Thursday, May 29, 2025

Fear and Healing

I’m writing a series for #MentalHealthAwarenessMonth. Every Thursday this May, I’m exploring one theme that shapes how we live, feel, and function.


This week’s theme is fear—and how healing begins when we stop resisting it.


Not all fear announces itself. It doesn’t always arrive with racing thoughts or a pounding heart. Sometimes, fear wears the face of ambition. Sometimes, it hides behind control, perfectionism, overthinking, people-pleasing, or the need to stay endlessly busy.


Fear shows up when we avoid rest, delay hard conversations, or hold back joy just in case it doesn’t last.


If you look closely, you’ll see how much fear runs the show—without ever being named.

It sounds like:

 • “I can’t afford to mess this up.”

 • “What if they think I’m too much?”

 • “I don’t want to look like I can’t handle it.”

 • “Let me just finish this first, then I’ll focus on myself.”


We’ve normalized this kind of inner pressure. It can even look responsible. Productive.


But underneath, many of us are driven by a quiet anxiety: that we’re not enough, that we’ll fall behind, that something will collapse if we stop trying so hard.


How do we heal from this cycle?


Healing doesn’t start with grand gestures. 


It starts with quiet noticing.


Catching the moment your jaw clenches in disagreement. 


The reflex to apologize for something that wasn’t your fault. 


The urge to sabotage something good because you’re unsure you deserve it.


Healing is about becoming honest. It’s about recognizing what fear is trying to protect—and asking if that protection still serves you.


The intent is not to fix yourself—but to believe you’re allowed to feel safe in your own life.


Mental wellness doesn’t mean you’ll never be afraid. It means you’ll know how to recognize fear without obeying it. It means dropping the shame and getting curious about what’s beneath your patterns.


And maybe, instead of trying to outrun fear, you’ll begin to understand it.


You don’t owe the world a perfect version of yourself.

You owe yourself a life that feels steady, present, and honest.


And that's when healing begins!


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If this reflection resonated with you, my book Fear Off Life explores this exact journey—with real stories, practical insights, and the quiet permission to live more freely. Available now on Amazon: https://amzn.in/d/41k6CRh








Thursday, May 22, 2025

The art of self-reflection

I’m doing a Mental Wellness Series for #MentalHealthAwarenessMonth. Every Thursday this May, I’m writing about one theme that shapes how we live, feel, and function.


This week’s focus is self-reflection.


We spend so much time looking outward—managing tasks, responding to others, chasing what’s next. It’s easy to become efficient at everything—except being with yourself.


Self-reflection isn’t a trend or a one-time exercise. It’s a quiet habit of returning to your inner world. A chance to check in before things pile up. A way to stay honest with yourself when life gets loud.


But when things are uncertain or fast, reflection can feel like a luxury. When you’re always solving or giving, it can feel unnatural to pause and ask, How am I really doing with all of this?


We’re conditioned to value doing over being. Output over observation. But without reflection, we live on autopilot—reacting instead of responding, pushing forward without checking if it’s even the direction we want.


Mental wellness isn’t just about pushing through. It’s about knowing yourself—what grounds you, what drains you, when you're out of alignment, when you’re pretending to be fine.


That kind of knowing doesn’t come from noise. It comes from stillness. From noticing without judgment. 


Self-reflection isn’t about overthinking. It’s about seeing clearly. It’s asking, Am I living in a way that feels true—or just tolerable?


In therapy, I meet people who are doing well on paper but feel disconnected inside. Not because they’re broken, but because they’ve been living by borrowed rules without pausing to ask if those rules still fit.


Sometimes, clarity doesn’t come from talking to someone else. It comes from listening to yourself. Writing something down. Sitting with your own words. Noticing the small signs of misalignment you’ve been ignoring.


You don’t need a long ritual to reflect. You need honesty. Five quiet minutes. A willingness to be with what is.


Because self-reflection isn’t about fixing everything. It’s about asking better questions. About remembering that your life is allowed to change when you do.


So this week, give yourself a moment—not to plan or solve, but to listen.

Here's to self-reflection leading to lasting transformation for all of us.

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If you are looking for a structured way to reflect, do not forget to check out my bestselling book on the topic ‘Question The Answers.’ https://lnkd.in/gEKjdyHY







Thursday, May 15, 2025

Emotional Residue in Relationships

I’m doing a Mental Wellness Series for #MentalHealthAwarenessMonth. Every Thursday, I write about one theme that quietly shapes how we live, feel, and function.

This week’s focus is on the emotional residue of relationships.

Relationships are meant to nourish us. But sometimes, they drain us in ways we struggle to name. Not because we don’t love the people in our lives—but because even good relationships carry invisible weight: unspoken expectations, unresolved patterns, emotional labor we didn’t realize we signed up for.

We often treat mental health like it lives only inside us. But much of it plays out in how we relate to others—how we communicate, how we manage closeness, how much space we feel allowed to take up.

It doesn’t always show up as dramatic conflict. Often, it’s subtle: –
– Rewording a message to sound softer
– Feeling drained after every interaction
– Wanting more but being afraid to ask for it

We carry these small weights daily. Over time, they add up to fatigue, numbness, resentment. And we don’t always notice—until we’re tired for no clear reason.

As a psychologist, I also meet people who aren’t in crisis or heartbreak. They’re just worn out. Quietly overwhelmed from being everything to everyone. Not asking for much. Just room to be. A connection that doesn’t feel like performance.

That’s what emotional residue does.

It doesn’t always appear inside the relationship—it appears inside us. In the hesitation. The hypervigilance. The slow retreat from our own needs.

And the hardest part? We don’t talk about it.

We tell ourselves it’s not that bad. That we should just manage. But managing isn’t healing.

You can love someone and still feel unseen.
You can be grateful and still want more.
You can accept effort and still long for ease.

Healing begins with honest questions: –
What part of me do I shrink in this relationship?
What am I giving that I no longer feel free to stop?
What version of me does this connection expect—and is that still me?

Sometimes, these questions help us return to the relationship with more clarity. Other times, they help us realize that what we’ve been calling connection is actually obligation.

Either way, the work starts within.

Mental wellness isn’t just about stress or mood. It’s about having spaces where you can exhale. Relationships where you don’t overthink your existence. Bonds that make you feel more like yourself. The right relationships will always make room for your whole self.

Here’s to better relationships leading to happier lives for all of us.
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If you want to know my take on what a healthy relationship really looks like, don’t forget to check out my bestselling fiction works 'Taste of Fate' and 'Work- Love Balance,' both available on Amazon.
 https://lnkd.in/gzYvt8kY

#Psychology #Mentalhealth #Relationships #EQ