Temporary People Teach Us Permanent Lessons

We don’t always get to choose who comes into our lives—or how long they stay. Some people walk with us for a lifetime, others for only a season. And while temporary people may leave as quickly as they came, their impact often lingers.

Sometimes it’s beautiful. Sometimes it’s heartbreaking. But always—it’s instructive.

Because even the ones who don’t stay teach us something we carry forward. Temporary people leave permanent lessons.


The Pain of Goodbyes and the Gift They Leave Behind

When someone exits your life, it can feel like rejection, abandonment, or loss. You may replay every moment, wondering what you could have done differently to make them stay. But here’s the truth: their leaving isn’t always about you.

Temporary people teach us boundaries. They teach us what we will and will not accept.
They teach us value. Sometimes by showing us what we deserve—and sometimes by showing us what we don’t.

Not all lessons are gentle. But every lesson has purpose.


What Temporary People Reflect Back to Us

Every person who crosses our path acts as a mirror. Some reflect our best qualities back at us—reminding us of the love, kindness, or courage we already hold. Others reflect the wounds we still carry, highlighting the work that’s left undone.

If you’ve ever noticed how one relationship reveals your need for boundaries, while another pushes you toward forgiveness, that’s no accident. Temporary people show us where we’re growing, and where we’re still stuck.

Even the ones who hurt us—sometimes especially the ones who hurt us—end up guiding us toward our truth.


Not Everyone Is Meant to Stay

We live in a culture that glorifies “forever.” Forever friends. Forever love. Forever loyalty. But life doesn’t always work that way.

The truth is, some people are only meant to walk us part of the way. They show up for a chapter, not the whole book. And that’s okay.

Because their role is not to stay—it’s to move us forward. To give us the lesson, the shift, the wake-up call we couldn’t have gotten any other way.

When we cling to people who were only meant to be temporary, we rob ourselves of the lesson. When we let them go with gratitude, we keep the gift they came to bring.


Choosing Growth Over Grief

It’s natural to grieve when someone leaves. But we don’t have to get stuck in the story of what “could have been.”

Instead, we can ask:
What did I learn from this connection?
How did this person shift me?
What strength did I discover because of them?

Sometimes the hardest people to release leave behind the clearest lessons. They teach us self-respect. They teach us resilience. They teach us that we can survive the leaving—and even thrive after it.

You may not have chosen their exit, but you can choose what you carry forward.


SLAY Reflection

  1. Who in your past was only meant to be temporary, but taught you something lasting?
  2. What lesson are you still carrying from a relationship that didn’t last?
  3. Do you find yourself holding on to people who were never meant to stay? Why?
  4. How does it feel to shift from grief to gratitude when you think of temporary people?
  5. What permanent strength or wisdom do you have today because someone left?

S – See the role they played in your growth
L – Let go of what wasn’t meant to last
A – Acknowledge the lessons they gave you
Y – Yield to gratitude instead of grief


Call to Action: Join the Conversation

I’d love to hear from you.
Who was a “temporary person” in your life, and what permanent lesson did they leave behind?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.

And if you know someone struggling to let go of someone who was never meant to stay, send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a reminder that even endings carry gifts.

You Can’t Speak Butterfly Language to Caterpillar People

There comes a moment in growth—real, soul-deep growth—where you start to see things differently. You think differently. Feel differently. You’ve been through the fire, and now you move lighter, clearer, freer. But what happens when the people around you haven’t caught up?

What happens when they’re still speaking caterpillar, and you’ve turned into a butterfly?

It’s one of the hardest parts of healing. You want to be understood, to be supported, to be met with the same energy you now bring to the table. But not everyone will get it. Not everyone is meant to. Some people are still living in the version of you that fit them. And that version? The one who shrunk, people-pleased, kept the peace, and didn’t make waves? That’s who they miss.

But you don’t owe anyone a version of yourself that you’ve outgrown.


Don’t Waste Your Wings Explaining Yourself to Those Who Refuse to Fly

The more you evolve, the less you’ll feel the need to explain yourself. That’s not arrogance—it’s alignment.

You’re not obligated to shrink your truth to make someone else comfortable. You’re not here to convince them of your growth, your healing, or your worth. If someone is committed to misunderstanding you, no amount of butterfly talk will make them listen.

They don’t speak your language. They haven’t earned the right to interpret your transformation.

So instead of wasting your energy justifying your boundaries, your peace, your purpose—protect that energy. You’ve worked too hard to unlearn survival mode only to get pulled back into it trying to prove you’ve changed.

Let your life speak for itself. Let your peace do the talking.


You’re Not Better—You’re Just Becoming

Growth doesn’t make you superior. It makes you aware. And with awareness comes choice.

You don’t have to cut people off with cruelty. But you also don’t have to carry the weight of relationships that ask you to deny your truth. Just because you love someone doesn’t mean you can grow beside them.

Some people will stay rooted in fear, gossip, chaos, control. They’ll look at your wings and call them dramatic. Call them selfish. Call them fake. That’s okay.

Let them.

You don’t need their permission to evolve. Your transformation isn’t up for debate.


Fly Anyway

If you’ve been dimming your shine to stay digestible—stop.

If you’ve been translating your truth into someone else’s comfort—stop.

If you’ve been waiting for them to catch up—you don’t have to anymore.

Butterflies don’t explain how they became butterflies. They just fly.

You’re allowed to protect your peace without guilt. You’re allowed to walk away from dynamics that drain you. You’re allowed to outgrow places, people, and patterns that no longer serve you—even if they once did.

That’s not disloyal. That’s evolution.

So the next time someone tries to pull you back into the old version of yourself, remember: you’re not who you used to be. And that’s a good thing.

You’re speaking butterfly now. Not everyone is meant to understand.


SLAY Reflection

  1. Who in your life still expects you to be the person you’ve outgrown?
  2. What version of yourself are you most proud of leaving behind?
  3. Do you feel the need to explain your healing journey to others?
  4. How does it feel when someone doesn’t “get” your growth?
  5. What’s one way you can protect your peace this week—without apology?

S – Speak your truth without over-explaining
L – Let go of needing approval for your evolution
A – Align with people who see and support the real you
Y – Yield to your transformation, even if it’s misunderstood


Call to Action: Join the Conversation

I’d love to hear from you.
Who have you had to stop explaining yourself to—and how did it free you?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.

And if you know someone who’s trying to fly while others are pulling them down, send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a nudge.

Slay Say

Some Wounds Aren’t Loud

Just because there wasn’t malice doesn’t mean there wasn’t damage.
The ripple of someone’s behavior can still cut deep—
even when their hands never meant to cause pain.

What matters is how you felt. What you carry.
Your truth still deserves recognition.

This is your reminder to honor what happened,
even if no one else saw it.

SLAY on!

Boundaries Don’t Burn Bridges, They Protect Castles

We often think of boundaries as walls—cold, hard, unmovable. Something that keeps people out. Something that severs ties. But boundaries aren’t built to burn bridges; they’re created to protect the castles we live in: our peace, our worth, our mental and emotional well-being.

Setting boundaries doesn’t make you selfish or difficult. It makes you safe. It makes you sovereign over your own life.


Castles Require Protection

Think about what a castle is: it’s a sanctuary. A stronghold. A place where something valuable lives. And yet, without a gate, without guards, without a moat, it’s just a target.

You are the castle.

Your energy, your time, your kindness, your heart—these are the treasures inside. Boundaries are how you decide who gets access, and under what conditions. They are not about shutting everyone out. They are about making sure that those who enter are willing to honor the space, not pillage it.

If someone sees your boundary as a betrayal, they were never meant to be in your castle to begin with.


Burning Bridges vs. Building Balance

There’s a big difference between cutting someone off out of spite and setting a boundary to preserve your well-being. But not everyone will see it that way—especially those who benefited from you not having boundaries before.

Let that be a red flag.

When someone is upset that you’re taking care of yourself, it says more about them than it does about you. Your healing will threaten the dynamics that were built on your silence, your sacrifice, and your people-pleasing. And when those dynamics shift, don’t be surprised if some bridges fall down on their own.

Let them.

Not every bridge is meant to last forever. Some were only built to teach you how not to be walked on.


Boundaries Are Not Barriers to Love

It can feel scary to draw the line—especially with people we care about. We worry they’ll see us differently. That we’ll lose them. That they’ll think we don’t love them anymore. But the truth is, love that can’t coexist with boundaries isn’t really love.

It’s control. It’s codependency. It’s convenience.

Love honors the sacred. And what could be more sacred than your well-being?

Setting a boundary is not an act of war. It’s an act of self-respect. It’s saying, “I care enough about myself to choose what I allow into my life.”

Those who love you well will walk through your gates, not try to climb your walls.


You Don’t Owe Anyone Access to Your Peace

Let that sink in.

You don’t owe explanations. You don’t owe justifications. You don’t owe your energy to people who constantly drain it. You don’t owe a single brick from your castle to anyone who hasn’t proven they know how to build.

It’s not easy to maintain boundaries, especially when guilt or fear creeps in. But remember this:

Every time you choose your peace over your people-pleasing, you reinforce the walls that keep your life safe and sacred.

Protect your castle. The right people will come with open hands, not demands.


SLAY Reflection

  1. Where in your life have you struggled to set boundaries?
  2. What have you been afraid might happen if you did?
  3. How does it feel when someone respects your boundaries without question?
  4. What does your “castle” need more protection from right now?
  5. How can you reinforce your emotional boundaries with love and clarity?

S – Stand strong in your worth
L – Let go of guilt around protecting your peace
A – Ask for what you need without apology
Y – Yield only to love that respects your lines


Call to Action: Join the Conversation

I’d love to hear from you.
What boundaries have helped protect your peace?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.

And if you know someone who’s afraid to set boundaries, send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a nudge.

You Did Nothing Wrong By Asking To Be Treated Right

There was a time in my life when I second-guessed myself. I would speak up when something didn’t feel good, and then spiral afterward—replaying the moment in my head, wondering if I was overreacting, if I made things awkward, if I should have just stayed quiet.

But here’s the truth I wish I had known sooner:

You did nothing wrong by asking to be treated right.

There is nothing wrong with saying “that hurt my feelings” or “I don’t like how that made me feel.” There is nothing wrong with saying “I deserve better than this.” Because you do. You always have.

What is wrong is how often we’re taught to feel guilty for setting a boundary. We’re told we’re too sensitive, too difficult, too much. So we shrink. We tolerate. We accept less. And with each time we swallow our truth, we chip away at the trust we have with ourselves.

Over time, we begin to question whether we even deserve what we’re asking for. We start to silence ourselves before anyone else even has the chance to.

But the voice inside you that whispers, “this doesn’t feel right”—that voice is sacred. And it deserves to be heard.

We’re often praised for how much we can endure, how quiet we can stay, how agreeable we can be. But healing isn’t about being palatable. It’s about being real.

It’s about letting go of the version of you that never got to speak up, and becoming the version who knows how to say, “I’m not okay with this.”

Because you matter. What you feel matters. What you need matters.


It’s Not Asking for Too Much

It’s not just about the person on the other end of the conversation. It’s about you. Your self-worth. Your healing. Your nervous system. The way you allow yourself to take up space and take care of yourself.

Honoring how you feel isn’t selfish—it’s self-respect.

Asking to be treated with kindness, consistency, and care is not asking for too much. It’s asking for the bare minimum. And if someone can’t meet you there, that’s not your failure. That’s their limitation.

You don’t have to convince people to do the right thing. You just have to be willing to do the right thing for yourself.

Letting people know where your lines are isn’t pushing them away. It’s giving them a clear map of how to love you.

And if they walk away? Let them. Anyone who leaves because you asked for respect was never offering it to begin with.

Protecting your peace is not dramatic. It’s necessary. Saying “no more” is not cruelty. It’s clarity. And standing up for yourself is not a betrayal of others—it’s a commitment to yourself.

When you start honoring what you know to be true, you stop seeking validation from people who never had the capacity to see you clearly.


Trust What You Know

So if you’ve ever walked away from a conversation, a relationship, or a space because your boundaries weren’t honored—let me remind you:

You did not fail.
You did not overreact.
You did not do anything wrong.

You simply chose yourself.
And that is something to be proud of.

You’re not hard to love—just hard to manipulate. And anyone who’s confused by that difference was never meant to hold your heart.

Let your purpose lead. It knows the way.


SLAY Reflection

  1. Have you ever felt guilty for speaking up about how you were treated?
  2. Where in your life are you still tolerating what doesn’t feel good?
  3. What would change if you fully trusted your feelings and instincts?
  4. Who in your life consistently respects your boundaries?
  5. How might your life shift if you believed you weren’t “too much” for simply asking for respect?

S – Speak your truth without apology
L – Let your boundaries be your guide
A – Ask for what honors your worth
Y – Yield to self-respect over people-pleasing


Call to Action: Join the Conversation

I’d love to hear from you.
What’s something you’ve asked for that made you feel proud for standing up for yourself?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.

And if you know someone who’s second-guessing themselves for speaking up, send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a nudge.

Slay Say

NOT EVERYONE CLAPS WHEN YOU RISE

We don’t lose people when we grow—we reveal them.
Not everyone who starts the journey with you is meant to finish it beside you.
Your success may make others uncomfortable, but that doesn’t mean you should shrink.
Let go of the need for approval and keep climbing.
The ones who are meant to walk with you won’t fear your elevation—they’ll fuel it.

This is your reminder:
You don’t need universal applause to be on the right path.
Just the courage to keep going.

SLAY on!

When a Child is Shamed for Feelings, They Don’t Stop Feeling—They Stop Trusting

There’s a heartbreaking truth many of us come to learn too late:

When a child is shamed for having feelings, they don’t stop feeling. They stop trusting.

They stop trusting their emotions. They stop trusting their voice. And eventually, they stop trusting themselves.

We often teach kids—intentionally or not—that certain feelings are too much, too messy, too inconvenient. That anger is bad. That sadness is weakness. That fear is overreacting. We hush them. We roll our eyes. We tell them to “get over it” or “calm down.” But what we’re really saying is: Your feelings don’t belong here.

And that message doesn’t just sting in the moment. It stays.


The Seeds of Self-Doubt

When we shame a child’s feelings, we’re not teaching emotional regulation—we’re teaching emotional suppression.

Instead of learning how to navigate their emotions, they learn to ignore them, question them, or feel guilt and embarrassment for even having them in the first place.

They start asking:

  • “Why am I so sensitive?”
  • “What’s wrong with me?”
  • “Why can’t I just be normal?”

These questions don’t come from nowhere. They come from a world that told them, early on, that their natural responses were somehow wrong.


Unlearning the Silence

As adults, many of us carry this conditioning into our relationships, our workplaces, and our inner dialogue. We still quiet our feelings. We second-guess our instincts. We feel shame for emotions that are perfectly human.

But here’s the thing: Our feelings don’t go away just because we learned to hide them.

They find other ways to come out—through anxiety, depression, emotional outbursts, or chronic people-pleasing. The body keeps the score. The heart remembers.

Healing begins when we give ourselves permission to feel again. To validate what was once invalidated. To trust that our emotions have something to teach us, not something to be ashamed of.


Reparenting Starts With Awareness

Maybe you were that child. Maybe you’re still carrying the weight of being told to “toughen up” or “stop crying.”

Or maybe you’ve caught yourself repeating those phrases to someone else—not out of cruelty, but because it’s what you were taught.

Here’s the good news: You can stop the cycle.

You can start by:

  • Saying “I hear you” instead of “you’re overreacting.”
  • Asking “What are you feeling?” instead of “What’s wrong with you?”
  • Letting your own emotions be seen, so others feel safe showing theirs.

You don’t need to have all the answers. You just need to be a safe place.


SLAY Reflection

Ask yourself:

  • Was I shamed for showing emotion as a child?
  • How did that shape the way I express or suppress feelings today?
  • Do I trust my emotional responses—or do I second-guess them?
  • How can I begin validating my emotions, rather than hiding or judging them?
  • What would it feel like to create space for someone else to share, without judgment?

S – L – A – Y

S: See where your emotional patterns began.
L: Listen to your inner voice with compassion.
A: Allow your feelings to surface without shame.
Y: Yield to the wisdom your emotions are offering.


Call to Action: Join the Conversation
I’d love to hear from you.
Were you taught to suppress your emotions as a child—and how has that shaped your journey?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.

And if you know someone who’s learning to feel again, send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a nudge.

Slay Say

Growth starts where ego ends

It’s not always easy to hear what we need to hear. Sometimes, the truth pokes at our pride before it frees us. But if we want to grow, we have to stop treating feedback like failure. Growth asks for humility, curiosity, and the willingness to be wrong. The most powerful people are the ones who stay open—even when it stings.

If you treat feedback as an attack, you’ll miss every opportunity to rise.

SLAY on!

Confirmation Bias

We all want to believe we’re right. That the thoughts we have are the truth. That what we fear is valid. That what we suspect about others is accurate. And so, often without realizing it, we go looking for proof. Not for the truth—but for what we already believe.

That’s confirmation bias.

And it can quietly wreck everything from our relationships to our self-worth.


What Are You Trying to Prove?

Here’s the thing about the human brain: it’s not always looking for truth. It’s looking for evidence that confirms what it already believes.

If your brain believes you’re not good enough, it will dismiss compliments and zero in on criticism.

If your brain thinks no one can be trusted, it will interpret a delayed text or a short tone as betrayal.

If you believe someone doesn’t like you, you’ll search their face and their actions for the tiniest piece of proof—and you’ll find it, even if it isn’t real.

We all do it. It’s human.

But when we act on that bias instead of reality, we reinforce the story we already believe—and miss the opportunity for connection, growth, and healing.


When I Believed the Worst

For a long time, I believed I was unworthy. That no matter how hard I tried, it was never enough. That I would always be the one left behind.

So I looked for proof.

I clung to any sign of rejection. I dismissed care or kindness because I assumed it wouldn’t last. I assumed I was being judged, even when no one was paying attention to me.

I thought I was being self-aware. I thought I was protecting myself.

But what I was really doing was building a case against myself, collecting data that wasn’t even true. And every time I gave weight to a moment of perceived rejection, I was closing a door. I was missing a chance to see that maybe the story I was telling myself wasn’t the whole truth.

And if it wasn’t the truth? Maybe I wasn’t broken after all.


How to Break the Bias

Awareness is everything.

Next time you find yourself thinking, “See? I knew it,” pause.

Ask yourself:

What am I trying to prove right now? And is this actually true—or just familiar?

Confirmation bias feels like safety. It feels like control. But really, it’s just an old loop. One you can break.

Try asking someone you trust for a reality check. Or write down your belief and then list the evidence for and against it.

Better yet, ask yourself: Would I talk to someone I love the way I’m talking to myself right now?


SLAY Reflection

Ask yourself:

  • What beliefs do I keep trying to prove?
  • Where did those beliefs come from?
  • How is confirmation bias limiting my relationships?
  • Do I trust my thoughts more than I trust what’s real?
  • What would it feel like to look for evidence of the opposite being true?

S – L – A – Y

S: Spot the belief that keeps repeating.
L: Listen for the moment you start searching for proof.
A: Ask yourself what else could be true.
Y: Yield to possibility. It’s where healing begins.


Call to Action: Join the Conversation
I’d love to hear from you.
What’s a belief you’ve spent a long time trying to prove—and what happened when you questioned it?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.

And if you know someone who’s stuck in a loop of self-doubt, send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a nudge.

Be Your Own Fairy Godmother

Some of us grew up believing someone would swoop in and fix everything. A magical godmother. A rescuer. A sign from the universe that now is the time, that this is the moment our lives change for the better.

But here’s the truth no one tells you as a kid:

The magic wand is already in your hands.

Waiting for someone else to save you keeps you stuck. Hoping for permission to live fully delays your joy. You don’t need a fairy godmother. You just need to believe in your own power to create change, healing, and magic.

You don’t need a transformation. You need a reminder of who you already are.


I Spent Years Waiting for a Rescue

I thought love would save me. Or success. Or finally being “enough.”

I believed that if I kept trying, kept achieving, kept pleasing, eventually someone would say, “You’ve made it. You’re worthy now.”

But that moment never came—because I was looking outside of myself for something only I could give.

It wasn’t until I hit rock bottom that I realized no one was coming to save me. I had to be the one to pull myself out. I had to be the one to say, “Enough. I choose me now.”

It wasn’t a grand, glittery moment. It was quiet. Personal. But it changed everything.

When you stop waiting to be chosen, and choose yourself instead, that’s when the real magic begins.

And that decision? It didn’t come from perfection. It came from truth. From realizing that I deserved better—not someday, but right now.


Create Your Own Magic

We’ve been taught that magic looks like glass slippers and pumpkin carriages. But real magic? It’s setting boundaries. It’s speaking your truth. It’s taking the brave next step—even when your voice shakes.

It’s no longer waiting for someone to tell you that you’re ready. You already are.

It’s recognizing that you are worthy of love, rest, joy, peace, and purpose—without having to earn it.

Magic is found in the everyday moments when you show up for yourself. When you advocate for your well-being. When you care for your spirit. When you speak kindly to your reflection.

Magic is deciding not to abandon yourself again.

It’s building a life that honors your truth, your pace, your values. Not the ones someone else handed you.

You don’t need a crown. You don’t need a costume. You don’t need anyone’s permission.

You’ve had the power all along.

Let this be your reminder: You are the magic. You are the moment. You are the one you’ve been waiting for.


SLAY Reflection

Ask yourself:

  • Where in your life are you waiting for someone to rescue or choose you?
  • What would it look like to choose yourself instead?
  • What’s one area where you can take your power back today?
  • What belief about worth or magic are you ready to release?
  • How can you show up for yourself like someone who truly has your back?

S – L – A – Y

S: See where you’ve been waiting for permission.
L: Listen to what your inner voice truly wants.
A: Act from a place of self-trust, not self-doubt.
Y: Yield to your own magic—it’s been waiting for you.


Call to Action: Join the Conversation
I’d love to hear from you.
Have you ever realized you were the one you’ve been waiting for?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.

And if you know someone who’s stuck waiting to be saved, send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a nudge.