The Story You Keep Telling Yourself
One of the most painful things people do after rejection, disappointment, or loss is turn someone else’s choice into a conclusion about themselves.
A relationship ends, and suddenly it becomes evidence that they were not enough.
A friendship changes, and it becomes proof that they are difficult to love.
An opportunity goes to someone else, and it becomes confirmation that they are not capable.
What started as an event slowly becomes an identity.
But there is a problem with that.
Most of the time, other people’s choices are influenced by things we cannot see.
Their fears.
Their priorities.
Their timing.
Their wounds.
Their circumstances.
Their own journey through life.
Yet we take those decisions and place ourselves at the center of them.
We assume their choice was a verdict.
A final ruling on our worth.
But another person’s decision is not always about you.
And even when it is, it is still only one person’s perspective.
Not the truth of who you are.
The danger is not the rejection itself.
The danger is the story you create afterward.
The belief that because someone left, you were not worth staying for.
The belief that because something ended, you were not enough.
The belief that because someone could not see your value, it must not exist.
Those stories have a way of causing far more damage than the original event ever did.
Healing begins when you stop treating other people’s choices as evidence against yourself.
Because your worth was never meant to be determined by someone else’s decision.
This is your reminder that another person’s choice is not a verdict on your value.
Slay on.
