
“Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss people.” ~Eleanor Roosevelt
I stopped gossiping when life humbled me. I didn’t realize at the time, but what I thought was just innocent girl talk with my friends was really a way to escape my own shame and insecurity.
I had this quiet, ongoing sense that I wasn’t measuring up personally or emotionally. Gossiping about someone else gave me a fleeting escape, since it allowed me to shift my focus to someone else’s behavior. Every time I did it, I felt a sense of guilt and shame after, but I never thought too much about it.
It wasn’t until the morning I was abruptly terminated from a career of two decades, leaving me angry, sad, disappointed, and feeling extremely worthless, that I started to look at “innocent gossip” much differently.
I spent the first few weeks, actually months, crying a lot. I struggled to find my place in a world where my job not only paid the bills, but it also gave me structure in a crazy world.
I remember sitting on my couch, feeling like a vulnerable, exposed child, when I discovered that my friends, the people who I thought were my support network, were casually discussing my recent hardship like it was the weather.
I felt exposed and betrayed but determined to persevere.
In that moment, I realized gossip was a way to momentarily control a narrative when my own life felt out of control. I turned to it when I was scared orx felt small, but it was just a mirage, leaving me feeling even more empty each time.
In my own isolation, I noticed a friend who always seemed to spiral into negativity, turning every conversation into a complaint, always talking about others. And that made me wonder, if she was so free to gossip about them, what was she saying about me when I wasn’t there? But I had done the same thing to her.
Something shifted when she finally admitted she was exhausted and at her wits’ end. In that moment, I realized I had often filled in the blanks with judgment instead of curiosity. It was easier for me to gossip about her, to stay in the shallow comfort of speculation, rather than ask her how she truly was or just sit with her in silence.
What I had labeled as dismissiveness suddenly looked more like survival, and I couldn’t help but feel I wasn’t the friend I wanted to be.
Now that I’ve been on the other side, I understand how quickly words can wound. I promised myself at that very moment that when I speak, it will be with empathy and care, knowing how deeply words can hurt.
I have no problem telling people I no longer gossip, and I know it has pushed some friends away. And I am okay with that because I am no longer bound by those old patterns.
My own battle stripped away the need to judge, speculate, or speak casually about others. When you’ve been brought to your own knees by loss, illness, or fear, you begin to understand how fragile a human heart truly is and how heavy careless words can land on someone who is already drowning.
Compassion, I learned, is not a moral high ground; it is wisdom earned through pain.
When my life was slowly unraveling, I started to learn what it felt like to move through the world misunderstood, judged by appearances while privately struggling to stay afloat. While I was drowning, every whispered comment, every casual judgment felt like a weight dragging me to the bottom of the sea.
It was in that very personal space that gossip stopped feeling harmless. It began to feel irresponsible and careless, speaking about wounds without knowing how deep they go.
Slowly, I began to see how much wasted energy gossip demanded and how little it gave in return.
Outgrowing gossip wasn’t about being better than anyone else; it was about being the best version of myself. It became about protecting my own heart and choosing empathy over mindless, idle words.
My healing required space, silence, and the courage to speak only what nurtures rather than harms. My own pain taught me that every person is carrying a story heavy enough without my judgment adding weight.
Choosing silence and compassion changed the way I moved through the world.
Just last week, I caught myself about to join a familiar conversation, but I quickly stopped myself. In that pause, I realized how much freer I could be, no longer weighed down by old habits. I listened more, judged less, and found joy in connecting with people rather than dissecting them. My energy is no longer drained by the toxic weight of gossip, and my heart feels lighter, more open, and more at peace.
Gossip only kept me small, but now I choose to grow beyond it, giving my time to what truly nourishes the heart: kindness, connection, and understanding.
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About Lisa Ingrassia
Lisa Ingrassia is a former HuffPost blogger and Belief Net writer. She is a monthly contributor for Family Christian with work has also appearing in Her View from Home and The Mighty. She is currently working on her memoir, After the Amen, and shares reflections on life, grief, and love through her social media page, A Daughter’s Love. When she’s not writing, Lisa is a devoted wife and obsessed with her puppy, Nitro.
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