
There was a time when I felt an almost reflexive need to explain myself. If I hesitated before answering, I would fill the silence with reasons. If I changed my mind, I would provide a detailed account of how I got there. If I pulled back, set a boundary, or chose a different path than expected, I would soften it with context—hoping, to make it more acceptable. More understandable. Easier for others to sit with.
I used to believe explanation was a form of respect. A way of maintaining connection. A kind of quiet proof that I was thoughtful, reasonable, and worth keeping in the circle. But over time, I’ve come to see another side of it.
Sometimes, constant explanation isn’t about respect at all. Sometimes, it’s about permission—seeking it, offering it, and quietly believing I need it just to live my life as it is. That belief doesn’t hold the same power it once did.
There are parts of me now that I no longer rush to explain. I no longer feel that everyone deserves to know everything that is happening in my life. Not every decision needs a public record. Not every season needs commentary. Some things are mine to carry, mine to understand, and mine to share—if and when I choose.
I no longer feel the need to associate with certain people just so I can appear in a group photo on a Saturday night. Belonging, I’ve learned, is not proven in tags or captions. It’s felt in quieter, steadier ways. It’s being there for others … when it counts.
I don’t feel obligated to update the wider community every time something shifts—especially when life turns heavy. If someone is sick, if something is hard, it does not automatically become a story to circulate. Care doesn’t need an audience to be real. And I have no need to elevate my ego by announcing what I’m working on, building, or becoming. The work itself is enough. The growth speaks, even when I don’t.
This shift didn’t arrive all at once. It came in the accumulation of small realizations—moments when I explained myself fully and still wasn’t understood. Moments when explanation felt less like sharing and more like defending. Moments when I walked away feeling exposed instead of connected.
Eventually, something settled in: understanding is not guaranteed, no matter how carefully you explain. And more importantly, it isn’t always required.
I’ve also stopped maintaining false friendships out of habit. For a long time, I kept certain connections alive simply because they had always been there. It felt easier than asking whether they still fit. Some might interpret that shift as aloofness. Or moodiness. It isn’t.
It is simply a choice.
A choice to be more honest about where my energy goes. A choice to step away from what feels performative and lean into what feels real. Now, when someone says, “I haven’t seen you in a long time,” or “I didn’t know that you…,” I no longer feel compelled to fill in the blanks just because the question is there. Curiosity does not automatically require a full accounting. Some spaces in a life are allowed to remain unspoken.
That doesn’t mean I’ve stopped connecting. It doesn’t mean I’ve become distant or closed off. It means I’ve become more deliberate. These days, I get to choose “my people”. Not based on proximity or history alone, but on something steadier—mutual understanding, respect, and a shared sense of what matters. I’m drawn to those who don’t require constant explanation, who don’t measure connection by how much is disclosed, but by how much is genuinely understood.
There is a quiet freedom in that. A freedom in saying less—not to avoid, but to trust. Trust that my choices can stand without a supporting argument. Trust that my boundaries don’t need a detailed defense. Trust that the right people will meet me where I am, not where I feel pressured to perform.
And those who don’t? They may never understand—no matter how clearly the story is told. That used to unsettle me. Now, it feels like clarity. I still believe in openness. I still believe in honesty. But I no longer believe that everything must be explained to be valid.
Some parts of us are allowed to exist without commentary.
Some decisions are allowed to stand without a footnote.
Some growth is so quiet, the only evidence of it is what you no longer feel the need to say. And increasingly, I’m at peace with that.
Not everything about who I am needs to be explained to be real. Some parts of me stand—unexplained, and enough.

Photo by Odette Gagnon


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