Notes from the Shadows
Hello, this is Notes from the Shadows. I’m Lívia Oliveira, and today I want to talk about something many people live without realizing. Sometimes the deepest conflict in your life isn’t between you and someone else. It’s inside you. It’s the tension between wanting to be authentic and wanting to feel safe. We like to think authenticity is simple — just be yourself. But your nervous system isn’t focused on self-expression. It’s focused on survival. And for human beings, survival has always depended on connection. That’s why rejection doesn’t just hurt your feelings — it affects your body. Imagine this. You send a message to someone you care about. You reread it. You adjust the tone. You try not to sound too much or too distant. You press send. An hour passes. No response. At first you tell yourself they’re busy. Then your mind starts asking: Did I say too much? Was that too direct? Should I have added something softer? You reread the message like it’s evidence. Nothing actually happened. No rejection. No conflict. Just silence. But your body reacts. That’s not drama. That’s your nervous system responding to uncertainty. Your amygdala reacting to a possible threat to connection. When we were young, we learned what kept us close to the people we depended on. Maybe being quiet avoided conflict. Maybe being helpful earned affection. Maybe making yourself smaller made you easier to love. That adaptation was intelligent. It kept you connected. But here’s the paradox. You’re not a child anymore. Now you want to be seen. To speak clearly. To disagree without fearing loss. Your adult mind understands that silence isn’t necessarily rejection. But your body doesn’t always update that rule. So when uncertainty appears, your system reacts. You laugh when something isn’t funny. You say “it’s fine” when it isn’t. Not because you’re fake — but because somewhere inside, your system still believes: “If I adjust enough, I won’t lose this.” Here’s the painful truth: The more you abandon yourself to keep connection, the less real that connection becomes. Belonging that requires you to shrink isn’t belonging. It’s performance. And performance is exhausting. Maturity isn’t becoming cold. It’s not pretending you don’t care. It’s increasing your tolerance for uncertainty. It’s allowing silence without chasing. It’s allowing space without assuming abandonment. Different people regulate closeness differently. Some move closer when insecure. Others move away. Neither is wrong. Both are trying to feel safe. Real connection isn’t about never feeling anxious. It’s about staying present when anxiety shows up. If a connection requires you to become smaller to survive it, it isn’t safe. And the most important relationship you regulate is the one you have with yourself. You don’t need to perform to deserve closeness. You don’t need to edit yourself to be loved. Safety and authenticity don’t have to compete. Maybe instead of asking, “Why am I like this?” You can ask: “Can I stay real, even when I feel afraid?” Because emotions rise. They move. They pass. And you are allowed to feel them without losing yourself.
8 episodios
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