One of the most freeing realizations you can have is this:
Anything you lose by not being honest about who you are was never truly meant for you to keep.
Not the relationship.
Not the friendship.
Not the approval.
Not the version of belonging that only existed as long as you stayed small, quiet, agreeable, or performative.
Because real connection survives truth.
What falls apart when you become authentic was often built on performance in the first place.
Prefer to listen? The Audio Blog version is available here.
A LOT OF PEOPLE ARE LOVED FOR WHO THEY PRETEND TO BE
That’s the painful part.
Many people spend years carefully shaping themselves into whoever they think will be most accepted.
More agreeable.
Less emotional.
Less outspoken.
Less honest.
Less themselves.
They learn to say what keeps the peace.
Hide what feels inconvenient.
Shrink the parts of themselves that might make other people uncomfortable.
And over time, they become exhausted trying to maintain an identity that was never fully real to begin with.
Because pretending may gain acceptance.
But it often costs self-respect.
PEOPLE-PLEASING CAN CREATE VERY LONELY RELATIONSHIPS
On the surface, it may look like connection.
You are liked.
Included.
Wanted.
Needed.
But deep down, there is often anxiety underneath it.
Because when people only know the edited version of you, part of you quietly wonders:
“If I stop performing, will they still stay?”
That fear keeps many people trapped in relationships where authenticity feels dangerous.
So they overextend.
Over-give.
Over-explain.
Overcompensate.
Not because they are weak, but because somewhere along the way, they learned that love had conditions attached to it.
AUTHENTICITY WILL ALWAYS DISAPPOINT PEOPLE WHO BENEFITED FROM YOUR PERFORMANCE
That truth can be uncomfortable.
Sometimes the people who react most negatively to your growth were benefiting from the version of you that abandoned yourself to keep them comfortable.
The version that never said no.
Never had boundaries.
Never challenged unhealthy dynamics.
Never expressed needs honestly.
And when you begin showing up more authentically, some people will call it selfishness simply because they no longer have the same access to your self-sacrifice.
But becoming real is not betrayal.
It is self-respect.
THE RIGHT PEOPLE DO NOT REQUIRE YOU TO HIDE YOURSELF
Healthy relationships do not demand constant performance.
You should not have to earn connection by suppressing your personality, opinions, emotions, needs, or growth.
Real connection allows honesty.
It allows evolution.
Boundaries.
Imperfection.
Humanity.
The right people may not agree with you all the time.
But they will not require you to become emotionally smaller in order to remain lovable.
That is the difference.
LOSING FAKE CONNECTIONS CAN FEEL LIKE REAL GRIEF
Even when the relationship was unhealthy.
Even when the friendship was conditional.
Even when the approval came at the expense of your well-being.
Because letting go of false connections still hurts.
Humans are wired for belonging.
So when people pull away after you become more authentic, it can trigger deep fears of rejection, abandonment, or loneliness.
But losing relationships built on performance is not the same as losing relationships built on truth.
One was sustainable.
The other was survival.
YOU CANNOT BUILD REAL SELF-WORTH WHILE CONSTANTLY ABANDONING YOURSELF
This is where many people become emotionally exhausted.
Trying to keep everyone happy.
Trying to stay accepted.
Trying to avoid rejection at all costs.
But every time you silence yourself to maintain approval, you send yourself a quiet message:
“My real feelings are less important than keeping other people comfortable.”
That slowly erodes self-trust.
Because deep down, your nervous system knows when you are betraying yourself.
And eventually, the emotional cost becomes too heavy to carry.
BEING REAL FILTERS OUT WHAT WAS NEVER ALIGNED
That is not punishment.
That is clarity.
Authenticity has a way of revealing which relationships are rooted in genuine connection and which ones were built around convenience, control, image, or emotional dependency.
And while that process can feel lonely at first, it is also freeing.
Because you stop wasting energy trying to maintain relationships that only survive when you are pretending.
You stop auditioning for acceptance.
You stop shape-shifting to fit rooms that were never built for your real self.
SOME PEOPLE WILL MISUNDERSTAND YOU NO MATTER WHAT
That is part of life.
You can communicate carefully, love deeply, show up consistently, and still be misunderstood by people who only see you through the lens of their own expectations, projections, or limitations.
You cannot control that.
What you can control is whether you abandon yourself trying to manage everyone else’s perception of you.
And that is where freedom begins.
Not when everyone approves of you.
But when you no longer need them to.
REAL PEACE COMES FROM BEING FULLY YOURSELF
Not the polished version.
Not the socially acceptable version.
Not the least disruptive version.
The real version.
The one that has opinions.
Needs.
Boundaries.
Depth.
Growth.
Honesty.
Because at the end of the day, fake acceptance is still fake.
And there is nothing lonelier than being loved for someone you are pretending to be.
The right people will not disappear when you become more authentic.
If anything, authenticity is what allows the right relationships to finally find you.
Because anything you lose by not being real was never truly rooted in the real you to begin with.
SLAY REFLECTION
S — See the Pattern
Where in your life have you been performing instead of showing up authentically?
L — Let Go of the Fear
What are you afraid people might think if you fully expressed who you are?
A — Accept Your Truth
What parts of yourself deserve to be seen instead of hidden?
Y — Yield to Authenticity
How might your life change if you stopped chasing approval and started choosing honesty?
CALL TO ACTION: JOIN THE CONVERSATION
I’d love to hear from you.
Have you ever lost a relationship, friendship, or sense of belonging after finally being honest about who you are?
Share your thoughts in the comments. Let’s grow through it together.
And if you know someone who’s learning to stop performing for acceptance and start embracing their authentic self, send this to them.
Sometimes losing what was never real is the first step toward finding what is.
Discover more from State Of Slay™
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.