Growing Up Without a Family: From Survival Mode to Thriving

Growing Up Without a Family: From Survival Mode to Thriving

“You can’t go back and change the beginning, but you can start where you are and change the ending.” ~C. S. Lewis

I started life in a poor household with one parent who left when I was very little, never to be seen or heard from again, and another who stuck around but made it very clear I wasn’t wanted and I had ruined their life by existing.

For some reason, I never had any contact from either of their parents, my grandparents, and very little to no contact from their wider families.

So, as a young child, I knew I had no practical or emotional safety net. There was no one to fall back on, no one to soften the impact if things went wrong. I needed to stand on my own two feet to survive.

As an abandoned and scapegoated child, I was very independent and resilient, and I was driven by the goal of getting away and creating a life for myself. But I couldn’t take risks or focus on studying because I had no safety net.

During my school exams, I would work full time during the holidays beforehand and part-time during term time. I was then exhausted when it came to exams and had little time to revise. At points in my undergraduate degree, I was working almost full time to keep a roof over my head, always living off my overdraft.

I kept what had happened and was happening at home inside. I never talked about it. No one knew. All of my peers had two parents, and they couldn’t understand my life or provide support. In those days, teachers and other adults weren’t as knowledgeable as they are now, and I was never asked about my home life or offered support. So there was no emotional safety net either.

Since I was responsible for myself financially, I really learned to budget. This meant that when I started in a career in my twenties, I excelled much quicker than my peers. They were learning the world of work following university; I had already been in it for years.

Not Fitting the Mold 

Well into my adulthood, when I found myself in a professional-class world, my friends would assume I was like them. They would talk about people from single-parent families and broken homes as those who would not achieve.

I wasn’t used to talking about my situation. It’s not something that comes up naturally in conversations, and, as with many difficult family situations, people are generally awkward in responding and can, unwittingly, say things that make you feel worse. (I’ve even heard “My father would never leave me!” as if they couldn’t believe it or focus on me at all.)

There isn’t a common toolkit for supporting someone who has been abused or abandoned by their family, and it’s a topic that has only recently started to be more openly talked about in social discourse. So I didn’t know how to talk about myself in an authentic way when it came to family.

On a daily basis, at work or at social occasions, at Christmas or on Mothers’ or Fathers’ Days, people talk about their families of origin and assume others have the same. It’s the norm for most people, and they struggle to support someone who has a different reality.

I realized a few years ago that many of my friends had no idea about my circumstances, so I felt misunderstood and like a core part of myself was unseen.

Filling the Void… or Learning to Live with It

As a young adult, I decided to build a friends’ family, or chosen family, with people I met while studying or through work because I needed to have people around me. Years later, I understood that all my relationships were affected by growing up feeling unwanted and unloved. So, I wasn’t discerning about who was in my life and didn’t understand that I had my own needs in relationships. If someone wanted to spend time with me, who was I to say no?!

This led to friendships and romantic relationships that were, at best, mismatched without real connection and, at worst, abusive. Also, when the holidays came around, my friends’ family would disappear to be with their real families. So I hadn’t filled the void in my life, despite my energy and efforts.

I was trying to distract myself from the pain of not having a family by developing new relationships. Through therapy, though, I realized that the key is learning to live with the void of what I didn’t have—processing it, facing up to it, and actually feeling that pain.

Reconnecting with myself, particularly my child self, was key. I had to take some of the energy I had expelled outward to please others and turn it inward to learn to cope with my loss, heal, and improve my choices.

An amazing therapist helped me understand that I was living with a form of grief. She explained, “Grief is being attached to something that isn’t there.” I now live with the void and the pain, grieving the feeling of loss and abandonment rather than distracting myself from it. Not trying to fix it or fill it but learning to acknowledge it as part of my story.

While the pain will never fully leave, I now make choices from a place of connection to myself, which has led to more fulfilling relationships and much more energy to put into meaningful activities.

Surviving and Even Thriving

Growing up without a safety net means focusing on survival. Throughout my childhood, I worked hard to get somewhere safe and secure with my own independence. Between these efforts and what I was enduring, I was exhausted. Well into adulthood, I kept working toward building a secure life of my own.

By my mid-thirties, I had some basics: a safe home, financial security, and some good people in my life. That’s when it crept up on me—that I was constantly imagining and planning for terrible things that never happened, that I was always on high alert in normal situations, and that I was exhausting myself with my incessant rumination.

I was still operating in survival mode when I didn’t need to. My body and mind hadn’t caught up to the reality that I was finally safe. I needed to learn to live, not just survive.

Some talk about recovering from trauma as getting back to oneself, but when you endured it throughout childhood, you weren’t given the chance to know who that self is. Who would I be if not in survival mode? I had to discover who the core of me was and learn how to just live.

Realizing this was the first step. I was lucky to have great therapists, a complete course of EMDR to process and re-install new pathways in my mind, group therapy, where I learned from others, and other treatments.

There was a moment during installation EMDR (a process that helps to replace negative beliefs with positive ones) when I was asked to imagine what would have helped me as a child during a difficult experience I’d had.

At first, all I could think of was changing what was happening to me and someone being there to intervene. But then I imagined giving my child self a hug. That’s what she needed in that moment, and in many others.

Since then, I have tried to focus on my needs and nurture myself, which has helped to shift me from just practical surviving to thriving.

It wasn’t easy or immediate, but after a while of going out in the world post-therapy, I noticed I had an abundance of energy. It felt like I had been carrying a dead weight around me my whole life that had lifted, and I suddenly felt lighter in my day-to-day activities.

I was able to identify and move away from unhealthy relationships, which reduced negative, depleting interactions and increased my positive interactions.

I put this energy into nourishing and meaningful activities in my time outside of work—volunteering, researching, engaging in active hobbies. In turn, I got energy from doing them and reached toward my potential. I became myself. Beyond being a victim of my circumstances, I could thrive.

If you’re also navigating life without a traditional family of origin, know that you are living with a little-understood form of grief, and as much as that will never leave you, a loving, safe, and fulfilled life is still possible.

The first step is understanding and processing what happened to you so you can give to yourself the care and nurturing you need. That’s what will give you the strength, resilience, and empathy to thrive.

About Nisha Wilkinson

Nisha Wilkinson holds a PhD in War Studies and has worked on international conflict and security for over fifteen years. She is interested in human behavior driving violence and insecurity, and advocates for socio-economic diversity of voices in state institutions.

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Escaping an Abusive Situation: The Hardest Parts and Greatest Lessons

Escaping an Abusive Situation: The Hardest Parts and Greatest Lessons

“The wound is the place where the Light enters you.” ~Rumi

I watched my son get hit by his father, and something inside me finally broke open.

Not broke apart. Broke open. There’s a difference.

For years, I had absorbed the chaos. I had made myself smaller, quieter, more accommodating. I had convinced myself that if I could just love harder, be better, try more, something would change. But in that moment, watching my child suffer at the hands of the man who was supposed to protect him, I understood with absolute clarity that nothing I did would ever be enough to fix this. The only thing left to do was leave.

It took me three months to plan our escape. Three months of pretending everything was normal while quietly gathering documents, saving money in secret, and mapping out a future I could barely imagine. Three months of holding my breath and praying my children could hold on just a little longer. Then, I moved myself and my four kids to safety.

I wish I could tell you that was the hard part. I wish I could say that once we were physically free, the healing began and everything got easier. But the truth is, leaving was just the beginning. The real transformation, the part that would eventually turn my deepest wounds into wisdom, was still waiting for me on the other side.

What nobody tells you about escaping an abusive relationship is that sometimes your children don’t escape with you. Not emotionally, anyway. Sometimes they carry the trauma in ways you can’t predict or control. Sometimes they blame you for disrupting their world, even when that world was hurting them.

My oldest daughter decided to go back to live with her father. She was angry with me. Teenagers often are, but this felt different. This felt like a rejection of everything I had sacrificed to keep her safe.

I begged her for months to come home. I cried myself to sleep more nights than I can count. I questioned every decision I had ever made. Had I been wrong to leave? Had I destroyed my family for nothing? Was I the problem all along, the way he always said I was?

The grief was suffocating. I had fought so hard to protect my children, and now one of them had chosen the very thing I had tried to protect her from. And then something happened that I never expected. She came back.

Not because I convinced her. Not because I begged hard enough or said the right words. She came back because she finally experienced for herself exactly what I had been trying to shield her from. The reality I had tried to describe in a thousand different ways suddenly became her own lived truth.

When she returned, she was different. Stronger. More awake. She had learned something that my warnings could never teach her. Today, she’s one of the most resilient young women I know.

Her coming home taught me something profound. It showed me that it was okay to come home to myself too. For so long, I had abandoned my own needs, my own voice, my own worth. I had been so focused on saving everyone else that I forgot I also needed saving. Watching my daughter find her way back reminded me that I could find my way back too.

This is what I mean when I say wounds become wisdom. Not that suffering is good or that pain has some cosmic purpose that makes it worthwhile. But that the very experiences that break us can also be the experiences that show us who we really are. The places where we have been hurt most deeply often become the places where we have the most to offer. I learned this lesson again just this past year.

My son, now fifteen, decided he wanted to live with his father. History was repeating itself and every cell in my body wanted to scream, to fight, to do whatever it took to stop him from making the same mistake his sister had made. But because I had walked this road before, I knew something I didn’t know the first time around. I knew I couldn’t protect him from his own journey.

This time, things were harder. He began acting out. Drugs. Alcohol. Trouble with the law. Probation. Every phone call brought new heartbreak. Every update reminded me of all the ways I wish I could fix this for him.

But here’s what my wounds had already taught me. Sometimes the most loving thing we can do is give someone space to learn their own lessons. Sometimes our children have to touch the fire themselves before they believe it’s hot. And sometimes, the hardest part of loving someone is trusting that they will find their way, even when the path they’re taking terrifies us.

So I did something that once would have felt impossible. I let go. Not of loving him, not of believing in him, but of trying to control the outcome. Instead, I held the door open. I stayed present. I stayed steady. I trusted that the love I had poured into him all those years was still alive inside him, even if I couldn’t see it yet.

And then something happened I could never have forced. After sixty days in a treatment facility, during one of our visits, my son looked at me with tears in his eyes and said, “Mom, I see it now. I don’t ever want to go back to Dad’s house, and I don’t want to be anything like him.”

In that moment, I realized that the patience, trust, and love I had held onto when I felt most powerless had been working quietly beneath the surface all along.

His sister, who had once walked that same road herself, embraced him with a quiet understanding that only comes from lived experience. Their bond also deepened in that moment. Shared truth, shared healing, shared resolve.

And just like his sister before him, he found his way home. Not because I convinced him. Not because I fought harder or found the right words. He came home because he had walked far enough into his own experience to see clearly for himself. The truth had become his own. That’s the paradox of love and letting go. When we stop trying to control someone else’s path, we create the space for them to choose their own.

My son’s journey didn’t unfold the way I would have wished. It involved pain, consequences, and lessons learned the hard way. But it also revealed something powerful. The foundation we lay for our children—the years of love, safety, and truth—it doesn’t disappear when they leave. It stays with them. And when they’re ready, it calls them back home.

This is the alchemy of transformation. The pain we survive becomes the medicine we offer. The wisdom we gain from our hardest seasons becomes a lantern for others still walking in the dark. We do not heal despite our wounds. We heal through them.

If you’re in the middle of something that feels impossible right now, I want you to know that you are not alone. Whatever fire you’re walking through, whatever heartbreak is keeping you up at night, whatever impossible choice is sitting in front of you, please hear me when I say this. You are stronger than you know.

The wound you’re carrying right now may one day become the very thing that helps someone else survive. Your story, the messy and painful and imperfect truth of it, has power. Not someday when you have it all figured out. Not when you reach the other side and can tie it up with a neat bow. Right now, in the middle of it, your survival matters.

Here’s what I’ve learned about turning wounds into wisdom.

First, let yourself feel it.

Don’t rush past the pain to get to the lesson. Grief is not a problem to solve. It’s a process to honor. The only way out is through and trying to skip the hard parts only means you’ll have to circle back later.

Second, resist the urge to control what you cannot control.

This was the hardest lesson for me. I wanted so badly to protect my children from every consequence of their choices. But some lessons can only be learned firsthand. Our job is not to remove every obstacle from the path of the people we love. Our job is to be there when they stumble, ready to help them back up.

Third, come home to yourself.

So many of us spend our lives abandoning ourselves for others. We shrink, accommodate, disappear. We make everyone else’s needs more important than our own until we forget we even have needs. Healing requires us to turn back toward ourselves with the same compassion we so freely offer everyone else.

Fourth, trust the timing.

Your breakthrough will not look like anyone else’s. Your healing will not follow a predictable schedule. The wisdom that’s being forged in you right now may not reveal itself for months or even years. But it is coming. Every hard thing you survive is adding to a reservoir of strength you don’t even know you have yet.

Finally, let your story be medicine.

When you’re ready, and only when you’re ready, share what you have learned. Not from a place of having it all figured out, but from a place of honest, imperfect survival. The world doesn’t need more people who pretend they have never struggled. The world needs people who are willing to say, “This nearly destroyed me, and here’s how I survived.”

I still have hard days. I still worry about my children. I still carry scars from a marriage that tried to convince me I was worthless. But I also carry something else now. I carry the unshakable knowledge that I’m capable of walking through fire and coming out the other side. I carry the wisdom that came from my deepest wounds. I carry a story that might just help someone else believe they can survive too.

For years, I believed that loving my children meant fighting every battle for them. Now I understand something different. Love sometimes looks like holding the light on the porch and trusting that when they’re ready, they will see it and walk toward home.

The wound is where the light enters. Not because pain is good, but because pain cracks us open in ways that nothing else can. And in those cracks, if we’re brave enough to look, we find something unexpected. We find ourselves. We find our strength. We find the wisdom that was waiting for us all along.

You are not broken. You never were. You’re being refined.

About Rebecca Wells

Rebecca is a soul midwife, life coach and health counselor specializing in attachment theory and trauma-informed healing. She is the author of Refined by Love and six companion workbooks. A mother of four, she lives in Tennessee where she helps others transform their wounds into wisdom. Connect with her at wellnesswithrebecca.com.

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Gratitude: The Amazing Superpower Inside Us All

Gratitude: The Amazing Superpower Inside Us All

“When you arise in the morning, think of what a precious privilege it is to be alive—to breathe, to think, to enjoy, to love.” ~Marcus Aurelius

Gratitude.

It used to be a very triggering concept for me, and sometimes it still is.

It’s been a process to unravel what it means to me and to be okay with days where I am in active trauma or grief, when I feel there is nothing to be grateful for. It’s okay to be in those places.

Gratitude is but one of the plethora of tools I’ve used to shift my perspective on my circumstances (when I am able to) and feel a little better—and it’s one of the things that’s kept me alive.

Statistically, I shouldn’t be here. Not only alive, but healthy and safe.

You know the ACEs (adverse childhood experiences) test? Yeah, well, I aced (pun intended) that test. Ten out of ten, which gives me the prize of… a significantly higher chance of mental, physical, and behavioral health problems and a lower life expectancy.

My whole childhood was a tornado of chaos. I had parents who were severely addicted to crack. was physically, sexually, and emotionally abused. Drug dealers were in and out of the apartment. Children’s Aid workers stopping by for visits was a common occurrence.

I didn’t know if I was going to come home from school, little nine-year-old me, and find my parents dead from an overdose. Sometimes they didn’t leave their room for days, which left me full of anxiety that felt like a heavy rock in my stomach.

Family and friends either ended up in jail, on the streets, in addiction, or dead way before their time.

Sometimes we got evicted, and sometimes I didn’t have food to eat, so I would stash packets of oatmeal in my room for emergencies. Like I said, chaos. Maybe you can relate?

This is where gratitude came into the picture. It seems like there would be nothing to be grateful about in the midst of this nightmare I was living in, right? Well, call it delusional optimism, call it whatever, but I found things to be grateful for.

Oh, I had a teacher say that they believed in me? Grateful. Oh, I got lunch today and dinner? Grateful. Mum and dad are alive today? Grateful. I didn’t get beaten today; I’m grateful.

You see, I firmly believe that surviving my childhood gave me a super-powered sense of gratitude that I carry with me today. And I believe this exists in all of us, but sometimes we cannot access it, and that’s okay. When we can, though, it can be a beautiful thing.

I am so grateful sometimes, I can hardly stand it, and I cry happy tears. I am living in my own safe home, where I can go into the kitchen and get what I want to eat without fear of being beaten? Wow. It doesn’t even have to be tied to trauma or grief either, this feeling of gratitude. You mean I can turn on the tap and get clean water on demand? Grateful.

I have all my limbs. I can see. I can write. I can read. I have a smartphone. I can drive. Grateful.

Sometimes, if we stop for a second and think about things that we are grateful for, if we are able to, it can literally change our brain. The more we think about things we are grateful for, the more we start to notice and see things to be thankful for. It becomes our default programming.

Please hear me here. I’m not suggesting that we pretend everything is sunshine and rainbows. (But when is the last time you noticed and appreciated a rainbow?) We are all hurting. Things happen, bad things.

Sexual abuse survivors, hi, how are you? I see you. Domestic violence survivors, hi, nice to meet you. I hear you. I’m with you.

Life is flippin’ hard, and if anyone gets that, I do. I have a diagnosis of complex post-traumatic stress disorder that is a lifelong friend I’ve had to learn to accept. Some days I feel like throwing gratitude out of my window.

But I know it makes a huge difference in my mental state, so I keep working at it.

Here are some practical steps and lessons I’ve learned from gratitude. Please don’t take these as things that must be followed or judge yourself on the gratitude scale. If these things aren’t accessible to you, that is okay.

Starting (and ending) your day with gratitude is powerful.

Starting your day with gratitude has the ability to color the rest of your day in a positive light. This doesn’t have to be a complicated time-consuming ritual; one second when you open your eyes in the morning is all you need. You can spare one second just for you; you deserve that.

To keep it super simple, just think of one thing that you’re grateful for—anything. It sounds cliche, but how about the fact that you were able to open your eyes and see? If you can write it down, even better, which is my next tip.

Write it down.

If you are able to start writing down things that you are grateful for, try it. Writing things down allows you to keep track, go back and look at, and remember all the big and little things that you are grateful for. You can carry a little notebook around, keep one beside your bed, or jot things down in your phone—whatever is most accessible for you.

Have fun with it.

Be silly and imaginative with the things that you are grateful for; the little kid inside will thank you. You get to watch a cartoon or read a book that brought you joy when you were a kid? That can be a moment of gratitude. You do a little happy dance while you’re brushing your teeth just because you can move your body? That can be another one. It can be anything.

Be gentle with yourself on hard days.

Some days are difficult, and all we have enough energy for is to barely survive the day. Some days even the word “gratitude” can be overwhelming, never mind thinking of things to be grateful for. That’s okay. Let yourself feel whatever feelings you are feeling and try to be gentle with yourself. That’s enough, my friends.

The beautiful thing about finding things to be grateful for is that the more you practice, the more it can become a habit and a game, and the easier it might become. You might begin to look at situations in your life differently.

If you are in a difficult situation or season right now, whether you’re dealing with abuse, grief, divorce, loss, health problems, or just regular ol’ life getting you down, I want you to know that I see you and I get how hard this is. I’ve been there, and I will be there again.

If you are able to access gratitude, it can be a supportive tool. If you can’t access it, that is okay. Please hear me: if you do not or cannot feel grateful, there is nothing wrong with you, and you are not doing healing wrong.

Here are three things I am grateful for today.

I am grateful for having the ability to write this message to you, my heated blanket, and the hummingbirds playing outside my window. Your turn—if you’re able and it’s accessible to you, please leave some things you’re grateful for in the comments below. I’d love to hear them.

Take good care, you beautiful humans.

About Jade Dorrington

Jade Dorrington is a writer living on the land of the Lekwungen speaking peoples, also known as Victoria, British Columbia. He has an unquenchable curiosity about the world, and always has a book on the go. When he is not writing, he enjoys being outside, travelling to new places, and moving his body in ways that bring him joy.

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How I Stopped Overexplaining and Found Calm in Conflict

How I Stopped Overexplaining and Found Calm in Conflict

“Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response.” ~Viktor Frankl

For a while, I forgot about that space.

When conflict entered my life—first with my employer, then with my insurance company—I didn’t react explosively. I didn’t fire off reckless emails.

I did something that felt far more reasonable.

I built arguments.

I constructed careful, layered explanations. I mapped policy references, contextual details, and logical connections. I laid out what felt like a complete reticulum of ideas in my defense. If I could make my case airtight, I believed, it would be undeniable.

It seemed rational.

But it wasn’t peaceful.

When Conflict Enters the Body

The conflict didn’t just live in my inbox. It lived in my body.

I woke up rehearsing arguments. I reread messages after sending them, scanning for weaknesses. I was defending myself even in silence.

There was a tightness in my jaw. A low hum of vigilance. A feeling of being small inside systems that used language more formally than I did.

Fear was there, though I didn’t name it at first.

Fear of being misunderstood. Fear of being dismissed. Fear that if I left one gap in my reasoning, it would be used against me.

So I tried to leave no gaps.

The Instinct to OverExplain

As someone trained to think in systems, I instinctively look for structure. When something is wrong, I examine how the pieces connect. I show the framework underneath the problem.

Under pressure, that instinct intensified.

The more anxious I felt, the more thorough my explanations became. My emails weren’t emotional—they were intricate. Comprehensive. Dense.

And exhausting.

What I slowly began to see was that my need for completeness wasn’t just intellectual discipline.

It was anxiety in disguise.

If I covered every angle, I wouldn’t be vulnerable. But covering every angle didn’t calm me. It kept me spinning.

The Power of the Pause

The shift didn’t happen dramatically.

It began with interruption.

Before sending certain emails, I started creating space. Sometimes that meant stepping away for a day. Sometimes it meant reviewing my draft through a neutral lens and asking simple questions:

Is this clear? Is this too dense? What outcome am I actually seeking?

What surprised me wasn’t the feedback.

It was the pause itself.

Instead of adding more explanation, I began removing it.

Half of what I had written was defensible—but unnecessary. I didn’t need to anticipate every counterargument. I didn’t need to prove the entire philosophical foundation of fairness.

I needed to be precise.

And precision felt calmer.

Clarity Is Stronger Than Volume

Strength, I began to see, does not come from density.

It comes from clarity.

Not every supporting idea belongs in the email.

Not every possible objection needs to be pre-argued.

Not every detail needs to be defended.

Sometimes clarity means cutting your argument in half.

That felt uncomfortable at first. It felt like surrender.

But it wasn’t surrender.

It was refinement.

When I shortened my responses, something else shortened too—my rumination. My body softened. The internal courtroom grew quieter.

Clarity reduced the emotional charge.

How to Advocate Without Escalating

If you find yourself over-explaining in moments of conflict, here’s what helped me:

First, write the full version privately. Say everything. Build the entire fortress if you need to.

Then step away.

When you return, ask yourself:

  • What specific outcome do I want?
  • Which sentences directly support that outcome?
  • Which sentences are trying to prove I’m right?

Cut what is trying to prove. Keep what is trying to resolve.

Replace abstract claims with clear requests. Instead of “This is unfair,” try “I am requesting X by Y date.”

Notice how your body feels when you read the shorter version.

Often, it feels steadier.

And steadiness is power.

Choosing Dignity Over Fear

Eventually, the conflicts were resolved. Not dramatically. Not perfectly. But sufficiently.

What stayed with me wasn’t the outcome.

It was who I had become.

Less reactive. Less tangled in overconstruction. Less afraid that clarity required total coverage.

I had learned something I had never been taught:

Advocacy does not require agitation.

It requires presence.

You do not have to overwhelm someone to stand your ground.

You do not have to sacrifice your peace to defend your rights.

Fear tries to cover every angle. Dignity stands inside one clear position.

When I shifted from building intellectual fortresses to standing calmly inside what I needed, everything changed—not necessarily the system, but me.

And that was enough.

If you are facing something similar right now—an email you dread sending, a situation where you feel unheard—try creating space before you respond.

Draft it. Don’t send it. Return with calmer eyes.

Choose clarity over coverage. Choose steadiness over urgency.

You can advocate for yourself without losing your peace.

I didn’t set out to learn that lesson.

But I’m grateful I did.

If sharing this helps even one person feel less alone in that uneasy space between self-defense and self-preservation, then the tension I went through was not wasted. That is my hope.

About Tony Collins

Edward “Tony” Collins, EdD, MFA, is a documentary filmmaker, writer, educator, and disability advocate living with progressive vision loss from macular degeneration. His work explores presence, caregiving, resilience, and the quiet power of small moments. He is currently completing books on creative scholarship and collaborative documentary filmmaking and shares personal essays about meaning, hope, and disability on Substack. Connect: substack.com/@iefilm | iefilm.com

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The Wedding Dress Metaphor: A Powerful Lesson on Being Authentic

The Wedding Dress Metaphor: A Powerful Lesson on Being Authentic

“True belonging doesn’t require you to change who you are; it requires you to be who you are.” ~BrenĂ© Brown

This past year, during a season of transition in my life, I started working part-time as a bridal stylist at a wedding dress store. It was something I had quietly dreamed about for years. I’ve always loved wedding dresses for their artistry, their structure, and the way each one feels like its own separate world of intention and detail.

But what has surprised me most hasn’t been the beauty. It’s been the these dresses revealed important lessons about confidence and authenticity in leadership.

There is a moment that happens in the dressing room sometimes. It doesn’t happen with every gown. In fact, most appointments are a process of exploration: trying silhouettes, fabrics, and necklines.

Some dresses are clearly wrong. Some are close. Some are objectively stunning but don’t quite land.

And then, occasionally, someone steps in front of the mirror, and the energy shifts. There’s a pause, and their posture softens. They don’t immediately speak; they just look.

It isn’t about perfection. It isn’t even always about dramatic beauty. It’s something quieter than that. It feels like recognition. Like something inside them says, “There you are.”

I’ve started to realize how much of my own life has been shaped by wanting that feeling, and not just in a dressing room.

Have you ever quietly wondered, “Am I someone who will be chosen?”

Chosen for the opportunity.

Chosen for the leadership role.

Chosen for the next level.

Chosen for the room where decisions are made.

It’s not always a loud question. Sometimes it hums quietly underneath ambition. And when we’re carrying that question, we can begin to unknowingly let it alter us.

We observe what gets rewarded. We notice who gets promoted. We pay attention to which personalities seem to thrive. And slowly, almost unconsciously, we adjust.

We soften certain traits. We amplify others. We smooth our edges.

We try to shape ourselves into what we believe will be selected. I’ve done this more times than I can count. I’ve walked into professional spaces scanning for cues: Who should I be here? What version of me fits this room?

From the outside, it can look like adaptability. And sometimes it is. Growth is real; refinement is real; learning how to communicate effectively in different environments is part of maturity.

But there’s a quiet line between growth and self-abandonment. And I didn’t realize how often I had crossed it until I started working with wedding dresses.

When someone begins an appointment, I often tell them, “This room is full of beautiful gowns. You’re going to find very few that you don’t think are gorgeous. Many of them will look incredible on you. This isn’t about finding a beautiful dress. It’s about finding the one that feels like you.”

Over and over, I’ve watched someone admire a dress.

“I love the lace,” they’ll say.

“I love the structure.”

“It fits perfectly.”

And then they go quiet.

“But it’s just not mine.”

That sentence used to confuse me.

If it fits…

If it flatters…

If there’s nothing wrong with it…

Why isn’t it the one?

But the longer I’ve watched, the more I understand. Something can be objectively good and still not be aligned. Something can be impressive and still not feel like home.

And that realization cracked something open in me.

There have been seasons in my professional life where I was praised. I was told I was capable and smart and had high potential. And yet, I still often found myself feeling overlooked and undervalued.

Those moments used to send me into quiet spirals.

What am I missing? What do they want that I’m not giving? How do I need to change?

I’ve learned that rejection rarely feels neutral.

It can land as a verdict on our worth. Especially if there’s already a part of us that wonders whether we are “too much” in some ways or “not enough” in others.

Have you ever wondered if you’re…

  • Too direct.
  • Too sensitive.
  • Too ambitious.
  • Too quiet.
  • Too intense.
  • Too idealistic.
  • Or not strategic enough.
  • Not polished enough.
  • Not assertive enough.

When we internalize those narratives, something subtle begins to happen. We start altering ourselves.

Imagine if a wedding dress responded to being overlooked by tearing out its lace because it was “too detailed.” Or flattening its silhouette because it was “too dramatic.” Or dulling its sparkle because it was “too noticeable.”

It sounds absurd. And yet, in professional spaces, many of us do exactly that.

We quiet our ideas before they’re fully formed.

We hold back perspectives that might create tension.

We shrink our ambition so we don’t intimidate.

We harden our softness so we won’t seem naĂ¯ve.

We edit ourselves preemptively, hoping to avoid future rejection.

At first, it feels strategic. Over time, it feels exhausting.

When you repeatedly step away from your own nature, something inside you starts to feel misaligned. You may achieve things. You may receive validation. But there’s a faint disconnect, a sense that the version of you being rewarded isn’t entirely real.

I’ve felt that. And it’s a lonely feeling.

The wedding dresses have taught me something profound: they do not question their design when someone says, “You’re beautiful, but not for me.” They do not unravel themselves in shame. They simply return to the rack, unchanged.

And then someone else walks in, someone who has been searching for that exact neckline, that exact silhouette, that exact combination of structure and softness, and when they step into it, the recognition is instant.

There is no convincing, contorting, or performance required. There is just resonance. That quiet shift in the room.

What if confidence works the same way? What if confidence isn’t about convincing every room, and every person, of your worth?

What if it’s about trusting that the way you think, lead, create, and communicate has inherent value?

This doesn’t mean we stop growing or refuse feedback or cling rigidly to habits that no longer serve us. It means we discern between refinement and erasure, between expanding ourselves and abandoning ourselves.

I am still learning this. I am still catching myself when I start scanning a room for cues about who to become. I am still reminding myself that the goal is not universal approval; it is authenticity and alignment.

Here’s what I’ve come to believe:

Being overlooked can hurt deeply, and wanting to be chosen is profoundly human. But reshaping ourselves to fit into who we think we need to be costs more than the rejection ever would.

When we sand down our edges to be more acceptable, we may gain temporary approval, but we lose authenticity. And without authenticity, our potential for influential leadership plummets.

The dresses don’t change themselves. They don’t compete. They don’t compare themselves to the gown in the next fitting room. They simply exist as they were designed. And understand the value in their uniqueness.

There is something deeply dignified and steady about that.

What if we allowed ourselves that same steadiness?

What if we stopped interpreting every “no” as evidence of inadequacy and started seeing some of them as redirection?

What if not being chosen in one room is protection for the room where you won’t have to shrink?

What if your sensitivity is not a liability but discernment?

What if your directness is not aggression but clarity?

What if your depth is not slowness but thoughtfulness?

What if the very traits you’ve been trying to tone down are the ones that will make you the inspirational leader you know you can be?

Confidence, I’m beginning to see, is less about bravado and more about self-trust. It’s the willingness to remain intact.

Perhaps the most radical shift of all is this:

You do not need to be universally chosen to be worthy. You do not need to edit yourself into something more palatable to be valuable. You do not need to dull your sparkle, flatten your shape, or mute your design.

In fact, the most powerful thing you can do is own more fully what makes you unique and stop trying to live and lead in a way that feels inauthentic and dampens your impact.

Gentle Questions for Reflection

If you’re in a season of questioning your worth or wondering whether you need to change in order to move forward, you might sit with these:

  • What qualities have I softened or hidden because they felt “too much”?
  • Which parts of me feel most natural, and where do they feel most welcomed?
  • Am I pursuing growth, or am I subtly abandoning myself?
  • Where might a recent rejection actually be redirection?
  • What would it look like to trust that my design has purpose?

You don’t have to become someone else to move forward.

You may simply need to stand, fully as you are, and trust that the rooms meant for you will recognize your reflection when they see it.

About Tess Hobson

Tess Hobson is a leadership coach who helps people build confidence from the inside out and lead with authenticity. She is passionate about emotional resilience and self-trust. Her writing is inspired by everyday moments that reveal deeper truths about courage and confidence. You can discover your leadership superpower through her free quiz and learn more about her work at thestorywithincoaching.com.

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We Are Allowed to Age: Why I Don’t Care That I Look Old

We Are Allowed to Age: Why I Don’t Care That I Look Old

“When there is no enemy within, the enemies outside cannot hurt you.” ~African Proverb

It is just past ten in the morning on a Tuesday.

My wet boardshorts and blue tank top are drying at lightning speed in the sweltering South Indian sun.

I am feeling alive and exhilarated after my surf session in the surreal blue, bathtub-warm Arabian Sea.

Surfing waves consistently has been my goal for the past two years, and I’m doing it. Which is pretty awesome considering that I never thought I would surf again.

The trauma and fear from a surfing accident ten years ago, which nearly knocked my teeth out, was still lodged in my body for years, and my life’s focus had shifted from sports to yoga.

When I landed in Kerala, India, my intention was to do an intensive period of study with my Ashtanga yoga teacher for ten weeks and then return to Rishikesh in Northern India, where I had been basing myself.

A chance invitation brought me to the coastal town I have been living in for the past two-plus years because of the pandemic.

And it just so happens there is good surf here.

My reentry into surfing has been slow and steady.

For my fiftieth birthday present I gave myself ten surf lessons.

I decided I needed to start off as a beginner and took basic lessons to ease myself back into things and get comfortable back on a surfboard.

An Indian man in his mid-thirties who was in my surf class asked, “How old are you?”

“Fifty,” I replied.

“I hope I am still surfing at your age,” he said back.

I think he maybe meant this as a compliment, but I took it self-consciously and wondered why it mattered what my age was.

It is now two years later.

I have slowly gone from a beginner to an intermediate surfer.

As I sipped a hot chai out of a Dixie cup on the side of a busy fishing village road, after my morning surf, an older Indian gentleman with grey hair asked me, “What is your age?”

“Fifty-two,” I replied.

His jaw dropped, and he said, “I thought you were seventy. You have really bad skin.”

Yes, this really happened.

And it has happened more than once.

Every time it’s happened, I have allowed it to knock the wind out of my sails.

Wow, I think, how is it even possible that I look seventy years old when I feel better than when I was twenty-one?

In all honesty, good skin genetics are not in my favor. Coupled with my love of the sun and spending most of my life outside, it has left me with the skin of an alligator.

I lied about my age up until my mid-forties.

On my forty-sixth birthday, I told a woman who asked about my age that I was forty. She laughed and asked if I was sixty.

But this chai-guy encounter sparked me to lie in the other direction.

What if I start telling these men I am eighty-five? I thought to myself as I drove my Mahindra scooter away from the chai shop. This idea made me smile, and I immediately felt more empowered.

Instead of feeling ashamed of my skin, I decided to hand it right back to them.

I no longer care what they or you think about how I look, and I put zero energy into my appearance.

It doesn’t matter to me because inside I feel amazing.

I practice the whole of Ashtanga yoga’s challenging intermediate series six days a week, which is something I never in my wildest dreams thought would be possible in my forties, and I surf every day.

The young twenty-something Indian surf guys are now giving me fist pumps and saying, “You are really surfing and catching some big waves now!”

And they have stopped asking about my age.

I felt called to share this story because it made me wonder: Why are we not allowed to age?

Why is it an embarrassment to have old-looking skin?

Why can’t I have wrinkles and grey hair and own it?

This is what the body does.

It ages.

So then why are we not meant to look our age? Or in my case, even older!

I have decided to take a stand and turn the tides.

I am claiming my age and my place in the surf line and voicing my truth.

We are allowed to age.

About Polly Green

Polly Green is a psychic medium, spiritual coach, and filmmaker who guides self-aware souls through growth and transition. She helps clients release old patterns, reconnect with their true essence, and feel grounded, clear, and empowered in life and work. Blending mindset shifts with spiritual tools, she supports awakening empaths in embracing their gifts and helps those seeking comfort and connection with loved ones on the Other Side. Connect with her on Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube, or visit her website.

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How Dry January Improved My Brain Health and My Life

How Dry January Improved My Brain Health and My Life

“You are not stuck with the brain you have. You can make it better.” ~Dr. Daniel Amen 

At the beginning of the year, I had this whole list in my head about the benefits of dry January: drop a few pounds, sleep better, get those bright white eyes everyone raves about. The standard results you think you would get if you avoided alcohol for a month. But I should have known; my body had something else in mind.  

Truthfully, the real reasons are much more complex. Alcoholism runs in my family. I’ve never thought I had a problem, but occasionally, you need to check in with yourself and take a step back.

My mother passed away when she was fifty-seven. She couldn’t care for herself the way she needed to—to do the hard things to make her life and her health better. That was hard to witness as a young child.

There wasn’t much I could do to change that trajectory. I vowed that wouldn’t happen to me. So I consciously build ways to check myself and prioritize my brain health.  

I’ve done Dry January before, so I knew I could do it. What I realized this time is that the all-or-nothing approach is easier for me than trying to moderate.

That “monkey on my back” everyone talks about is for real. For me, it’s also the mental bandwidth of deciding. Should I have a drink tonight? How many are okay? Do I deserve it after this week? When you commit to none, all that wondering goes away. Turns out January was way easier than “Damp January” would’ve been. Proving that to myself again is always worth it.  

But there’s more to this now. I recently got tested for the Alzheimer’s gene, as it runs in my family, and I was experiencing midlife brain fog that I couldn’t kick. I found out that I carry one copy of the APOE gene, which puts me at 25% higher risk for cognitive decline! That’s when my brain health became even more important to me. 

I know alcohol is not good for the brain and body, but I’m also not ready to give up that glass of wine entirely.   

These scheduled breaks from alcohol are going to be part of my life going forward. Not deprivation. Protection. I want to enjoy life; I still want to go to an occasional happy hour without guilt. But this is my 80/20 trade-off. Take care of my brain most of the time so I can embrace those moments when I choose to indulge. 

Here’s a side note. Having my significant other do this with me made all the difference. I got through football games and birthday parties, all those moments where you’re the only one not drinking. But if there’d been drinking in my own house? That would be more challenging. (Like an open bag of chips you are trying not to eat.) So, thank you, honey. 

He says he didn’t necessarily like it, but he did it for me. Secretly, I think he’s proud of himself for being someone who did Dry January. Not because it’s hard, but it takes commitment and going out of your way to do things differently.  

Here’s what caught me off guard—take away that end-of-day glass of wine or Friday night’s wind-down, and your brain immediately starts hunting for a replacement. What is the reward? I get it—there should be a treat at the end of a long, hard work week. Yes, of course there are other ways to gift yourself, like self-care, etc. But you’re sitting on the couch watching a movie together (not going out). I never expected mine to go so insanely to sugar.

I’m a salty person. Always have been. Cheese and bread over dessert every time (except dark chocolate, of course). But this month I was craving sweets like crazy.

Watching my reward system scramble for that dopamine hit was fascinating and kind of alarming. Proof that these patterns are more addictive than we think. And that once sugar is in your system, you want more. They say sugar is as or more addictive than cocaine. Now I understand.  

The scale? It went up. Just a couple pounds, and I’m not worried about it, but come on. Here I am doing the “healthy thing,” and I’m gaining weight. I was a bit insulted, to be honest, and it didn’t seem fair. But between the sugar, increased sitting on the couch, and losing alcohol’s appetite suppressant effect, my body had other ideas. Now I know. 

I would say the worst part was the hormonal acne I got on my chin and jawline. I assumed this was from detoxing all the “bad” things out of my body, but what could have been that bad to deserve this? Maybe it was the increased sugar consumption? I’m officially in menopause after eight years on a rollercoaster of symptoms (including skin issues), and this is what I get—deep painful zits like I’m a teenager.

I had to ask Claude what the real answer was. He said when you stop drinking, your liver can suddenly focus on clearing out those excess hormones—including estrogen metabolites and androgens. This can create a temporary surge as your body processes what’s been backing up, which can absolutely trigger breakouts, especially that deep, cystic hormonal acne along the jawline and chin.

Well, there you have it. I guess I’m happy to be cleaning house, but it’s rather rough in the pale days of winter.

This is the fun part. What got better?  

SLEEP! Sleep became a different thing entirely. Not just easier to fall asleep—I mean deep, actually-refreshed-in-the-morning sleep. My Oura ring loved me. I received my highest sleep core since I started tracking over a year ago. Ninety-one, and it even had a crown next to it!  My HRV is in optimal balance— say what? That never happens.  

The inflammation changes were dramatic. Less stiff, less swollen—my rings are falling off.

 That morning’s stiffness I’d written off as being in my fifties? Mostly gone unless the weather is shifting. 

The night sweats dwindled to almost none. Those 3 a.m. spirals where you replay every conversation and stress about tomorrow? Done. The mental spinning that used to wake me up again at 4 a.m. just… stopped. I did get up to pee but was able to go right back to sleep.  

My lymphatic system finally got consistent attention, not just the liver. I’ve done lymphatic massage for years and dry brushing when I remember, but I’d never stuck with self-massage. This month I made it daily—gentle circles and taps along the collarbone, neck, under the arms, abdomen, and behind my knees.

Our lymphatic system doesn’t have a pump like the heart; it needs movement and manual help. I could actually feel the difference in how my body was clearing things out. My brain fog was less, energy improved, and I was more focused.  

Another bonus was Mondays stopped being a reset. I was building upon the week before instead of constantly starting over. I noticed it most in my yoga practice. I had better balance and increased stamina, and I felt stronger in every class. I was creating actual momentum instead of taking steps back every Monday to recover. 

Maybe my favorite surprise was stopping the fight against January’s hibernation energy. Instead of thinking I need to make plans, go out, and stay up later than my body wants, I happily got cozy with a book by the fire and didn’t think twice about it. My dog loved it, too! 

It wasn’t just about being alcohol-free. It was about removing the social push that alcohol creates. Without that glass of wine saying, “Let’s keep going,” I listened to what my body wanted. Turns out it wanted to rest. Sleep. Permission to be in the moment and chill. 

I’ll go back to socializing and the occasional late night for sure. But this month reminded me that my body’s been trying to tell me something, and I need to listen with more intent. 

Now that it’s February (at the time when I wrote this), I’ll enjoy that first glass of wine (thinking a good Burgundy and a steak). But I’m going forward with way more awareness. About my patterns, what my body’s telling me, what actually helps versus what I just think should help. 

I’m thinking about rewards differently—what feels good and is good for me, not just the quick dopamine fix. Although those are fun sometimes too. 

This wasn’t just about wellness checkboxes. Because I’m always doing that. It was more about understanding my reward system, recognizing inflammation and imbalances I’d normalized, and learning that sometimes the best insights come from doing less and not more. 

Now that I have that information? I get to decide what to do with it and build upon it. That’s where the real power is—not restricting myself but in knowing what’s happening in my body. It makes me want to make better choices. Not because I “should,” but because I care about my brain, and I want to protect it for years to come.  

About Christine Despres

Christine is a RN, board-certified health & wellness coach and certified dementia practitioner who has spent thirty-plus years in healthcare developing her passion: helping midlife women build a holistic brain-healthy lifestyle to sharpen their mind, boost confidence, and feel vibrant in their next chapter. To check out more of her work, visit her site, The Wellness Navigator. You can also find her on Instagram. If you want personalized insight. take the Brain Health Quiz,Why Does Everything Feel Harder after 40? It takes two minutes.

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