Becoming the Sanctuary
Healing changes more than the relationship we have with ourselves. It changes the relationship we have with our lives, our priorities, our conversations, our boundaries, and sometimes even the people we've loved for years. We often hear people talk about the freedom that comes with healing. We hear about finding peace, becoming more authentic, and learning to love ourselves. Those parts are real. But there is another side of transformation that doesn't get nearly enough attention. Sometimes healing is lonely. Not because you've done something wrong. Not because you've become better than anyone else. But because becoming more yourself naturally changes the world around you. In Episode 8 of Becoming the Sanctuary, Kelley explores one of the quietest and most misunderstood parts of personal growth: what happens when your external world begins responding to your internal changes. Throughout the first seven episodes of this season, the conversations have focused primarily on what happens within us. We've explored survival mode, emotional disappearing, nervous system regulation, learning to rest, recognizing the ways we outrun ourselves, and understanding why healing was never meant to become another form of self-punishment. But healing doesn't stay contained inside of us. Eventually it reaches every relationship we have. It changes how we communicate. It changes what we tolerate. It changes what we value. It changes how we spend our time. It changes the conversations we enjoy. It changes the dreams we're willing to pursue. And as those internal shifts begin taking shape, our external lives often begin changing alongside them. That transition can feel incredibly lonely. One of the central ideas explored throughout this episode is that growth naturally changes relationship dynamics. It isn't always dramatic. Sometimes there isn't a major conflict or a single defining moment. Sometimes two people simply begin growing in different directions. Conversations that once felt effortless begin feeling forced. Shared interests slowly fade. Priorities evolve. Worldviews expand. What once felt deeply aligned no longer feels quite the same. That doesn't automatically make anyone right or wrong. It simply makes them different. Kelley reflects on how many people experience guilt when this begins happening. We often assume that if a relationship changes, someone must be at fault. We wonder if we're being selfish. We question whether we're asking for too much. We try to hold on because we don't want to hurt people we genuinely care about. But sometimes growth asks us to acknowledge something much more complicated. Love and alignment are not always the same thing. You can deeply love someone and still realize you're no longer walking the same path. You can appreciate everything a relationship gave you while also recognizing that it may no longer fit the person you're becoming. Those realities can exist together. Another important theme throughout this conversation is the idea that grief isn't limited to death. We can grieve friendships. We can grieve careers. We can grieve family dynamics. We can grieve routines. We can grieve communities. We can grieve dreams we once believed would define our lives. We can even grieve older versions of ourselves. That kind of grief is rarely acknowledged because nothing tangible has necessarily been lost. The people may still be alive. The places still exist. The memories remain. Yet something has undeniably changed, and that change deserves to be honored rather than ignored. Kelley also reflects on her own experiences throughout recovery, leaving the career she once imagined she'd retire from, building Thrivewell Hub, stepping into entrepreneurship, and realizing that every major chapter of growth required saying goodbye to a version of herself that had once felt familiar. One of the hardest parts wasn't making those decisions. It was allowing herself to grieve them. Because we often assume that if we're excited about what's next, we shouldn't feel sad about what we're leaving behind. But human beings rarely experience emotions one at a time. Joy and grief often arrive together. Hope and uncertainty often coexist. Excitement and fear often travel side by side. Learning to make space for those emotional contradictions is part of becoming emotionally mature. This episode also explores the uncomfortable reality of being misunderstood. One of the most common phrases people hear when they begin changing is, "You've changed." Sometimes those words are offered as an observation. Sometimes they're offered as criticism. Sometimes they're spoken with disappointment. And sometimes they're an attempt, whether intentional or not, to pull someone back into the version of themselves that felt more familiar. Growth often disrupts expectations. When one person begins setting boundaries, the people who benefited from the absence of those boundaries may not immediately understand. When someone begins choosing peace over chaos, the people who are comfortable in chaos may interpret that choice differently. When someone begins prioritizing authenticity over approval, those who expected constant agreement may struggle to adjust. None of those responses automatically mean someone is a bad person. They simply remind us that change affects everyone connected to us. Throughout the episode, Kelley invites listeners to consider another perspective. Perhaps one of the greatest signs of healing is becoming willing to let people have their own opinions about your life without feeling responsible for changing them. That doesn't mean becoming defensive. It doesn't mean becoming emotionally distant. It simply means recognizing that understanding cannot be forced. There comes a point where explaining every decision becomes exhausting. Healing often asks us to become comfortable with being misunderstood by people who only knew earlier versions of us. That can be one of the loneliest parts of growth. But it can also become one of the most freeing. The conversation also explores the unique experience of living between identities. Many people spend months or even years in a space where the old version of life no longer feels like home, but the new version hasn't fully arrived yet. Old relationships may no longer fit. New relationships haven't fully formed. Old routines have disappeared. New rhythms are still developing. Old identities no longer feel authentic. New confidence hasn't fully settled in. It can feel like standing in the hallway between two chapters of life. That hallway often feels uncertain. It often feels lonely. But it is also where some of the deepest transformation takes place. Rather than rushing through that space, Kelley encourages listeners to see it as an important part of becoming. This episode also reflects on the importance of aligned community. As some relationships naturally evolve, others begin to appear. Healing has a way of introducing us to people who recognize the version of ourselves we're growing into rather than the version we've outgrown. Those relationships often feel different. There is less performance. Less proving. Less pretending. More honesty. More curiosity. More mutual respect. More room to grow. For Kelley, that vision sits at the heart of Thrivewell itself. Creating spaces where people don't have to perform. Creating spaces where people don't have to explain why they're changing. Creating spaces where people feel safe enough to become themselves without fear of judgment. At its core, The Loneliness of Becoming Different is a conversation about honoring every chapter that brought us here while still giving ourselves permission to continue growing. It is about recognizing that becoming more authentic may also mean becoming less familiar to the people who only knew earlier versions of us. It is about understanding that grief is not always a sign something has gone wrong. Sometimes grief is simply evidence that something meaningful mattered. And it is about trusting that while healing may temporarily feel lonely, authenticity has a remarkable way of leading us toward the people, places, and communities where we no longer have to shrink ourselves in order to belong. If you've ever felt like you've outgrown parts of your life, struggled with changing friendships, questioned your identity during a season of growth, or wondered whether you're the only one experiencing this quiet loneliness, this conversation is for you. Because becoming different isn't about leaving people behind. It's about finally allowing yourself to move forward. And the people who are meant to walk beside you won't ask you to become someone smaller just so they can feel more comfortable. They'll make room for who you're becoming. #BecomingTheSanctuary #ThrivewellEstate #HealingJourney #Authenticity #PersonalGrowth #Transformation #EmotionalHealing #SelfDiscovery #Community #InnerWork #HealingPodcast #MentalWellness #RecoveryJourney #Mindfulness #BecomingYourself
8 episodes
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