Welcome.
Today I want to talk about something that many of us do without realizing it.
Trying to prove ourselves.
Trying to prove our worth.
Trying to prove our intentions.
Trying to prove that we're good people.
Trying to prove that we're independent.
Trying to prove that we're not too much.
Or not too needy.
Or not too demanding.
Are not too dependent.
And often these behaviors seem harmless.
Even admirable.
But when we look a little deeper,
We may discover that many of them are rooted in fear.
The fear of being misunderstood,
The fear of being judged.
The fear of being rejected.
The fear of being seen in a way we don't want to be seen.
Because let's be honest,
Being misunderstood can feel uncomfortable.
Most of us want people to see our hearts.
We want people to understand our intentions.
We want people to recognize who we truly are.
But somewhere along the way.
Many of us have learned that in order to be accepted,
We needed to manage how others perceived us.
So we start proving,
Explaining,
Overgiving,
Over-performing,
Over-accommodating,
Trying to stay one step ahead of potential judgment.
Trying to control how others see us.
And while this may create temporary comfort,
It often comes at a cost.
Because every time we're focused on managing perception,
We're no longer fully present.
We're performing.
We're strategizing.
We're controlling.
We're trying to secure acceptance.
Instead of allowing ourselves to simply be.
I think relationships are one of the places where this becomes most visible.
Imagine you're getting to know someone.
Perhaps there's something you genuinely desire.
Maybe you desire support?
Maybe you desire consistency.
Maybe you desire effort.
Maybe you desire to be courted.
Maybe you desire someone who enjoys giving.
But instead of allowing that desire to exist,
Fear enters the conversation.
Fear says,
What if they think I'm selfish?
What if they think I'm asking for too much?
What if they misunderstand me?
And suddenly you begin adjusting yourself.
Not because it feels aligned,
But because you're trying to prevent a certain perception.
And what's interesting is that when we do this,
We often lose valuable information.
Because if we're constantly stepping in to manage the dynamic,
We're never actually seeing how the other person naturally shows up.
We're not allowing reality to reveal itself.
We're controlling it.
And that control often comes from fear.
Fear that if we simply show up authentically,
We may not be accepted.
But authentic relationships require authenticity.
They require honesty.
They require us to allow people to meet the real version of us.
Not the carefully managed version.
The real version.
The version with desires.
The version with needs.
The version with preferences.
The version that isn't constantly trying to earn approval.
Because here's something I've learned.
The people who are meant for you need the opportunity to respond to the real you.
Not the version of you that is trying to avoid judgment.
Not the version of you that is trying to prove something.
The real you.
And this brings us to something many people find difficult.
Receiving.
Receiving attention.
Receiving support.
Receiving care.
Receiving generosity.
Receiving love.
Receiving help.
For many people,
Giving feels much safer than receiving.
Because giving creates a sense of control.
Receiving requires trust.
Receiving requires openness.
Receiving requires vulnerability.
And vulnerability can feel uncomfortable.
Because the moment we receive,
We allow ourselves to be impacted.
We allow ourselves to be seen.
We allow someone else to contribute.
We allow someone else to show us who they are.
And that can feel scary.
But it can also be beautiful.
Because when we stop trying to control every perception,
Something unexpected happens.
We gain clarity.
We begin seeing people more clearly.
We begin seeing relationships more clearly.
We begin seeing ourselves more clearly.
Because we're no longer performing.
We're observing.
We're participating.
We're allowing.
We're trusting.
And perhaps most importantly,
We're learning that our worth does not need to be proven.
Your worth is not something you earn through performance.
Your worth is not something you earn through overgiving.
Your worth is not something you earn through constantly demonstrating your value.
Your worth exists before any of those things.
And the more you deeply trust that,
The less you need to feel to prove.
The less you feel the need to manage perceptions,
The less you'll feel the need to earn what was already yours.
Respect.
Love.
Belonging.
Connection.
Take a deep breath in.
And a slow breath out.
Ask yourself.
Where in my life am I trying to prove something?
Where am I trying to control how I'm perceived?
Where am I preventing myself from receiving?
And what would it feel like to trust that the right people will see me without all the extra effort?
Take another slow breath.
And allow yourself to soften.
Allow yourself to release the performance.
Allow yourself to release the proving.
Allow yourself to simply be.
Because you were never meant to earn love through exhaustion.
You were never meant to secure connection through performance.
You were never meant to prove your worth.
You were meant to know it.
Thank you for listening,
And may you continue creating relationships that are built not on proving,
But on authenticity,
Trust,
And the courage to receive.
Namaste.