that I wasn’t needy in a shameful way. I was simply a young man painfully alone in a crowd.
I think, in that moment, I chose the rejection I could control over the rejection I couldn’t. The cold water was honest. It didn’t pretend I belonged, and if I was going to be outcasted, I decided to be that fully.
What I’ve come to see is that the humiliation I experienced at the party and afterward in thinking about it for all these years was part of my becoming who I’ve always been meant to be.
Because I know what it’s like to feel unseen, and I know the shame of feeling it, I can recognize that struggle in other people, and I can help. I’ve lived too close to the ache of isolation to mistake it for something else or to look past it when someone else is suffering.
Thirty years has been enough time to watch the patterns of my life come into focus. And what I see now is that the feeling I spent so long trying to escape was giving me insight into something I couldn’t have understood otherwise: in one way or another, we all need belonging.
When I walk into a room today, whether it’s a party, a family gathering, or at work, my attention moves toward the person standing alone.
The one who’s laughing a little too eagerly at something that wasn’t that funny. The one attached to their phone because it’s easier than sitting there without a purpose. The one who arrived hoping tonight would be different and who’s starting to wonder if it will be.
I know that person. I’ve been that person, and in some ways, I still am that person.
The feeling of not belonging doesn’t disappear just because you become aware of it and work on it, at least it hasn’t for me. It eases at times, but it never fully leaves. And I’ve stopped waiting for the day it does.
What I’ve found instead is that the pain becomes something you can carry without being crushed by it. It becomes a part of who you are that you learn to accept, relate to, and even draw strength from, because it keeps you honest about what it means to be human.
That’s what my life’s journey has become. What I want people to know and to feel in their bones when they leave a room is this: You are seen. You are heard. You are valued. And you are loved.
I’ve had to be honest with myself about the limits of those words. When I was hiding the parts of myself I was afraid to show, no reassurance from the outside could fully reach me. And sometimes the people around me weren’t looking carefully enough to find what was good in me anyway.
I had to admit that the belonging I was yearning for wasn’t always being blocked by my own walls. Sometimes it just wasn’t being offered. Let’s face it, the world can be a cold and cruel place at times.
I’ve learned that we tend to give others what we most need ourselves, and that’s certainly true for me. The pain I experienced didn’t just wound me. It showed me what I was made for.
Not everyone will see you for who you really are. Some people will be tuned to a different frequency, and that will hurt. But the more honestly you offer yourself to the world, the more you give the right people a chance to know you.
That belief has been tested and proven in my own life. In my twenties, I thought it would be funny to bring a homemade Key Lime pie to a New Year’s Eve party full of people trying hard to look cool. It was kind of like bringing baked goods to a nightclub and a perfect example of my off-beat sense of humor.
One young woman laughed out loud when I offered up the pie and joined me at the kitchen table for a slice. We talked and enjoyed each other’s company until the party faded into the background.
That young woman became my wife.
We’ve been together for over twenty-five years, and she’s since told me she never liked Key Lime pie. The truth was, she just wanted to get to know the guy who was brave enough to be himself in a room full of people pretending to be someone else.
The qualities that make you most yourself are visible to people who know how to look. You have a place in this world right here and now, as you are, not once you have earned it. And when you show others what’s true about you, you give the right people a chance to find you.
The calling to see people, to help them open up and truly belong, isn’t something I chose. I found it by following my own wound, my own need for the same thing, all the way to its other side. It’s been an ongoing journey with hard falls along the way, but it’s the most valuable thing I have ever stumbled into.
The young man I was when I stepped into that pool in Philadelphia wasn’t broken. I was, in my own hurting and wordless way, searching for something true. And although I still struggle with belonging from time to time, I’ve found it.
I’ve learned to belong to myself. I’ve learned to see the pain that people carry but rarely name and to recognize it without judgment because I know it from the inside. That sight has changed me from someone who was grasping for a place to belong into someone who tries to create that place for others.
The outside is a hard place to learn. But it teaches you to see.
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About Daniel H. Shapiro
Dr. Daniel H. Shapiro is keynote speaker, author, and mentor. He is passionate about human connection and the stories we carry with us. For more information about his book, The 5 Practices of the Caring Mentor, or his mentoring and speaking services, check out yourinherentgoodness.com.
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