You Are Not Alone

There was a time in my life when I felt deeply alone. Not occasionally lonely. Not just on a quiet evening. I mean profoundly alone. I could be surrounded by people, even in a crowded room or a packed stadium, and still feel like I was standing on an island no one else could reach.

At the time, I did not realize I was playing a major role in creating that feeling. I had family who loved me, friends I enjoyed spending time with, and colleagues I looked forward to seeing. On paper, I was anything but alone. But emotionally, I had built walls so thick that connection could not get through.

And those walls were built from fear.

Fear that if people saw the whole me, the imperfect parts, the struggling parts, the uncertain parts, they might not like what they saw. Fear that if I admitted I was not always OK, people might judge me, reject me, or quietly drift away. So I kept smiling. I kept performing. I kept everything that mattered most locked inside.

From the outside, everything looked fine. From the inside, it felt like isolation.


The Illusion of Being Alone

Here is something I learned that changed everything. Feeling alone is not always about who is around you. Often, it is about how much of yourself you allow to be seen.

I could sit with friends, laugh, share stories, and still feel disconnected because I was protecting myself rather than connecting. I was editing my truth in real time. I was maintaining an image rather than building a relationship.

That kind of distance adds up. Over time, it starts to feel like an ocean between you and everyone else. You watch others seem connected and supported while you stand on your own emotional shoreline, wondering why you cannot feel the same.

For me, the turning point came when the effort of hiding became more exhausting than the fear of being seen.


The Moment Everything Shifted

I remember the first time I truly opened up. I was terrified. My hands were shaking. I had never shared what I considered the messy or imperfect parts of my life. I honestly did not know how it would land.

But I also knew something important. Continuing to carry everything alone was not sustainable. Emotionally, mentally, and physically, it was taking a toll.

So I reached out to someone I trusted. I spoke honestly. Not polished. Not perfect. Just real.

And what came back was not judgment. It was understanding. It was compassion. It was love.

That moment cracked something open inside me. It showed me that vulnerability does not push the right people away. It often pulls them closer.


Connection Requires Courage

When I started sharing more openly with others in my life, something remarkable happened. People showed up. They listened. They supported me. They shared their own stories. And suddenly I saw something clearly.

Everyone is carrying something.

Some people hide it better than others. Some people have not yet found safe spaces to share. But the idea that you are the only one struggling is almost always an illusion created by silence.

Connection happens when honesty enters the room.

That does not mean oversharing with everyone. It means choosing safe people and allowing yourself to be known by them.

And yes, sometimes people will step back. That happened to me too. A few relationships changed. But I learned an important lesson. The people who stay when you are real are the people meant to walk alongside you.


Building Your Circle

We are living in a time when connection can happen in more ways than ever before. Geography is less of a barrier. Shared interests bring people together. Communities form around healing, growth, creativity, spirituality, mental health, and personal development.

Your people might already be in your life. Or they might be waiting for you to find them.

The key is willingness.

Willingness to open up. Willingness to risk being seen. Willingness to believe you deserve connection and support.

And if you are part of this State Of Slay community, know this. We are building that circle together. A space where growth, honesty, and support are not just encouraged but celebrated.

There is real strength in community. Individually, we can accomplish incredible things. Together, we become resilient in ways we never imagined.


You Get To Choose Connection

Today, I do not feel alone the way I once did. Not because life is perfect. Not because challenges disappeared. But because I no longer isolate myself emotionally.

I choose connection.

I choose honesty.

I choose to let people in.

And when you do that, you realize something powerful. You were never truly alone. You were just carrying more by yourself than you needed to.

You do not have to do that anymore.

You are not alone.


SLAY Reflection

S — See the Truth
When do you feel most alone? Is it actually about who is around you or what you are holding back?

L — Let Yourself Be Seen
Is there someone safe you could open up to this week? What stops you?

A — Allow Support
How does it feel when someone truly listens to you? Can you let yourself receive that?

Y — Your Next Step
What is one small action you can take today to build connection instead of isolation?


Call to Action: Join the Conversation

I would love to hear from you.
When have you felt alone, and what helped you reconnect with others?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.

And if you know someone who might need this reminder, send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a nudge.


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5 thoughts on “You Are Not Alone

  1. It took me YEARS to finally realize that I had control over who was in my life, that I didn’t need to try to please everyone to make everyone else happy at my own expense – living a life for others and not myself.

    This stemmed from tons of self-esteem issues that I could never own up to, let alone tell anyone else.

    But like you said, Carrie – once you open up and let the truth out – it’s freeing as hell.

    It’s not an overnight fix but it’s a HUGE step in the right direction to live authentically.

    We feel alone in a crowded room when we are truly alone in our minds. We can get so wrapped up in ourselves and our insecurities that we forget how to just BE. And as you said, those who stay, stay. Those who reject us – well, they weren’t meant to be a part of our journey.

    Such a huge step to the healing process to know that there are so many others out there that have the same struggles as I do, and that we can choose to make things better.

    Thank you, Carrie!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Yes, it’s so easy to blame others for how we feel but we need to take responsibility for our own lives, happiness, and self-worth. Until we work on that, and truly believe it, nothing will ever make us feel whole, it can’t, it’s our job to do it, it’s an inside job.

      And, yes, absolutely, it takes time, goes back to patience again, we have to remember that we are trying to undo, or change, years and years of behavior we thought, or were told, was right, it takes time to make positive changes, allow yourself the gift of mistakes or slips, we are all human, but we’re trying, and if we keep trying, we will succeed.

      You alone are enough. You are special. You have value. You deserve to be heard. Learn that. Know that. Share that. And if you don’t, we’ll remind you until you do.

      Surround yourself with like-minded people. People who are on the same journey, or may have come before you to show you the way, those are people you give your time to, the others may fall away, but as you said Eldwenne, if they are meant to be in your life they will be, now, or down the road.

      Don’t be afraid to make positive changes for yourself because you’re afraid of upsetting the people in your life. YOU need to live YOUR life, they can live theirs.

      Much love to you today SLAYER on your journey, I, along with all the other SLAYERS, are travelling along with you.

      SLAY on!

      Liked by 2 people

  2. I remember when I finaly had the courage to open up to people I was so suprised at their reactions. The reactions were not negative or dismisising ar all. My mind always told me that people would think or say: why are you bothering me with that. Turns out nobody thought like that at all. It was me, my mind making assumptions.
    Now, when my mind is speaking loud, I ask myself that one question. Am I making an assumption or is what I am thinking based on facts.
    And you are right Carrie, old habits die hard. I catch myself falling back on old behaviour in difficult situations or emotional moments. But the fact I catch that myself and find a way to turn it around, that for me is a huge win.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes! Acknowledgement is a huge win! The fact that we are aware of it is a victory in itself, then it’s just the practice of contrary action, of doing the opposite of what we did before.

      Our perception is off, what our head tells us is the truth is simply not most of the time, and 100% of the time if it’s telling us to stayed quiet and suffer alone.

      It does take courage to change our thinking and to step out and reach out, but the more we do it the more we see that we’re alike, and the more we feel connected to other people.

      You are a warrior Willeke, a survivor, a SLAYER, keep stepping forward and know you have an army to back you up.

      SLAY on!

      Liked by 1 person

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