There’s a moment we all face at some point in our lives — that split second where we know the truth, feel the truth, and can almost hear it knocking inside us… yet we swallow it, push it aside, or cover it with something easier. Something softer. Something far more convenient.
A convenient lie.
Convenient lies are seductive. They shield us from discomfort, delay accountability, and let us stay exactly where we are. They keep the peace — temporarily. They protect our reputation — superficially. They protect our ego — momentarily. But they never move us forward.
The inconvenient truth, on the other hand, doesn’t care about comfort. It doesn’t soften its edges to make the landing easier. It shows up as it is — raw, revealing, and sometimes painful. But it is always the doorway to freedom.
And this is the paradox:
Lies keep us safe in the moment. Truth keeps us free in our lives.
Learning to choose the inconvenient truth over the convenient lie is one of the most defining acts of emotional maturity we will ever face.
Why We Choose the Convenient Lie
Let’s be honest — most lies don’t come from cruelty. They come from fear.
Fear of hurting someone.
Fear of looking bad.
Fear of disappointing others.
Fear of disappointing ourselves.
Fear of consequences.
Fear of change.
For years, I leaned on convenient lies because the truth felt overwhelming. It meant confronting who I had become. It meant taking responsibility. It meant letting go of people, habits, or patterns that once kept me afloat.
Convenient lies feel like cushions.
Inconvenient truths feel like cliffs.
But here’s the thing:
Cushions can suffocate you just as quickly as cliffs can scare you.
Convenient lies delay pain, but they guarantee suffering.
The High Cost of Avoiding the Truth
When you bend, blur, or bury the truth, you pay for it in ways you don’t always see right away.
The cost shows up later as:
- anxiety you can’t explain
- guilt that follows you into bed
- shame that sticks to your skin
- relationships built on uneven ground
- resentment that grows each time you betray your own integrity
- a life that doesn’t feel like yours
Convenient lies feel like relief… until they don’t.
Because every time you avoid the truth, you abandon a piece of yourself. And eventually, those pieces add up.
The Inconvenient Truth: A Pathway to Freedom
Telling the truth has consequences. That’s why it scares us.
But so does hiding it.
The difference is that truth gives you your life back.
The inconvenient truth does not destroy you — it reveals you. It strips away illusion, denial, fantasy, and projection. It brings you back into alignment with yourself. It allows you to grow.
It is inconvenient because it demands clarity, responsibility, ownership, and sometimes painful self-awareness. But it also gives you something no lie ever could:
Peace.
The kind of peace you don’t need to earn.
The kind of peace you don’t need to protect.
The kind of peace that only comes from living in integrity.
Truth Doesn’t Hurt as Much as Staying in What Isn’t True
We’ve all been taught that “the truth hurts.” But the truth doesn’t hurt nearly as much as living a lie — especially a lie you tell yourself.
The lie says: “If I tell the truth, I’ll lose them.”
The truth says: “If you have to lie to keep someone, you’ve already lost them.”
The lie says: “If I ignore it, it will go away.”
The truth says: “What you avoid controls you.”
The lie says: “It’s not the right time to face this.”
The truth says: “There is no right time — only now.”
Truth invites you into reality — and reality, even when painful, is where healing lives.
Being Honest With Yourself Is the Hardest Part
You cannot offer truth to others if you refuse to sit with it yourself.
Some of the hardest truths I’ve ever faced were not the conversations I had with other people — but the ones I had alone at night, staring at my reflection and realizing:
I had lied to myself about what I could handle.
I had lied to myself about who someone really was.
I had lied to myself about what I deserved.
I had lied to myself about my patterns and intentions.
I had lied to myself to stay comfortable.
Those truths were inconvenient.
They were painful.
But they were transformational.
Self-honesty is the birthplace of self-respect.
How to Choose Truth When the Lie Feels Easier
Here are practices that help you step into honesty with courage:
1. Sit with discomfort instead of escaping it.
Discomfort isn’t danger — it’s data.
2. Notice when you rationalize.
Any sentence that starts with “It’s no big deal” or “It doesn’t matter” is a clue.
3. Ask yourself: “What am I afraid will happen if I tell the truth?”
Your answer is where the work begins.
4. Practice micro-honesty.
Small truths make room for bigger ones.
5. Let go of outcomes.
Your job is to tell the truth — not control what happens after.
Truth is not the burden.
Carrying the lie is.
Choosing Truth Is Choosing Yourself
At the end of the day, choosing the inconvenient truth means choosing yourself — your integrity, your peace, your inner alignment.
When you tell the truth, you stop betraying yourself for temporary comfort.
You start building a life that can actually hold you.
A life that doesn’t require performance, pretending, or self-betrayal.
A life rooted in the most powerful thing of all:
Authenticity.
And that, SLAYER, is where your freedom lives.
SLAY Reflection
- Where in your life are you choosing convenience over truth?
- What are you afraid will happen if you tell the truth — and is that fear rooted in reality?
- What truth have you been avoiding that feels heavy in your body?
- How has hiding the truth kept you stuck or small?
- What would choosing truth make possible for you?
- S – See where you’ve been hiding behind convenience
- L – Let truth guide your healing, even when it’s hard
- A – Accept discomfort as part of growth
- Y – Yield to honesty and reclaim your peace
Call to Action: Join the Conversation
I’d love to hear from you.
What inconvenient truth did you finally face — and how did it change your life?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.
And if you know someone who’s stuck in a convenient lie, send this to them.
Sometimes, the truth someone’s avoiding is the truth they most need to hear.
