Part Three — Showing Up for Myself

Reflection has never been my strongest skill. More often than not, I find myself drifting toward regret — replaying moments and wondering where I messed up along the way. It’s a familiar place, but this time I’m trying something different.

Instead of sitting in what I would change, I’ve been paying more attention to who I want to continue becoming.

The version of myself that showed up in my last relationship wasn’t perfect, but she showed up. She communicated more clearly, held her boundaries better, and stayed grounded in ways I hadn’t always been able to before. And that’s something I’m choosing to acknowledge — not as proof that I got everything right, but as evidence that I am capable of growth.

What I’ve been curious about lately is how differently I move through life when I’m in a relationship.

I notice that I lean into routines more easily. I show up at the gym more consistently. I feel a quiet sense of accountability — not because someone is forcing me to do anything, but because I know someone is walking alongside me.

Left entirely to my own devices, though? I know myself well enough to admit that I’ll stay up too late watching trash TV, eat way too many cookies, and find a hundred reasons to avoid the gym.

And instead of judging that version of myself, I’m starting to ask better questions.

Why does accountability feel easier when it’s shared?
What would it look like to create that same structure without needing someone else to hold it for me?

I’ve realized that I do well when there’s connection built into commitment — trainers, volunteer work, check-ins, shared routines. I thrive when I’m part of something that asks me to show up.

Maybe the next layer of this journey is learning how to support the version of me that shows up best — whether I’m walking alongside someone or learning to walk on my own.

Not perfectly. Not overnight. Just one small decision at a time.


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Responses

  1. erroneouschoices Avatar

    This theme follows me through life, how to be the me I choose in all levels of being. I’d say the best self. Should we be our best selves alone or should we just be?
    Should we understand that humans exist for other humans and relationship accordingly, letting that disciplined self gain control?
    I like your decision, settling on supporting the self that shows up in any place we exist in

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Heathe_Johnson Avatar

      Thank you for this — I really appreciate the way you framed those questions. I don’t know that I’ve landed on a clear answer yet. For me lately, it feels less about trying to be my “best” self all the time, and more about being an honest version of myself — one that keeps learning and adjusting as life shifts.

      I do believe relationships shape us, sometimes in really beautiful ways. They can help us see parts of ourselves we might not notice alone. But I’m also learning that the version of me I bring into those relationships matters just as much — and that’s where the self-support piece has been showing up for me.

      I like how you said “supporting the self that shows up.” That feels very true right now — meeting myself where I am, while still staying open to growth.

      Thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts.

      Like

  2. Ellie Klauminzer Avatar

    Your statement that you thrive when you are part of something that asks you to show up resonates with me. I need the sense of being useful and the structure that such a situation provides. We all need to find meaning in our lives.

    Liked by 1 person

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