It’s strange to think that who we believe ourselves to be might not really be ours. From the moment we’re born, we’re named, categorized, and surrounded by people who reflect back to us who they think we are. Slowly, almost invisibly, we start to believe them. Our sense of “I” is shaped by words, tones, expectations, and judgments that were here long before us. We grow into the image the world holds up—an image built from approval, correction, and comparison.
As children, we don’t question this. We learn through imitation. If the adults around us cringe at a bad smell, we learn disgust. If they panic at death, we inherit fear. Even the way we describe our thoughts and emotions isn’t truly our own; it’s built from a language and imagery we didn’t invent. Society hands us its vocabulary, and with it, the boundaries of what we can feel and express.
We like to think our inner world is private, but so much of it is shared—borrowed, absorbed, repeated. What we call “me” is often the echo of everyone we’ve ever known. And yet, that doesn’t make us empty or false. It simply means we are inseparable from the web that raised us.
Society isn’t something outside us—it’s an extension of us. It shapes our emotions, our fears, even the way we experience our bodies. We are the environment we live in, just as it lives in us. Seeing this doesn’t strip away individuality; it makes it clearer. Because once we realize how much of what we call “self” was learned, we can begin to see what’s left when the mirrors fall silent.