Week 9: The Spark Inside The Blur
Hey Soul,
Why is it that only now, standing here in this blur, do I finally see it?
For years—maybe for my whole life—I’ve dimmed and morphed myself to fit. To make others comfortable. To keep the peace. To be loved. To be accepted. To make sure everyone else had what they needed. Sometimes it was small—biting back my opinion, hiding what I truly liked, softening my light. Other times it was all-consuming—changing myself entirely to meet someone else’s expectations.
And here’s the truth that hit me this week: I’ve done it with everyone. Without even realizing it.
Not because it was easier. Not because I didn’t know better. But because somewhere inside I believed that if I stood in my full light—if I truly let myself be—people wouldn’t know what to do with me. They’d leave. They’d call me too much. Or not enough.
And the wild part? I don’t even know who I am apart from all those dimmings. That’s what the blur has shown me.
The liminal space—the threshold, the in-between—isn’t just about waiting. It’s where the truths you’ve buried rise to the surface, whether you want them to or not. For me, it’s this: I’ve lived through everyone else’s lens, and now I’m being asked to take it off.
It feels terrifying, doesn’t it? To finally ask: If I’ve never allowed myself to fully be, then who am I?
But here’s where something shifted for me this week: the blur isn’t as confusing anymore. It’s becoming more about finding clarity.
I’ve been sitting in it long enough now that it doesn’t feel like a fog I’m lost in. It feels more like a place I’m learning to breathe inside. A hallway I’ve walked back and forth through so many times that I’ve finally stopped pushing at the doors, finally stopped looking for the “right one,” and just… stood still.
And when I did, I realized: this isn’t punishment. This isn’t a delay. This is preparation.
The blur is showing me what’s been hidden. It’s been teaching me patience, honesty, and presence.
And I’ve felt it in my bones—the ache, yes, but also the tiny sparks of joy that flare when I catch a glimpse of what lights me up. Like the memory of chats while coloring with my kids, markers and crayons scattered across the table—the hush of focus, the quiet joy of filling blank spaces with color. Like the way the sunlight breaks through clouds and you have to stop what you’re doing, just to stand in it, soaking in the warmth as it stirs something awake in you.
These moments feel small, but they’re not. They’re proof that the light hasn’t left me. I’ve just covered it.
And maybe the work right now isn’t to fling the door wide open and charge through—it’s to notice these glimmers, to honor them, and to let them slowly lead me home.
It’s like chasing lightning bugs barefoot through the grass as a girl—running after flickers in the dark, cupping them in my hands, letting their glow rest on my skin. Each spark saying, yes, Soul—this way. Each one guiding me closer to the door I’m meant to open.
And when you finally reach it—when light spills out around the cracks and you press your hand to the frame—you know. Your whole body knows. Your soul practically glows out of you with recognition, because the spark on the other side has always been yours. That’s the moment you understand what Let Me truly feels like.
This week it felt almost poetic—because my middle daughter was the one who handed me Mel Robbins’ Let Them Theory. Just like Mel’s daughter spoke truth into her life, mine did the same for me. And that timing? It feels like alignment.
Let Them. Stop gripping other people so tightly, stop trying to make them move your way, stop controlling what was never yours to hold. That part? I’ve been practicing.
But the harder part? Let Me.
- Let me love what I love.
- Let me color in a coloring book as a grown woman without shame.
- Let me blare the music I like, eat the food I crave, wear what feels like me—even if no one else understands it.
- Let me say what I feel without reshaping it into what sounds acceptable.
- Let me stop dimming. Let me stop apologizing.
Let Me is the soul permission I’ve been waiting for.
But here’s what I’ve realized too: the hardest part isn’t just Let Them or even Let Me. The hardest part is what comes after.
Not beating myself up once I do it. Not second-guessing my choices after I’ve made them. Not spiraling into was that too much? too selfish? too risky? once I’ve finally stood in my light.
Because the truth is, sometimes I’ll let them and let me—and then spend hours, days, tearing myself apart for it. The blur is teaching me that real freedom isn’t just in the decision. It’s in the release afterward.
Let Them. Let Me. Let It Be.
Because letting yourself let yourself—and then leaving it alone—is the truest, hardest, most freeing work of all.
Journal Reflection
- Where have you dimmed yourself to make others comfortable?
- What tiny sparks of joy remind you of the light inside you?
- What would Let Me look like in your life right now?
- When you’ve stood in your light, how have you second-guessed it afterward?
- What would it feel like to let it be—to trust your choice without clawing it back?
—Ang
