Why I stopped shrinking myself just to be digestible.
They said I was too intense.
Too sensitive.
Too loud.
Too much.
So I learned to shrink.
Softened my voice.
Smiled more than I meant it.
Apologized for taking up space I was never given permission to occupy.
I made myself “easier to love.”
Which meant less honest.
Less bold.
Less me.
I wasn’t calm.
I was compressed.
A storm in a soft voice.
A scream folded into a sentence that made them comfortable.
But one day I asked:
Why is my peace only valid
if it comes in quiet packaging?
Why do I have to sound reasonable
when I’m bleeding out truth?
So I stopped asking if I sounded okay.
Stopped translating my trauma into digestible language.
Stopped explaining my feelings in bullet points
so they wouldn’t flinch.
And I started roaring.
Not to hurt.
Not to rage.
But to reclaim the parts of me
that were never broken—just silenced.
Now?
If I’m calm, it’s because I chose calm.
Not because I owe it to anyone.
🧠 Emotional Takeaway:
You are not too much.
You are not too loud.
You are not too angry.
You are alive.
And if someone only accepts you in your calmest form—
they were never worthy of your realest self.
🪞 Reflection Box:
I thought being soft meant I was safe.
That if I smiled enough, stayed agreeable,
never made waves—
I wouldn’t be left behind.
But peace isn’t pretending.
And my healing didn’t come from staying quiet.
It came from finally hearing myself.
🎤 I don’t owe peace to calm your mind—
Or package rage in words that bind.
I’m not your mirror, meek or small—
I’m not less real when I don’t crawl.
So call me fierce. Or wild. Or wrong.
But I’ve been caged in shame too long.
And now I speak, in voice and psalm—
Not cruel. Not broken. Just not calm.
