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Someone once told me I would be horrible at something until I learned how to talk to people.
Recently, they acknowledged they said it — and admitted they believed it.
What’s interesting is not that the comment was made.
It’s that it lived somewhere between their belief about me and my belief about myself for far longer than it ever deserved.
And that’s where the real story is.
We like to think we move through life based on our own choices, values, and abilities. But in reality, many of our internal limits are shaped by what others believe about us long before we consciously choose anything.
Sometimes those beliefs are spoken:
“You’re too sensitive.”
“You’re not a leader.”
“You don’t communicate well.”
“You’d be better if you just…”
Other times they’re implied:
through tone
through roles assigned
through who gets listened to
through who gets corrected
And the most dangerous ones are the ones that sound reasonable.
Because they don’t feel like attacks.
They feel like feedback.
The problem is not that people have beliefs about us.
That’s unavoidable.
The problem is when we start using their expectations as mirrors.
At some point, many of us stop asking:
“Is this true?”
And start asking:
“How do I adapt to this?”
We shift from:
self-definition
to
self-adjustment
Not because we’re weak — but because humans are wired to belong.
We learn early:
which parts of us are acceptable
which parts are “too much”
which parts need to be softened, hidden, or explained
And slowly, unconsciously, we begin to live smaller than we are.
There’s a critical difference between belief and expectation.
Belief is internal.
It’s what you think is possible for yourself.
Expectation is external.
It’s what others think you should be.
And most people spend their lives trying to meet expectations instead of examining beliefs.
Which leads to this quiet pattern:
You outperform what others predicted.
You grow beyond what was assumed.
You evolve past who you were.
But the old expectations still linger in the room.
Not because they’re accurate – but because they were never updated.
What’s most limiting is not criticism.
It’s low expectations framed as truth.
Because they create an invisible ceiling:
You don’t feel blocked.
You just don’t reach.
You stay:
more careful than necessary
more polite than required
more restrained than authentic
Not because you lack confidence – but because you learned early that taking up space came with consequences.
At this stage in my life, I’m no longer interested in being palatable.
I’m interested in being present.
Not shrinking my voice to fit rooms.
Not editing my impact for comfort.
Not explaining myself into safety.
I am shifting my focus to:
taking up as much space as I can.
Not aggressively.
Not performatively.
Not to prove anything.
But because I finally understand this:
The space I take is not something others grant me.
It’s something I decide to occupy.
When you stop organizing yourself around other people’s expectations, a few things happen:
You speak more directly.
You wait less for permission.
You stop over-justifying.
You tolerate misunderstanding.
You allow tension without collapsing.
And some people will feel unsettled – not because you changed for the worse, but because they were accustomed to a smaller version of you.
Their belief system hasn’t caught up.
There’s a quiet contract many of us carry:
“If I am easy to manage, I will be accepted.”
But the adult version of that contract becomes:
“If I am fully myself, I will be aligned.”
And alignment is worth more than approval.
The real work isn’t correcting what people think of you.
It’s noticing:
where you still operate as if their beliefs are true
where you still perform to outdated expectations
where you still explain instead of simply exist
Because the most powerful shift is not external.
It’s internal:
moving from being interpreted…
to being expressed.
People will always have beliefs about you.
Some generous. Some limiting. Some outdated.
But the only belief that actually shapes your life is the one you live from.
And I no longer live from:
who I was allowed to be.
I live from:
who I choose to occupy now.
Which means I am done negotiating my presence.
I am here.
And I’m taking up the space that belongs to me.