Let’s start right here – where most of our shame lives – in our bodies.
Have you ever been called “too sensitive,” “too emotional,” “too needy,” or felt like you had to shrink yourself to be loved? Maybe people made you feel guilty for needing comfort, reassurance, affection, time, or help. Maybe you were told that your pain was an inconvenience, your voice was loud, or your presence was overwhelming.
But here’s the truth:
You are not too much. You are just human.
You have a nervous system. You have hormones, memories, a heart that holds pain and hope at the same time. You have muscles that tighten when you’re scared. Tears that fall when something touches a nerve. Skin that longs to be held. A brain that sometimes goes into fight-or-flight because it remembers what it’s like to be left or judged or hurt.
None of that is “too much.”
You were wired for connection, comfort, and safety. That’s not being dramatic—that’s biology.
When you feel like you’re “too much,” pause and ask:
“Am I really too much—or am I just around people who don’t have the capacity to meet me where I am?”
This doesn’t make those people bad. But it does mean you deserve to be seen, not silenced.
Today, if you feel ashamed for crying, asking for love, needing time to rest, or wishing someone would understand—you can place your hand over your heart and whisper:
“I am not too much. I am a human being with physical needs. I matter.”
Let your body hear that. Let the shame melt just a little.