It’s time to say the quiet part out loud
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I want to try to prove to you that
embracing vulnerability is true
strength. Joe Hudson's got this great
definition of vulnerability. He says
vulnerability is speaking your truth
even when it's scary. So a question to
ask, who is truly the braver person? The
one who lets themselves feel or the one
who flees the second an emotion gets too
close? the one strong enough to carry
the full weight of their experience
emotionally or the one so fragile that
they have to suppress it. Bnee Brown has
got this line, without vulnerability,
there is no courage. If there's no
uncertainty, no risk, no exposure.
You're not being that brave because
there's nothing on the line. We are so
quick to praise suppression as strength.
We call it control. We call it
discipline. We pretend emotional
detachment is a sign of maturity. But
fully living your life means actually
feeling what [ __ ] happens. Not just
performing composure while something
inside of you quietly breaks. The enemy
here, as far as I can see, is toxic
stoicism. Not the grounded, reflective
Ryan Holiday kind.
instead the hollowed out kind. The kind
that rewards shutdown. That teaches you
to be proud of how little you feel as
though restraint were the same thing as
resilience.
As far as I can see, fearing
vulnerability turns your inner world
into a minefield. It teaches you to
treat emotions like threats. So you
tiptoe carefully through your life
trying to not set anything off. Proud of
your control but slowly growing more
disconnected from life around you. This
isn't strength.
It's avoidance rebranded.
Resilience is not what most people think
it is. It's not about not feeling the
pain or being impervious to challenges
or setbacks. It isn't about people who
suppress or ignore their feelings. It's
also not about people who are delusional
and think they don't have feelings.
Resilience is about people who feel
their feelings deeply but are able to
act despite them in their best
interests. It's a slamming insight from
Mark Manson. This common mistake
especially among high functioning high
achieving people is believing that
vulnerability is weakness. But
vulnerability is being scared of
speaking your truth and doing it anyway.
It's choosing presence before
protection. It's the willingness to be
seen even when visible isn't tidy or
filtered or finished.
Imagine,
picture in your mind two people
receiving bad news. One's hands shake as
tears come, the other's face goes blank,
jaw locked, and later that night,
they're three drinks deep, scrolling
their phone, feeling nothing.
Which one is really stronger? The one
who can show their emotions
or the one who has to run from them? As
far as I can see, weakness is pretending
you don't feel.
Strength is feeling deeply
and staying open. Anyway, we call it
coping, but often it's just abstaining
from reality. The executive who prides
herself on being unflapable while
quietly burning out. She calls it
professionalism, but it's really a fear
of having her true self rejected. the
partner who insists I don't do drama
when what they mean is I can't tolerate
intimacy. Every deep discussion becomes
an emotional threat. So they fake calm
at the cost of closeness. The person who
posts about the value of vulnerability
online while being emotionally
unavailable offline. They are fluent in
the language of openness
but allergic to the practice of it. The
society obsessed with authenticity but
terrified of sincerity. Rewarding
shallow confessions that trend while
punishing the real ones that linger. The
children who learn that silence equals
safety growing into adults who apologize
for their needs before they've even
voiced them. The influencer culture that
sells performative rawness as a brand,
monetizing emotion while sterilizing its
reality. Different symptoms from the
same disease. People who are so afraid
of being broken by their feelings that
they never let themselves be shaped by
them. The real fear isn't just the
emotion itself.
It's also what the emotion might not
receive. We're not afraid of sadness.
We're afraid of being sad in front of
someone who shrugs. We're not afraid of
grief. We're afraid of grieving and
being judged for doing so. That's the
abandonment we're trying to avoid. Even
if we know that feeling our feelings is
braver than denying them, the people
around us still might think less of us
for opening up.
So, we keep things hidden. Not because
we want to, but because we don't want to
feel alone in the sharing. Men, as far
as I can see, have this hardest still.
As almost all definitions of masculinity
have some version of emotional control
as a core tenant, which makes feeling
pride in showing emotions as a man even
tougher.
But you cannot connect with the world or
anyone in it if you never truly show
yourself. Intimacy only exists to the
degree that you reveal yourself, your
sadness, anger, joy, desires,
boundaries, everything. When when you
hide your flaws or your feelings out of
fear of shame, you block intimacy and
authenticity. The more that you expose,
the closer you are. The less you show,
the more distant you become.
Which do you want to choose?
Vulnerability isn't weakness. It's
rebellion.
It's not how little you feel that makes
you strong. It's how much you can face
and stay open. It is saying, "I'll go
first. I'll be honest, even when it's
scary.
Not because I'm fragile, but because I'm
brave enough to be fully seen.
I think this is so [ __ ] cool. I think
this is like so on the money around what
openness really means and the fact that
what is it that
so many people look for in parasocial
relationships with their favorite
content creator or or writer or thinker
or TV personality or whatever. They want
authenticity.
But society is obsessed with
authenticity and terrified of sincerity.
Like those the fact that that is so
[ __ ] true
then creates a world of performative
authenticity. Like the stripped back
behind the scenes I don't need no makeup
or no script. But then you find out that
what this person's actually doing is
some [ __ ] five-dimensional jiu-jitsu
chess where they've managed to flip you
into believing that what they were
actually doing was naturalistic when
really it was super super contrived.
I think we like the idea of authenticity
and sincerity, but when it comes into
land, when it actually makes
the rubber meets the road, it feels
really uncomfortable because there is
nohere to hide from someone who is truly
truly showing their emotions. someone
who really opens up, who says like,
"This is a flag that I'm planting in the
ground, and this is something I really
[ __ ] care about, and it's gonna I'm
gonna shout and scream in excitement, or
I'm going to cry and whimper in like
pain at what this thing has caused me to
feel." Like, that is big. It's a very
big situation to be in. You we like,
think about the Overton window, the
Overton window of acceptable speech,
right? These are all of the words that
you can say and within that is a bracket
of words that you're allowed to say.
It's kind of the same with emotional
depth that there is a whole breadth of
emotions that people can feel and
despite the fact that we say what we
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