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Nature doesn’t shame its creatures. Neither should I.

10 March 20268 June 2025

When I look at the natural world, I don’t see judgment. I see trees growing in every direction they need to, stretching toward light without apology. I see animals of all sizes, shapes, colours, and instincts—all doing what they need to do to survive and thrive. I don’t see a single flower berating itself for blooming too soon or too late. I don’t see shame anywhere.

Yet somewhere along the way, I was taught to turn that shame inward. To measure my body, my feelings, my needs, and my pace against someone else’s idea of what’s acceptable. To believe that if I didn’t match the “ideal,” I had somehow failed.

But nature reminds me otherwise.

A stormy sky isn’t ugly. A bear in hibernation isn’t lazy. A snake shedding its skin isn’t dramatic—it’s simply doing what’s necessary. There’s no guilt in their process. No self-loathing in their instincts.

So why should I shame myself for being tired, hungry, soft, wild, angry, vulnerable, slow, changing?

Nature doesn’t ask its creatures to be anything other than what they are. And I want to live that way too—without shame, without apology. Just present. Just whole. Just real.

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