07/02/2026
So many people stay silent. Not because they have nothing to say, but because speaking feels unsafe. Afraid of judgment, ridicule, or misunderstanding, we hold our thoughts in. For anxious people, myself included, that fear can be crushing.
When I was younger, I had a very hard time at school. I absorbed a devastating belief: that I was small, worthless, that my voice didn’t matter. Speaking required enormous courage. And when I did, my words came out rushed, gabbled. People would say, “Hang on… what did you say?” and I’d have to repeat myself, slower, more exposed, more vulnerable. So I learned to avoid speaking altogether.
That kind of self-erasure is deeply diminishing. It’s demeaning. It crushes something essential inside you. And yet it’s incredibly common, especially among people who are kind, careful, or conflict-averse. Even when they do speak, they’re often not truly heard or understood. And after a while, that alone can feel like reason enough to stay silent.
But here’s the thing: your voice matters. Your truth matters. And learning to speak it, even when it feels terrifying, is possible. It’s something we can cultivate, gently, through practice, support, and understanding.
In a world full of curated lives, social masks, and polished personas, authenticity is rare, and precious. Speaking your truth isn’t about being loud or confrontational. It’s about being real. And when you learn to let your voice be heard safely, it changes everything, how others see you, how you see yourself, how fully you live.
You deserve to be heard. Not perfectly. Not forcefully. Not to please anyone. Simply authentically. And that is more than enough.