For years, I believed something was wrong with me.
Every setback, every difficult emotion, every repeated mistake became evidence in my mind that I was flawed. That I needed fixing. That I was somehow broken.
That belief kept me stuck longer than anything else ever did.
Because when you think you are the problem, change feels impossible. But when you realize a pattern is the problem, suddenly there is room for growth.
And that shift changes everything.
Prefer to listen? The Audio Blog version is available here.
The Difference Between Identity And Behavior
There is a profound psychological difference between saying “I am broken” and saying “I have a pattern that is not serving me.”
One attacks identity. The other addresses behavior.
Identity feels permanent. Behavior feels adjustable.
When I began to separate who I was from what I did, I experienced relief. I was not defective. I was human. I had learned coping strategies, habits, and reactions that made sense at one point but no longer supported my well-being.
And habits can be retrained.
That realization gave me hope.
Why The Brain Responds Better To Patterns
Our brains are incredibly adaptive. Neuroscience tells us they reorganize based on repeated thoughts and actions. What we practice becomes familiar. What is familiar becomes automatic.
So when we say “I need to fix myself,” the brain often interprets that as shame. And shame tends to shut down growth. It triggers defense, avoidance, and self-criticism.
But when we say “I need to retrain this pattern,” the brain shifts into problem-solving mode. It looks for solutions instead of assigning blame.
That subtle language shift can influence emotional resilience, motivation, and actual behavioral change.
Words matter.
Especially the ones we use with ourselves.
My Own Experience With This Shift
There was a time when I blamed myself for everything. If something went wrong, I assumed it confirmed my inadequacy. That mindset fueled anxiety, perfectionism, and exhaustion.
Eventually, I started noticing recurring patterns. Over-committing. Avoiding difficult conversations. Seeking validation. Ignoring my own needs.
Instead of labeling myself as flawed, I began asking different questions.
What triggered this reaction?
What need was I trying to meet?
What would a healthier response look like?
That curiosity replaced criticism. And progress became possible.
Not instant. Not perfect. But real.
Patterns Are Learned, And They Can Be Relearned
Most of our emotional patterns formed early. Family dynamics, cultural expectations, past relationships, trauma, success, failure, all of it shapes how we respond to life.
But learned does not mean permanent.
Awareness is the first step. Compassion is the second. Consistent action is the third.
Change rarely happens overnight. It happens through repetition. Through gentle correction. Through patience with ourselves.
And every time we choose a healthier response, we strengthen a new pathway in the brain.
That is growth in action.
Self-Compassion Accelerates Change
Criticism rarely produces lasting transformation.
Compassion does.
When we treat ourselves with kindness, we reduce fear. When fear decreases, openness increases. And openness allows learning.
It may sound counterintuitive, but being gentler with yourself often leads to stronger accountability. Because you are not operating from shame. You are operating from intention.
That makes change sustainable.
And sustainable change is what we want.
You Are Not A Project, You Are A Person
One of the biggest lessons on my journey has been this:
I am not something to fix.
I am someone to understand.
There is a big difference.
When we stop treating ourselves like broken projects and start treating ourselves like evolving humans, growth becomes less stressful. It becomes more natural.
You are allowed to grow without condemning where you started.
You are allowed to improve without rejecting who you were.
That perspective creates emotional freedom.
Language Shapes Healing
Try this simple experiment.
Instead of saying:
“I am the problem.”
Say:
“This is a pattern I am learning to change.”
Feel the difference.
One closes the door. The other opens it.
One creates shame. The other creates possibility.
And possibility is where healing begins.
SLAY Reflection
Let’s reflect, SLAYER:
S: What recurring emotional or behavioral pattern have you labeled as a personal flaw?
L: How might your mindset shift if you saw that pattern as learned instead of permanent?
A: What is one small adjustment you can practice today to retrain that pattern?
Y: How could self-compassion help you sustain growth instead of pushing yourself through criticism?
Call to Action: Join the Conversation
I’d love to hear from you.
What pattern have you started to see differently, and how has that perspective changed your growth?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.
And if you know someone who needs the reminder that they do not need fixing, just understanding, send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a nudge.
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