But So Did Your Taste in Red Flags, and We Survived That Too
Healing is such a funny journey because nobody really tells you what it actually looks like.
People make it sound all inspirational and cinematic. Like one morning you wake up peacefully healed, glowing in natural sunlight, drinking lemon water while journaling your breakthrough thoughts in a linen outfit you somehow own now.
Meanwhile, real healing looks more like:
crying in your car, unfollowing toxic people, setting boundaries you feel guilty about for no reason, listening to the same three songs on repeat, deep cleaning your house at 11 PM because your emotions got overstimulated, and convincing yourself that buying another candle counts as self-care.
And honestly?
That still counts.
Because healing isn’t always pretty. Sometimes it’s messy, uncomfortable, lonely, and deeply inconvenient. Sometimes it’s realizing the people you kept overextending yourself for wouldn’t even inconvenience themselves to refill your drink at dinner.
That realization alone deserves financial compensation.
One of the hardest parts about growth is learning to stop abandoning yourself just to keep other people comfortable.
Whew.
Because some of us became experts at shrinking ourselves.
Staying quiet to avoid conflict.
Over-explaining our feelings to emotionally unavailable people.
Giving grace to everybody except ourselves.
And after a while, you realize something terrifying:
you’ve been treating yourself worse than you’d ever treat someone you love.
That’ll humble you real quick.
Healing starts changing when you finally begin asking:
“Why am I so loyal to people who consistently drain me?”
“Why do I keep begging for bare minimum effort?”
“Why am I giving VIP access to people who show up emotionally like expired coupons?”
Growth will really have you looking back at old situations like:
“Wow. I really thought anxiety and inconsistency was chemistry.”
Embarrassing. But educational.
And here’s the wild part: the more you heal, the less tolerance you have for chaos disguised as connection.
Suddenly:
Mixed signals feel exhausting.
Fake apologies sound scripted.
Inconsistent effort becomes unattractive.
And peace? Peace starts feeling addictive.
You stop chasing people.
You stop proving your worth.
You stop auditioning for roles in relationships that should’ve been mutual from the start.
Because once you learn how peaceful your life gets without constant emotional confusion… it’s hard to go back.
And no, healing doesn’t mean you become cold or bitter.
It just means your boundaries finally got stronger than your fear of disappointing people.
That’s growth.
You’re learning to speak kinder to yourself.
Rest without guilt.
Walk away without explaining yourself into exhaustion.
And treat yourself like someone worth protecting instead of somebody who only exists to pour into everyone else.
Which, by the way, is overdue.
So if your healing journey currently looks like:
blocking people, crying occasionally, rebuilding your confidence, protecting your peace, drinking more water, romanticizing your alone time, and learning not every apology deserves renewed access…
Congratulations.
You’re doing better than you think.
And if nobody has told you lately:
your future self is probably looking back at you right now saying,
“Thank God we stopped settling for emotional nonsense.”
Growth looks good on you. Even if you’re still processing it in oversized hoodies and survival mode snacks. π€