Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Trusting tomorrow requires courage

06-16-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
V2

Few things create more anxiety than the future. Today may have its challenges, yet at least we can see what is in front of us. Tomorrow is different. It exists beyond our sight, hidden behind a curtain we cannot pull back. That uncertainty can feel unsettling because we are moving toward something we cannot fully understand or predict.

Most of us like to believe we know how our lives will unfold. We make plans, set goals, and create expectations about what comes next. Life has a way of reminding us that certainty is often an illusion. A single conversation, unexpected loss, new opportunity, or unforeseen challenge can change everything in an instant. No matter how carefully we prepare, we cannot guarantee a specific outcome.

Much of our fear about tomorrow comes from our resistance to change. We worry that something important may end or that we will be forced to face circumstances we do not feel prepared to handle. The mind begins creating stories about what could go wrong, and before long we find ourselves living in imagined futures that may never happen.

In Buddhism, this fear is closely tied to the reality of impermanence. Everything changes. Relationships evolve, careers shift, seasons pass, and circumstances rise and fall. Accepting this truth is difficult because human beings naturally seek stability and certainty. Fear often convinces us that control is the answer. We believe that if we plan enough, analyze enough, or prepare enough, we can protect ourselves from disappointment.

The problem is that the pursuit of control often creates more suffering than the uncertainty itself. The harder we try to control every outcome, the more exhausted we become. Relationships can suffer, stress increases, and life becomes consumed by worrying about possibilities that may never occur.

Fear is not the enemy. It is a natural human response to uncertainty. The goal is not to eliminate fear but to prevent it from directing our lives. Courage is not the absence of fear. Courage is moving forward despite it.

One lesson I continue to learn is that trusting tomorrow requires courage. There are no guarantees that the future will be easy. Tomorrow may bring disappointment, heartbreak, or unexpected challenges. Life offers no promise of a painless path.

What is easy to forget is that uncertainty works both ways. The future does not only hold the possibility of hardship. It also holds the possibility of healing, growth, joy, connection, and opportunities we cannot yet see. The same tomorrow we fear may contain the breakthrough we have been waiting for.

Since none of us can know what tomorrow holds, we have a choice. We can spend today fearing possibilities that may never arrive, or we can meet the future with openness and trust. Acceptance does not mean giving up. It means recognizing the limits of our control and finding peace within those boundaries.

The more I have practiced this mindset, the more I have realized that much of the suffering surrounding the future originates in the stories created by my own mind. The unknown often appears far more frightening from a distance than it does when we finally arrive there. Many of the situations I once feared became challenges I survived, learned from, and grew through.

Whenever uncertainty feels overwhelming, I remind myself of a simple truth: there is always a way forward. The path may not be obvious, but there is always a next step. The future does not have the power to defeat us. Our greatest obstacle is often the story we tell ourselves about what the future means.

Tomorrow will arrive whether we welcome it or not. Rather than meeting it with dread, we can choose to meet it with curiosity, courage, and trust. Whatever awaits us, we have survived every difficult day up to this point. That alone is proof that we are stronger than our fears would have us believe.

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Monday, June 15, 2026

They feel like they already belong in your story

 

06-15-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ

Nobody wakes up one morning and consciously decides that someone is going to become part of their future.

It rarely happens that way.

There is no announcement. No defining moment that clearly marks the beginning. Most of the time, it unfolds so gradually that you do not even notice it happening.

At first, they are simply someone you enjoy talking to. Conversations feel easy. Their messages make you smile. Their presence brightens an otherwise ordinary day. Nothing about it feels unusual because there are no expectations attached to it. You are just enjoying the connection for what it is.

As time passes, something subtle begins to change. You start looking forward to hearing from them. A story happens during the day, and they are the first person you think about telling. You find yourself wondering how they are doing or what they might think about something you experienced. Their presence begins occupying a little more space in your thoughts, not because you planned it, but because it feels natural.

Without realizing it, they start appearing in places they have never actually been.

You hear about a restaurant you would like to try someday, and your mind automatically imagines them sitting across the table. You come across a city you hope to visit, and somehow they are already walking beside you through unfamiliar streets. A movie you want to see, a concert you would enjoy, a holiday you hope to take, or even a home you dream of creating one day suddenly includes them without any effort on your part.

The interesting thing is that these thoughts rarely arrive as fantasies or grand romantic gestures. They slip quietly into everyday moments. They become woven into ordinary hopes and plans. What once looked like a future built entirely around yourself slowly begins making room for another person.

Looking back, I cannot point to the exact moment it happened. There was no dramatic realization and no life changing conversation. One day I simply noticed they were there.

Not in every thought.

Not in every plan.

Just present in a way that felt completely natural.

Like someone who belonged.

Perhaps that is what love often looks like before we recognize it for what it is. Popular stories tend to focus on dramatic confessions, overwhelming emotions, and unforgettable moments. Real life is often much quieter than that.

Sometimes love begins when another person slowly becomes part of the way you imagine tomorrow. They appear in your future not because you intentionally placed them there, but because your heart quietly made room for them long before your mind caught up.

By the time you finally notice, they already feel like they belong in the story you are writing for your life. What began as a simple connection has become something deeper, something meaningful, and something that feels surprisingly like home.
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One day at a time

06-15-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ

Life has a way of bringing every one of us to our knees at some point. No matter how carefully we plan, how hard we work, or how much we try to stay ahead of problems, there will be moments when things fall apart. Expectations are shattered. Circumstances change without warning. The path we thought we were following suddenly disappears beneath our feet.

In those moments, we are faced with a choice. We can allow the setback to define us, or we can find the courage to stand back up and keep moving forward.

Getting back up is rarely the easy part. Falling can happen in an instant. Recovering often takes far longer. It requires patience, resilience, and a willingness to keep going even when there is no guarantee that things will improve right away. When several challenges arrive at the same time, the weight can feel overwhelming. Problems begin competing for our attention. Our minds jump from one concern to another. We search for answers, try to regain control, and often end up feeling even more exhausted than before.

There have been seasons in my own life when everything seemed to be happening at once. Plans took unexpected turns. Situations I thought I had under control suddenly changed direction. There were days when it felt as though the world was working against me, as if every step forward was met with another obstacle. Experiences like these can leave us questioning ourselves, our choices, and even our future.

One lesson life continues to teach is that not everything unfolds according to our plans. Sometimes circumstances arrive without warning and force us into unfamiliar territory. During those periods, it is easy to lose our sense of balance. Anxiety grows louder. Frustration takes hold. We begin searching for someone or something to blame. Self pity can quietly settle in and convince us that we are powerless to change our situation.

Challenges have a way of freezing us in place. Even when we know what action might help, we often find ourselves trapped in endless analysis. We replay conversations, imagine worst case scenarios, and search for answers that may not even exist yet. Fear convinces us that if we think about the problem long enough, we will eventually solve it. In reality, many of us discover that the constant worrying causes more damage than the challenge itself.

When emotions take over, clear thinking becomes difficult. Decisions made from fear, anger, desperation, or hopelessness rarely lead us where we want to go. Emotional reactions can create new problems while we are still trying to manage the original ones. That is why learning how to steady ourselves during difficult seasons is one of the most valuable skills we can develop.

Over time, I discovered an approach that has helped me navigate uncertainty with greater peace of mind. Instead of obsessing over everything that could happen tomorrow, I bring my attention back to today. It sounds simple, perhaps even obvious, yet it has been one of the most powerful shifts I have ever made.

The truth is that tomorrow remains outside our control. We cannot predict every outcome, prevent every setback, or solve every future problem before it arrives. What we do have is this moment. We have today. We have the decisions we make right now.

That perspective has become an anchor during difficult times. Whenever my mind starts racing ahead, I remind myself to focus on what can be done today. I look at what truly needs my attention and what can wait. I identify the next step rather than trying to solve the entire journey at once. Some days that step is significant. Other days it is incredibly small. Both still count as progress.

What surprised me most was how much hope can be found in taking small, consistent actions. Progress does not have to be dramatic to be meaningful. Every decision to move forward, no matter how modest, builds momentum. Every choice to remain present weakens the grip of fear. Every effort to focus on what is within our control strengthens our confidence.

This mindset has also reminded me of something important: no one else is responsible for creating peace within my life. While circumstances influence us, we still have a say in how we respond. We have the ability to choose our next action, our next thought, and our next step forward. That responsibility can feel heavy at times, yet it is also deeply empowering because it means we are never completely powerless.

Whenever life feels overwhelming, I return to a simple reminder: one day at a time. Not next month. Not next year. Today.

I do not need to solve every problem at once. I do not need all the answers immediately. I only need to take the next step that is available to me. The rest can unfold in its own time.

If you are carrying anxiety, sadness, uncertainty, or disappointment right now, give yourself permission to stop chasing happiness for a moment and focus instead on being fully present. Meet reality where it is, not where you wish it were. Accepting what is happening does not mean giving up. It means seeing clearly enough to make wise decisions about what comes next.

Presence creates clarity. Clarity creates action. Action creates momentum. Over time, that momentum becomes hope.

No matter how difficult this season may feel, trust that you are stronger than you think. Keep showing up. Keep taking the next step. Keep moving forward one day at a time. You may be surprised by how far those small steps eventually carry you.

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Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Life was never designed to be controlled

 

06-08-2026
©BTMT-TJ
One of the most humbling realizations I have had is that life was never designed to be controlled. From the moment we enter this world, we are stepping into a journey filled with uncertainty, change, growth, loss, and unexpected turns. We arrive with nothing, and one day we will leave with nothing. Everything we experience in between is temporary, no matter how important, beautiful, or meaningful it may seem in the moment.

That truth can feel uncomfortable at first. Most of us spend a great deal of our lives trying to create certainty. We want guarantees. We want security. We want to know that the people we love will always be here, that our plans will unfold exactly as we imagined, and that the things we work so hard to build will remain unchanged. Yet life rarely follows a script. Circumstances shift. Relationships evolve. Dreams transform. Seasons come and go. What feels permanent today can look completely different a year from now.

The reality is that much of what happens around us exists outside our control. We cannot control how other people think, feel, or behave. We cannot control every outcome, every opportunity, or every challenge that crosses our path. We cannot stop time from moving forward or prevent change from arriving at our doorstep. What we do have control over is something far more powerful: the way we respond to the life unfolding in front of us.

Many of us spend years holding tightly to people, possessions, goals, identities, beliefs, regrets, and expectations. We convince ourselves that if we can just hold on a little tighter, we can preserve things exactly as they are. Yet the tighter we grip, the more fear we often create. We become anxious about losing what we have, worried about what might change, and exhausted from trying to manage things that were never ours to control in the first place.

This is one of the reasons so many wisdom traditions encourage us to reflect on the nature of attachment. If everything is constantly changing, what are we really trying to hold on to? What would happen if we stopped resisting the flow of life and learned to move with it instead?

For me, learning to let go has not made life feel less meaningful. It has made life feel more meaningful. When I stop assuming something will last forever, I become more present with it. I appreciate people more deeply. I savor experiences more fully. I become more grateful for ordinary moments because I understand they are not guaranteed. The temporary nature of life is not what diminishes its value. It is what gives life its value.

There is a great deal of wisdom in the idea that the more we try to control something, the more power it gains over us. The need to control often creates anxiety, frustration, and disappointment because reality rarely conforms to our expectations. Letting go is not about giving up. It is about releasing the illusion that we were ever meant to control everything in the first place.

Freedom begins when we stop fighting reality and start accepting it. That does not mean becoming passive or indifferent. It means participating fully in life while understanding that change is part of the experience. It means loving deeply without trying to possess. It means pursuing dreams without attaching your worth to the outcome. It means appreciating what you have while recognizing that nothing is guaranteed.

When we release our need to control every detail, something remarkable happens. We create space for peace. We become less consumed by fear and more connected to the present moment. We stop wasting energy trying to manage the uncontrollable and start investing that energy into living.

Life becomes much lighter when we learn to live and let live. The rest is often noise that pulls us away from what truly matters. What remains is the opportunity to be present, to love, to grow, to learn, and to experience this fleeting, beautiful journey for exactly what it is: a gift that was never meant to be held onto forever.

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Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Your past does not have to determine the ending...

06-01-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ

Every one of us carries a story about who we are and what is possible for our lives. The challenge is that many of those stories were never consciously chosen. They were formed through childhood experiences, painful moments, disappointments, criticism, fear, and the messages we absorbed from the world around us.

Some of those stories sound familiar. Maybe it is the quiet belief that you are not enough. Maybe it is the feeling that success belongs to other people. Perhaps it is the belief that you cannot change, that you are powerless, unworthy, unlovable, or destined to fail. Over time, these thoughts can become so familiar that they stop feeling like opinions and start feeling like facts.

The same thing happens in our relationships and daily experiences. We begin interpreting life through the lens of those old stories. Someone seems distant, so we assume they do not like us. Someone shows kindness, and we become suspicious of their motives. A delayed text becomes evidence that someone is upset with us. A setback becomes proof that nothing will ever work out. A difficult season convinces us that we are alone, unappreciated, or somehow less valuable than everyone else around us.

What is remarkable is that these conclusions often have very little to do with reality. They are reflections of the stories running beneath the surface. The mind is constantly searching for evidence to support what it already believes. When those beliefs are rooted in fear, insecurity, or old wounds, it becomes easy to create explanations that reinforce them, even when they are not true.

Many people spend years believing these narratives simply because they have been repeated for so long. They become part of our emotional inheritance, passed down through families, environments, experiences, and generations. We learn them before we are old enough to question them. We absorb them before we realize we have a choice.

That is why it is so important to understand that the stories you inherited are not necessarily the truth. They may explain how you learned to see yourself and the world, but they do not define who you are. They are patterns. They are interpretations. They are learned responses. Most importantly, they can be changed.

None of us gets to choose the experiences that shaped our nervous system in the beginning. We do, however, have the ability to become aware of the beliefs those experiences created. The moment we stop living on autopilot is the moment real change begins. That requires courage. It requires a willingness to look beneath our reactions, examine our triggers, and explore the memories that helped shape our view of ourselves.

When we discover where a story came from, we stop treating it as an unchangeable truth. We begin seeing it for what it really is: a narrative that was written during a different chapter of our lives. Once we recognize that, we gain the power to write something new.

The goal is not to pretend that life has always been easy or to ignore the pain we have experienced. The goal is to stop allowing old stories to dictate our future. Every small act of self awareness, every new choice, every healthier thought pattern becomes part of a new narrative. Little by little, those small changes create momentum. They build confidence. They open doors that once felt permanently closed.

Changing deeply rooted beliefs is not easy work. Most people know exactly how exhausting it can be to battle the same thoughts, fears, and insecurities year after year. Yet there often comes a moment when staying the same becomes more painful than changing. The frustration, emotional exhaustion, and longing for something better are not signs of failure. They are signals. They are reminders that part of you is ready for growth.

If your current story no longer reflects the life you want to create, give yourself permission to write a different one. Get clear about what you want. Take an honest look at what is holding you back. Release the beliefs that no longer serve you. Choose thoughts, actions, and habits that move you toward the person you want to become.

Your past may explain your story, but it does not have to determine the ending. The pen is still in your hands, and every day offers another opportunity to write a chapter filled with more strength, more freedom, and more possibility than the one before.

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Monday, June 1, 2026

Growth requires us to stop asking for permission to believe in ourselves

05-27-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
We spend so much of our lives looking outward, hoping something outside of us will finally create peace within us. We search for understanding from other people because we believe that if they could just fully see us, fully support us, or fully agree with us, then maybe we would finally feel secure in who we are. It is easy to fall into the habit of believing that acceptance from others will somehow fill the spaces inside us that still feel uncertain or unworthy.

The difficult truth is that external validation can never fully replace self acceptance. No amount of praise, agreement, encouragement, or approval from other people can create lasting confidence when we are disconnected from ourselves. Even the most supportive relationships cannot compensate for the absence of our own belief in who we are. When self love is missing, validation becomes temporary. It feels good for a moment, then fades just as quickly, leaving us searching for more reassurance all over again.

Something shifts once we begin to recognize this. The need to constantly be understood by everyone starts to loosen its grip. We stop chasing approval with the same desperation because we realize there is only one perspective we truly have control over our own. That realization can feel incredibly freeing. It allows us to stop performing for acceptance and start building a deeper sense of trust within ourselves.

A life coach reminded me of this recently in a way that stayed with me. They talked about the importance of becoming our own strongest source of encouragement and belief. The dreams that grow the most are often the ones we protect and nurture ourselves, long before anyone else sees their value. Faith in our own vision matters more than waiting for other people to validate it first.

I remember how deeply I craved understanding at the beginning of my podcast journey. I wanted friends and family to fully grasp what I was trying to build. I wanted excitement from them. Support from them. Validation that I was moving in the right direction. Every reaction felt important because I tied their understanding to my confidence.

Over time, I started to realize something that changed the way I approached everything. Other people will never care about our dreams in the same way we do. That is not cruelty or rejection. It is simply human nature. Most people are consumed with their own responsibilities, fears, ambitions, and inner battles. Everyone is carrying their own tunnel vision through life, focused on what matters most to them personally.

Once I stopped expecting other people to carry the same emotional investment in my path, I felt lighter. Prioritizing my own belief in what I was building changed everything. The more I became my own supporter, the less I needed constant reassurance from the people around me. The urge to seek approval softened. The need to explain myself faded. Confidence started becoming something internal instead of something dependent on outside reactions.

The people who love us can absolutely encourage us, support us, and cheer us on. That support is meaningful and valuable. Still, nothing compares to the feeling of fully standing beside yourself. There is something deeply empowering about becoming the person who believes in your vision even when nobody else fully understands it yet. Self trust creates a kind of fulfillment that external validation can never consistently provide.

At some point, growth requires us to stop asking the world for permission to believe in ourselves. The most important relationship we will ever build is the one we have with who we are when nobody else is clapping, validating, or approving. Once that foundation becomes strong, the opinions of others stop feeling like the thing holding our worth together.

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Friday, May 29, 2026

Connection still matters

05-26-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
Sharing our perspectives, our stories, and the truths we uncover about ourselves with people we trust can be one of the most meaningful parts of being human. There is something deeply healing about sitting across from someone and feeling safe enough to speak honestly. Those conversations can strengthen relationships, deepen emotional connection, and remind us that we are not moving through life alone. Being witnessed by another person matters. Feeling heard matters.

At the same time, there is a limit to how much of our inner world can actually be explained through language. Some experiences reshape us in ways that words can only partially capture. A moment of loss, healing, awakening, growth, or transformation can feel enormous inside of us, yet sound surprisingly simple once spoken out loud. The emotional depth of an experience does not always survive the translation from feeling into language.

There are seasons of life where we go through internal shifts that only make complete sense to us because we were the ones who lived through every detail of them. Other people may hear the story, but they did not carry the emotions, the fears, the realizations, or the quiet moments that gave the experience its meaning. Sometimes our words land differently than we intended. Sometimes they do not carry the same emotional weight for the listener. That disconnect can leave us feeling unseen, even when we are trying our hardest to communicate clearly.

I remember reconnecting with a friend after returning from a trip to Bali last year. Over drinks, they asked about some of the insights and personal changes I experienced while I was there. I tried to explain a few of the shifts that happened internally, the way certain moments changed how I viewed myself and my life. After sharing, one of the responses I received was, “Well, anyone could tell you that.”

In that moment, I realized my experience was not truly landing the way I hoped it would. The meaning behind it was getting lost somewhere between what I felt internally and what I was able to express externally. That did not make the experience any less real or important. It simply revealed something I think many of us eventually learn. Some things cannot be fully understood by people who did not live through them themselves.

What made that moment difficult was not just the misunderstanding. It was the loneliness that followed it. I walked away feeling disconnected because I wanted my experience to be validated in the same way it felt meaningful to me. I wanted someone else to fully grasp why it mattered so deeply. When that understanding did not come, it created insecurity and emotional distance.

Looking back now, I can also recognize something deeper beneath that interaction. Sometimes we seek understanding from other people because we are still trying to understand ourselves. We look for reassurance, validation, or confirmation from outside sources when our own inner clarity still feels shaky. The experiences and truths I was sharing at that time were still unfolding inside me. I had not fully settled into them yet. Part of me hoped that if someone else understood them, it would make me feel more certain about them too.

That realization changed the way I view misunderstanding. External understanding can feel comforting, but it can never create lasting inner security. No amount of someone else agreeing with us, validating us, or fully “getting it” can replace the self trust we have not yet built within ourselves. Real confidence comes from learning to honor our own experiences, even when they are difficult to explain. Real peace comes from trusting what we know internally, even when others cannot fully see it.

There will always be moments where people misunderstand our growth, our healing, our decisions, or the changes happening within us. That does not mean we are wrong. It does not mean our experiences are less meaningful. It simply means that some parts of life are deeply personal and cannot always be translated perfectly into words.

The goal is not to stop sharing ourselves with others. Connection still matters. Vulnerability still matters. Honest conversations still matter. The deeper lesson is learning not to base our sense of self on whether everyone else fully understands our journey. There is strength in being able to say, “This experience changed me,” even if nobody else completely understands why.

Sometimes the most powerful form of self trust is allowing your truth to exist without needing universal validation.

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Thursday, May 28, 2026

Real peace comes from...

05-21-2026
©BTMT-TJ
No matter how deeply we want to feel understood, there comes a point where we have to accept that other people’s opinions are not something we can control. No amount of explaining, proving, softening, or reshaping ourselves can guarantee that someone will see us clearly. People do not respond to us based only on who we are. They respond through the lens of their own experiences, fears, beliefs, insecurities, and expectations. In many ways, people see what they are prepared to see.

As we grow and change, this becomes even more obvious. Some people become uncomfortable the moment we begin stepping outside the role they assigned to us years ago. They became familiar with a certain version of us, and that version made them feel secure. It fit neatly inside the story they created in their mind. The moment we begin evolving, setting boundaries, speaking differently, dreaming bigger, healing, or becoming more confident, it disrupts that story. Instead of adjusting their perspective, some people resist the change entirely.

That resistance often has very little to do with us personally. Many people fear change because change forces self reflection. Watching someone else grow can quietly challenge the beliefs they have been holding onto for years. It can expose the places where they have stayed stuck, comfortable, guarded, or afraid. Expanding their understanding would require emotional flexibility and honesty, and not everyone is ready for that. Remaining rigid can feel safer than questioning their own perspective.

Because of this, misunderstanding becomes a defense mechanism. Rather than becoming curious, some people choose assumptions. Rather than asking questions, they cling harder to the version of us they already decided was true. It feels easier for them to label, dismiss, or misinterpret than it does to admit that people are allowed to evolve beyond old expectations.

Learning this can feel painful at first because most of us naturally want connection and acceptance. We want to believe that if we communicate clearly enough, people will eventually understand our heart. Sometimes they will. Sometimes they will not. Real peace comes from realizing that our growth cannot be dependent on universal approval. The people who are meant to grow alongside us will make room for who we are becoming, not just who we used to be.

There is something incredibly freeing about no longer exhausting yourself trying to manage how everyone perceives you. Once you stop carrying the responsibility of controlling other people’s opinions, you create space to live more honestly. You stop shrinking to fit inside someone else’s comfort zone. You stop apologizing for evolving. You stop treating your authenticity like something that needs permission.

The right people may not understand every part of your journey, but they will respect your humanity enough to let you grow without punishing you for it. That kind of connection is worth far more than approval built on pretending to stay the same forever.

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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Building a life that actually feels like your own.

05-20-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
There comes a point in life when you realize authenticity and universal approval cannot exist side by side. The more honest you become about who you are, the less energy you spend shaping yourself into something easier for other people to accept. You stop editing your personality to make others comfortable. You stop rehearsing every word before you speak. You stop shrinking parts of yourself just to avoid judgment or rejection. What begins to emerge is a version of you that feels more grounded, more peaceful, and far more real.

That kind of authenticity changes relationships. Some people will feel drawn closer to you because they finally get to experience the real version of who you are. Others may pull away because your honesty no longer fits the version of you they had grown comfortable with. That can feel painful at first, especially for people who spent years trying to earn love through approval, people pleasing, or constant self adjustment. Still, rejection is not always a sign that something is wrong. Sometimes it is evidence that you have stopped betraying yourself in order to keep the peace.

Living authentically requires accepting a difficult truth. Not everyone will understand you, and not everyone is supposed to. Some people only know how to connect with versions of others that feel predictable and familiar to them. When someone becomes more self aware, more expressive, or more emotionally honest, it can challenge people who are still uncomfortable with those same qualities inside themselves. Their discomfort is not your responsibility to manage. Their inability to understand you does not mean you are too much, too complicated, or somehow wrong.

People often reject what they have not yet learned to accept within themselves. Someone who has spent their whole life hiding parts of who they are may struggle to embrace a person who lives openly and confidently. That reaction says more about their internal limitations than it does about your worth. You do not need to carry the burden of convincing everyone to approve of your existence. You are not here to spend your life translating yourself into something more digestible for people who are committed to misunderstanding you anyway.

Being misunderstood can feel lonely, especially when you are first learning to stand fully in your truth. Yet there is also freedom in realizing that your value does not rise or fall based on whether everyone agrees with you, relates to you, or accepts you. The right people will not require you to become smaller in order to belong. They will not punish you for being honest about who you are. They will recognize your authenticity as something rare and courageous.

The moment you stop performing for acceptance is often the moment you finally begin building a life that actually feels like your own. Some relationships may fall away in that process. Some people may never understand the changes they see in you. That does not mean you should return to hiding. It means you are finally stepping out of survival mode and into alignment with yourself. The people who are meant to walk beside you will never require you to abandon your truth just to earn a place in their world.

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Tuesday, May 26, 2026

We all want to feel understood

05-19-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
We all want to feel understood. Most of us spend a large portion of our lives trying to make sure other people see us correctly, interpret us fairly, and recognize the intentions behind our words and actions. That desire is deeply human. Feeling understood creates a sense of safety. It makes us feel connected, valued, and emotionally secure. When that understanding feels uncertain, many of us begin working overtime to protect ourselves from being misread.

That is why we explain ourselves long after the conversation should have ended. We replay interactions in our minds while driving home or lying awake at night. We mentally rehearse future conversations before they even happen, trying to anticipate every possible misunderstanding before someone else has the chance to form the wrong opinion of us. There is an exhausting pressure that comes from constantly managing perception. It can quietly consume so much emotional energy without us even realizing it.

Being misunderstood can feel surprisingly painful because it often touches something much deeper than the moment itself. It can feel like rejection. It can feel like disconnection. Sometimes it feels like people are seeing only fragments of who we are while missing the parts that matter most. There is a particular loneliness in realizing that someone has created a version of you in their mind that does not actually reflect your heart, your intentions, or your character.

The difficult truth is that no amount of explaining can guarantee understanding. Some people will misunderstand you no matter how thoughtful, kind, patient, or articulate you are. Some people are listening through the filter of their own fears, insecurities, assumptions, experiences, or expectations. Others may only understand people who fit comfortably inside the version of reality they already know. That has very little to do with your worth and everything to do with the limits of their perspective.

At some point, growth requires asking a difficult question: do you really need everyone else to understand you in order to trust yourself? That question changes everything because it forces you to examine how much of your peace has been placed in the hands of other people’s opinions. Many of us unknowingly build our confidence around external validation. We feel stable when we are approved of and uncertain when we are questioned. That creates a fragile sense of identity because it depends entirely on how other people respond to us.

Real confidence begins to develop when you stop treating misunderstanding as evidence that something is wrong with you. You begin realizing that your responsibility is not to manage every perception. Your responsibility is to live honestly, communicate clearly, and remain grounded in your own values. After that, other people are allowed to interpret you however they choose.

There is freedom in no longer chasing universal understanding. The moment you stop trying to convince everyone to see you correctly, you reclaim energy that can finally be used to simply live your life. You become less focused on performing for acceptance and more focused on becoming aligned with yourself. Ironically, that authenticity often creates deeper and healthier connections anyway because people are no longer meeting a carefully edited version of you. They are meeting someone real.

The people who are meant to understand your heart usually will. The people who are determined not to may never do so, no matter how carefully you explain yourself. Learning to be at peace with that is not giving up on connection. It is learning that your identity cannot depend on universal approval. Sometimes the greatest form of self trust is allowing yourself to be misunderstood without abandoning who you are in the process.

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Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Growth challenges familiarity

05-16-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
Understanding is not something that can be demanded from other people. No matter how clearly we explain ourselves, how carefully we choose our words, or how deeply we want to feel seen, we cannot control the way someone else interprets us. Every person filters the world through their own experiences, fears, wounds, expectations, and beliefs. What they see in us is often shaped more by their internal world than by who we truly are.

Many people become attached to a specific version of us. They meet us during one chapter of our lives and quietly decide that this is who we are supposed to remain. The moment we begin to grow, evolve, heal, or move beyond the identity they became comfortable with, tension starts to surface. Growth challenges familiarity, and familiarity is where many people feel safe.

Some individuals are deeply uncomfortable with change because change forces reflection. When someone close to them begins stepping into a new level of confidence, authenticity, or freedom, it can unintentionally expose the places where they themselves feel stuck. Rather than becoming curious about that discomfort, they often resist it. They hold tighter to old assumptions, old labels, and old expectations because those things allow them to avoid questioning their own perspective.

This is why misunderstanding so often becomes a defense mechanism. It is easier for some people to dismiss, criticize, or misinterpret someone than it is to expand their worldview enough to truly see them. Misunderstanding allows people to protect the beliefs they have built their identity around. It allows them to remain comfortable without having to confront the possibility that growth requires openness.

Learning this changes the way we carry rejection. It helps us stop treating every misunderstanding like a personal failure. Not everyone is willing to meet us where we are going. Not everyone has the emotional flexibility to accept that people evolve over time. That does not mean our growth is wrong. It simply means our evolution no longer fits inside the limited framework they created for us.

There is freedom in realizing that being misunderstood is sometimes the natural cost of becoming more authentic. The goal cannot be to shrink ourselves into something easier for everyone else to process. The goal is to become honest enough with ourselves that we no longer abandon our growth just to preserve someone else’s comfort.

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