She realized she was the only self she could be—and not being
unapologetically true to herself was a disservice to her soul and the
world.
She was done listening to the noise of the world. She realized the quiet voice of her own soul was the most beautiful sound.
She was done questioning her motives, her intentions, the call of her
soul. She realized questions seek answers, and maybe she already knew
the answers.
She was done striving, forcing, pushing through and staying on the
hard path. She realized toughing things out might be a sign to pick
another path.
She was done with friends that admonished her to be more light and
breezy. She realized they didn’t understand she swam in the deep waters
of life, she felt at home in their dark depths and died if she lived on
the surface.
She was done with the distractions, the denials, the small addictions
that pulled her away from the true desires of her soul. She realized
that strength of character came from focus and commitment.
She was done not following the desires that yelled out in her soul
every day. She realized if she did nothing about them, they died a quiet
death that took a piece of her soul with them.
She was done with dinner parties and cocktail hours where
conversations skimmed the surface of life. She realized the beverages
created distortion and a temporary happiness that wasn’t real and
disappeared in the light of the day.
She was done trying to please everyone. She realized it could never be done.
She was done questioning herself. She realized her heart knew the truth and she needed to follow it.
She was done analyzing all the options, weighing the pros and cons
and trying to figure everything out before leaping. She realized that
taking a leap implied not fully seeing where she landed.
She was done battling with herself, trying to change who she knew
herself to be. She realized the world made it hard enough to fully be
herself, so why add to the challenge.
She was done worrying, as if worry was the price she had to pay to
make it all turn out okay. She realized worry didn’t need to be part of
the process.
She was done apologizing and playing small to make others feel
comfortable and fit in. She realized fitting in was overrated and
shining her light made others brave enough to do the same.
She was done with the should’s, ought to’s and have to’s of the
world. She realized the only must’s in her life came from things that
beat so strong in her soul, she couldn’t not do them.
She was done with remorse and could have’s. She realized hindsight
never applies because circumstances always look different in the
rearview mirror and you experience life looking through the front
window.
She was done with friendships based on shared history and past
experiences. She realized if friends couldn’t grow together, or were no
longer following the same path, it was okay to let them go.
She was done trying to fit in—be part of the popular crowd. She
realized the price she had to pay to be included was too high and
betrayed her soul.
She was done not trusting. She realized she had placed her trust in
people that were untrustworthy—so she would start with the person she
could trust the most—herself.
She was done being tired. She realized it came from spending her time doing things that didn’t bring her joy or feed her soul.
She was done trying to figure it all out, know the answers, plan
everything and see all the possibilities before she began. She realized
life was unfolding and that the detours and unexpected moments were some
of the best parts.
She was done needing to be understood by anyone but herself. She
realized she was the only person she would spend her whole with and
understanding herself was more important than being understood by
others.
She was done looking for love. She realized loving and accepting
herself was the best kind of love and the seed from which all other love
started.
She was done fighting, trying to change or not her accepting her
body. She realized the body she came into the world with was the only
one she had—there were no exchanges or returns—so love and acceptance
was the only way.
She was done being tuned in, connected and up-to-date all the time.
She realized the news and noise of the world was always there—a
cacophony that never slowed or fell quiet and that listening to the
silence of her soul was a better station to tune into.
She was done beating herself up and being so hard on herself as if
either of these things led to changes or made her feel better. She
realized kindness and compassion towards herself and others accomplished
more.
She was done comparing and looking at other people’s lives as a
mirror for her own. She realized holding her own mirror cast her in the
best, most beautiful light.
She was done being quiet, unemotional and holding her tongue. She
realized her voice and her emotions could be traced back to her deepest
desires and longings. if she only followed their thread.
She was done having to be right. She realized everyone’s truth was
relative and personal to themselves, so the only right that was required
was the one that felt true for her.
She was done not feeling at home in the world. She realized she might
never feel at home in the world, but that feeling at home in her soul
was enough.
She was done being drained by others—by people who didn’t want to
take the time for their own process and saw shortcuts though hers. She
realized she could share her experience, but everyone needed to do the
work themselves.
She was done thinking she had so much to learn. She realized she already knew so much, if she only listened.
She was done trying to change others or make them see things. She
realized she could only lead by example and whether they saw or followed
was up to them.
She was done with the inner critic. She realized its voice was not her own.
She was done racing and being discontent with where she was. She
realized the present moment held all it needed to get her to the next
moment. It wasn’t out there—it was right here.
She was done seeing hurt as something to be avoided, foreseen or
somehow her fault. She realized hurt shaped her as much as joy and she
needed both to learn and grow.
She was done judging. She realized judging assumed the presence of
right and wrong—and that there was a difference between using
information to inform and making someone else wrong.
She was done jumping to conclusions. She realized she only needed to ask.
She was done with regrets. She realized if she had known better she would have done better.
She was done being angry. She realized anger was just a flashlight
that showed her what she was most scared of and once it illuminated what
she needed to see, she no longer needed to hold on to it.
She was done being sad. She realized sorrow arose when she betrayed her own soul and made choices that weren’t true to herself.
She was done playing small. She realized if others couldn’t handle her light, it was because they were afraid of their own.
She was done with the facades and the pretending. She realized masks were suffocating and claustrophobic.
She was done with others’ criticism and complaints. She realized they
told her nothing about herself—only informed her of their perspective.
She was done yelling above the noise of the world. She realized living out loud could be done quietly.
She was done needing permission, validation or the authority. She realized she was her her own authority.
She was done being something she was not. She realized the purpose of
life was to be truly, happily who she was born to be…and if she paused
long enough to remember, she recognized herself.
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