Growth can be lonely. You notice subtle distance, fading patterns, quiet resistance. And you wonder: Am I changing too much? Am I leaving people behind?
It doesn’t announce itself. It doesn’t come with applause. It starts internally, a decision you make with yourself, for yourself. A moment where something inside you shifts and you realize: I can’t keep being who I was.
That decision is powerful… but also heavy.
Once you decide to evolve, things start changing around you, too. Not loudly. Not dramatically. Just slowly. People begin to fall away. Conversations change. Connections feel different. Energy shifts. The spaces you once fit into no longer feel like home.
And that part hurts.
No one really prepares you for the grief of outgrowing people who are still alive. For the sadness of realizing that not everyone is meant to walk the next version of your journey with you. Some people were meant for survival seasons. Some for learning seasons. Some for healing seasons. But not all of them are meant for your becoming.
And that’s hard to accept.
Growth can be lonely. You notice subtle distance, fading patterns, quiet resistance. And you wonder: Am I changing too much? Am I leaving people behind?
The truth: evolution isn’t about abandoning people. It’s about alignment. Not everyone wants to grow, and you can’t dim your light to make others comfortable.
So yes, people may slowly drift from your life. But that’s not all lost; it’s space for what truly matters. For relationships and energy that match who you are now, not who you were.
In that quiet shedding, there is clarity, honesty, and freedom. Painful, definitely; but necessary. Evolution doesn’t ask for comfort. It asks for truth. And choosing growth is choosing yourself.
It was uncomfortable to admit, but necessary. Because help given from depletion creates resentment. Support given from imbalance creates emotional debt. And care given without reciprocity slowly turns into self-abandonment
Some pain is loud and obvious. Other pain is quiet. It lives in small moments, repeated patterns, and silent realisations. The kind that doesn’t come from betrayal or conflict, but from noticing imbalance.
It comes from always being the one who shows up. From always being the one who checks in. From always being the one who adjusts. From always being the one who understands. From always being the one who gives.
And slowly realising that the same energy is not returned.
She was that person. Reliable. Present. Emotionally available. The one people leaned on. The one people called. The one people expected to be there. Not because she was closest, but because she was consistent.
Over time, she began to notice the pattern. Being the one who always initiates. Being the one who keeps relationships alive. Being the one who maintains the connection. Being the one who carries emotional labour. And a quiet question formed: why do I go so far for people who barely meet me halfway?
It wasn’t loud rejection. It wasn’t direct abandonment. It was something more subtle, the feeling of being replaceable. Not unwanted. Not disliked. Just easily substituted. The kind of feeling that builds slowly through repeated experiences of emotional imbalance.
What she didn’t understand at first was that the issue was never her heart. It was her placement. She was offering depth to people who lived on the surface. Consistency for people who live in convenience. Loyalty to people who are attached casually. Emotional safety for people who didn’t know how to protect it.
Because she was always there, her presence became expected. Her effort became normal. Her support became assumed. Her loyalty became invisible. Not because it had no value, but because it had no boundaries.
Somewhere along the way, she had learned that connection comes from effort, from being useful, from being needed, from being strong, from being supportive, and from being accommodating. So giving became a way to secure closeness, not a response to healthy reciprocity.
The shift didn’t come from anger. It came from awareness.
She began to notice something else, too, an inner conflict. The feeling of having to force herself to show up. The hesitation before helping. The pause before assisting. The quiet question of whether her giving was still genuine or was becoming anobligation.
She had often found herself holding on too long, hoping things would change, waiting for the wheels to keep turning, even when she felt like she was running on empty. There had been a quiet, dangerous voice in her head that whispered maybe she deserved the way she was being treated, maybe being undervalued was just how things were for her. But deep down, she knew that wasn’t the trut it was a habit of the mind, a shadow from past hurts trying to make sense of the pain. She reminded herself that no one ever deserved mistreatment, and that choosing to honour her worth was not selfish; it was survival, courage, and a refusal to let someone else define her value.
She started rethinking her help. Not from bitterness, but from honesty. Asking herself hard questions: Would this person be there for me if I needed them? Is this support mutual or one-sided? Am I helping from love, or am I hoping for future return? Am I giving freely, or am I investing emotionally in people who may never invest back?
It was uncomfortable to admit, but necessary. Because help given from depletion creates resentment. Support given from imbalance creates emotional debt. And care given without reciprocity slowly turns into self-abandonment.
She stopped giving automatically. She started giving consciously.
She stopped forcing generosity. She started choosing it.
She stopped helping as a reflex. She started helping as a decision.
She stopped chasing closeness. She stopped proving her value. She started observing effort instead of words. She started matching energy instead of exceeding it. Not to punish anyone. Not to harden herself. But to protect herself.
Slowly, something changed. She realised she wasn’t replaceable; she was misplaced. She had been pouring herself into spaces that couldn’t hold her depth.
When she started choosing environments that could, the feeling of invisibility began to fade. Not because she became louder, but because she became more selective. Not because she gave more, but because she gave wisely.
She didn’t need to love less. She needed to love smarter. She didn’t need to shrink. She needed to redirect her energy. She didn’t need to harden. She needed discernment.
It was a home that felt more like a cage, stripping away her chance to simply be the child she longed, to be the child she deserved to be. Yet, even in the midst of that chaos, she was blessed to find remarkable people who offered her a different kind of home. They gave her a listening ear, a safe place to breathe, and the time and space to grow into the person she was destined to become. Today, some of her most treasured memories are rooted in the kindness of those souls.
Once she closes the door to her home, she leaves the chaos of the outside world behind. Inside, she is free to let her mind wander, embrace peace, and find her calm no matter what the day has brought.
Her home is not always four walls and a roof. Sometimes, it is the quiet corner in her mind where peace finds her, even when the world around her is loud with chaos. It is the inner sanctuary she retreats to when life feels overwhelming.Her home can be the small circle of friends she trusts enough to listen without judgment when she needs to pour her heart out. It can be the quiet place she runs to when the storms of life grow too wild. It is wherever she feels safe enough to drop her guard, let go of the day’s weight, and simply be herself.
When she is in her home whether it is within her own heart, in the company of trusted souls, or in a place that soothes her spirit she knows the opinions and noise of the world cannot touch her. That is the freedom that allows her to take risks, to live authentically, and to face each day knowing that, no matter what happens, she will always have a place where she is at peace.e.
Now, this had not always been the case for her. In her past life, it was quite the opposite. She had four walls and a roof, and, to top it off, a plate of food to keep her stomach full. But that was where the comfort ended. To cope, she did what any logical teenager in that position might do take whatever she could, whenever she had the chance.There were countless times she would run to a friend’s house, just to escape the hate and resentment that filled the structure she called “home.” A home overflowing with insults. A home steeped in disrespect. A home where she was burdened with endless chores while others spent their days shopping, getting their hair done, or making money illegally in the so called land of opportunity.
It was a home that felt more like a cage, stripping away her chance to simply be the child she longed, to be the child she deserved to be. Yet, even in the midst of that chaos, she was blessed to find remarkable people who offered her a different kind of home. They gave her a listening ear, a safe place to breathe, and the time and space to grow into the person she was destined to become. Today, some of her most treasured memories are rooted in the kindness of those souls.
In those years, God’s hand was evident, sharpening her mind and inclining her toward academic excellence. She rose above her peers in school, her achievements shining brightly even when her self-worth felt dim. Still, deep inside, she longed to belong to be part of the “cool kids” crew. But she was never quite what that world demanded: not pretty enough, not wealthy enough, not light-skinned enough.
Rejection didn’t just wait for her at home it followed her like an unshakable shadow on sunny days, and like a lone star lingering in the cold darkness of winter nights. It was ever-present, a constant reminder that acceptance, for her, would never come easily. And even now, she notices its patterns woven into her everyday life appearing when she dares to stand up for what she believes, or perhaps when she tries too hard to win the approval of people who, in truth, are already impressed by her in ways she doesn’t even realize.
The question is now that she has the emotional, physical, and spiritual awareness, along with a few resources that would have been invaluable back then when she needed them most what is holding her back from using what she has now to take bold risks, make the right moves, and carve a path toward a future without limits? A future where she leaves a legacy, where her story is told on platforms that inspire others.
Could it be that, back then, she knew deep down she had nothing to lose and no one to disappoint, which gave her the freedom to act fearlessly? And now, with self-awareness and the weight of adulthood, that raw courage has been replaced by a quiet, persistent fear?
She takes pride in the twenty years it has taken to build the small sanctuary she now calls home complete with the four walls and roof she has, in many ways, built with her own hands. It may not be much by the world’s standards, but to her, it is a testament to resilience, gratitude, and hard-earned achievement. And one of the truest ways she can honor that journey is by throwing herself wholeheartedly into whatever she sets her mind to.
There comes a time when you begin to feel the weight of being unseen in a space that no longer serves your growth. It’s hard almost impossible to thrive in an environment that hasn’t been feeding what your body, mind, and spirit truly crave. When you’re constantly surrounded by the same people, same expectations, and same assumptions, it’s as though you’re trapped in a version of yourself that no longer fits. You try to stretch, to reach, to evolve but the world around you insists on seeing the old you. And in doing so, it quietly denies you the room to explore new possibilities, to walk unfamiliar paths, or to become more than what you’ve been. Sometimes, growth requires distance. Not because you hate where you came from, but because you finally love yourself enough to seek what you deserve.
One of the factors contributing to my unmarried status at above 30 is the absence of healthy marital examples in my life. Throughout my years, I’ve encountered more tumultuous cohabitations than I can recount. The sheer volume of such experiences could fill countless volumes. And as you can imagine this hasn’t excited me for the married status yet.
I can recount numerous stories, such as witnessing a man engaging in nightly battles with his wife upon returning home drunk, subjecting her to not only physical abuse but also verbal assaults filled with disparaging remarks about her personality, character, and history, and even resorting to hurtful comments about her physical appearance. Another instance involves observing a woman enduring a life of shame by remaining married to a predator, who is a molester, pedophile, and rapist, all in an attempt to maintain some semblance of status within her family and or society. However, the most common scenario I’ve encountered repeatedly is women being disenfranchised from their rightful place at the table, often through job loss as a request from their husbands and consequent powerlessness in marriages they had entered expecting partnership.
While some may downplay it as merely a slap across the face, asserting it’s not sufficient grounds for me to leave, those with sound judgment would firmly believe that it marked the onset of a potentially catastrophic future if not addressed promptly.
Besides manipulation, gaslighting, and fear of further abuse, financial dependency is a primary factor that renders women trapped in abusive relationships, regardless of their awareness of their unhappiness and the gradual toll it takes on their well-being. Even worse abusers often isolate their victims from friends, family, and support networks, leaving them feeling alone and without a way out. And I assure you, not everyone possesses the resilience to venture alone.
Before meeting her husband, she held a lucrative job and saw herself as an independent woman, diligently earning her rent, food, clothing, fuel, insurance, entertainment, and savings. However, upon meeting her partner, he pledged a monthly stipend that would cover her personal grooming expenses and provide funds for her social groups, along with a small amount for her parents. Regrettably, she took the offer and abruptly quit her job, placing her trust in someone she believed would provide her with everything she desired.
As her husband continued to attend work and progress in his career, thereby ascending in social status, he began encountering new acquaintances within his “circle” who could now enhance his recently attained position and reputation. The woman he once considered the epitome of beauty, not only his partner but also his favorite companion when exploring new dining spots or spending time with friends, became a source of embarrassment to him.
She assumed the role of household manager, focusing solely on maintaining cleanliness and order in their home, overseeing the children’s schooling and extracurricular activities, managing family gatherings, and instilling in them the teachings of Jesus Christ.
Financial success exacerbated the power imbalance in this relationship, which led to misuse of power and control over his wife. Granted sometimes the opposite is true, in this experience, the wife is at a disadvantage. Her Husband lets his newly inflated ego which leads to arrogance, dominance, and belittlement towards his once love of his wife.
Diminishment, absence of empathy, and skewed priorities resulted in the husband engaging in conflicts with his wife, while simultaneously inflicting lasting emotional wounds on his children, necessitating eventual intervention to address the ensuing trauma, for those fortunate enough to receive assistance.
Indeed, when he strikes you once, he demonstrates his physical dominance over you and asserts his belief that he can act without your consent, exerting control over you whenever he pleases. When you feel the impact of that slap on your face, it should immediately trigger awareness of the potential for future instances of domestic abuse.
I’m determined not to let this become my narrative, especially after witnessing variations of it throughout my life for so long.