Really needed to hear this lately
Dear Me,
You’ve been carrying more than you’ve been admitting.
Not because you’re trying to be dramatic. Not because you’re looking for sympathy. But because somewhere along the way, you became the person who figured things out. The person who kept going. The person who learned how to smile while mentally calculating ten different worries at once.
People see your competence. They see the version of you that handles things.
What they don’t always see is how tired you’ve been.
They don’t see the nights spent replaying conversations, questioning decisions, wondering whether you’re doing enough. They don’t see the pressure you’ve placed on yourself to keep improving, keep achieving, keep becoming someone “better.” They don’t see how often you’ve carried disappointment quietly because you didn’t want to burden anyone else with it.
And if we’re being honest, you’ve become so accustomed to carrying heavy things that you’ve started treating exhaustion like a personality trait.
It isn’t.
You are allowed to be tired.
You are allowed to admit that some days have felt unfair.
You are allowed to acknowledge that you’ve survived situations that genuinely hurt you, confused you, or changed you.
Not every wound leaves a visible scar.
The truth is that you’ve been stronger than most people realize.
But strength has a hidden danger. When you’re strong for long enough, everyone starts assuming you’re okay. Eventually, even you start assuming you’re okay. You stop checking in with yourself. You stop asking what you need. You stop offering yourself the same kindness you freely give to everyone else.
You hold yourself to standards you would never demand from someone you love.
You forgive others for being human.
You interrogate yourself for it.
Why?
Why is your mistake evidence of failure while everyone else’s mistake is evidence of growth?
Why do you measure your worth by your productivity, your achievements, your usefulness?
You were valuable before you accomplished anything.
You are valuable on days when you achieve nothing.
You are valuable even when you are confused, uncertain, emotional, afraid, unmotivated, or lost.
Your worth has never been a reward that needed to be earned.
And there is something else you need to hear:
Not everything that didn’t work out was a reflection of your inadequacy.
Some opportunities were wrong for you.
Some people could not meet you where you stood.
Some chapters ended because they had finished teaching you what they came to teach.
You do not need to keep reopening old doors just to prove you were worthy of staying.
Let them close.
Let them become history.
You are not obligated to drag yesterday into tomorrow.
There are still versions of your life that haven’t met you yet.
There are conversations that will make sense of things.
There are opportunities you cannot currently see.
There are moments of peace waiting beyond problems you haven’t solved.
Your story is not behind you.
It’s still unfolding.
So today, stop demanding perfection from someone who is already trying their best.
Stop speaking to yourself like an employee on probation.
Stop moving the finish line every time you get close to it.
Rest when you need rest.
Celebrate progress that nobody else notices.
Forgive yourself for not having all the answers.
Forgive yourself for growing slower than you wanted.
Forgive yourself for being human.
You have survived every difficult day you’ve ever faced.
Not flawlessly. Not elegantly.
But successfully.
You’re still here. And that counts for more than you’ve been giving yourself credit for.
So tonight, loosen your grip on everything that must happen, everything that should have happened, and everything you cannot control.
The future does not need a perfect version of you.
It only needs the real one. With all your courage. All your imperfections. All your scars. All your hope.
Keep going.
Not because you have something to prove, but because you deserve to see what happens next.
Love,
Me.



























































