There’s a quiet kind of exhaustion that comes from constantly trying to “prove” yourself. To look right, act right, eat right, dress right—just so the world might nod in approval and say, “Okay, you belong.” I’ve felt that weight. The pressure to make my body more acceptable. The unspoken rules about what makes someone worthy of love, success, or even just respect.
But here’s the truth I’m slowly learning to live by: I don’t have to earn my right to exist comfortably in my own skin. My worth doesn’t increase because I work harder to hide my softness or silence my hunger or flatten the parts of me that don’t fit someone else’s ideal.
I’m not a performance. I’m a person. And this body—this home I live in—is not a problem to solve or a project to polish. It’s a living, breathing part of me. It carries me through every single day. It has survived, adapted, held joy and pain, and shown up for me even when I treated it like a burden.
So no, I’m not here to perform worthiness anymore. I’m here to live. To stretch out, to breathe deeply, to move in ways that feel good, to eat without shame, to laugh with my belly, to rest when I’m tired. This is my body. This is my life. And I refuse to spend it performing for a world that never learned how to value realness over perfection.