04/29/2026
A lot of the behaviors we criticize most harshly in ourselves started as attempts to survive something.
Control. Shutdown. Defensiveness. People-pleasing. Overexplaining. Pulling away.
And to be clear, I’m not saying these behaviors don’t affect other people. They do. I’m not saying we should excuse harm, avoid responsibility, or let old patterns stay in charge.
I’m saying shame rarely gives us enough access to change.
When we only label a behavior as “bad,” we usually miss the fear underneath it. And if we miss the fear, we miss the reason the behavior keeps returning.
It’s important to turn toward the behavior with enough curiosity to ask:
How is it trying to help?
What are you afraid would happen if you stopped?
That question can open a different kind of change. Not change built on self-attack, but change that begins by understanding what the behavior has been trying to protect.