πŸŒ™ Showing Up Scared (Again)

I find myself in a weird space today. On one hand, I’m feeling better than I have all weekβ€”more like myself, less like someone who needs to make herself small for the comfort of others. On the other hand, I’m feeling emotionally conflicted.


πŸ’¬ Speaking My Truth

Before I go any further, I have a confession: I’ve been keeping some of my emotional pain to myself. My inner critic has been whispering that sharing any of it would be β€œairing dirty laundry” or β€œslinging mud.” But I’m realizing that talking about what I’ve lived through isn’t gossipβ€”it’s honesty. And this blog was never meant to be a highlight reel. It’s about authenticity. So, here we go.


🌧 Two Years of Distance

About two years ago, I made the incredibly difficult decision to create distance between myself and my mom and sister. The years leading up to that point were full of me begging to be seen, heard, and understoodβ€”and coming up empty. I was repeatedly told I was β€œtoo sensitive,” that I needed to toughen up, that my feelings were exaggerated. Eventually, I couldn’t keep doing it. I wrote a long message explaining how I felt, and then I stepped back.

Since then, there have been opportunities for conversation, for accountability, for healingβ€”but none have gone the way I’d hoped. The response has always been some version of, β€œYou’re too sensitive,” or, β€œYou owe us the apology.” That used to devastate me. Now, I see it for what it is: a reflection of where they are in their own process, not a measure of my worth.

Creating that distance broke my heart. But it also saved me. It gave me room to start figuring out who I am outside of the family roles I used to play. I stopped living in constant self-doubt and started learning how to protect my peace instead of sacrificing it for harmony that wasn’t real.


πŸ”₯ Choosing Growth Over Smallness

The easy thing would have been to slide back into my old patternsβ€”the people-pleasing, the self-silencing, the shrinking. And I won’t lie, it’s crossed my mind more times than I can count. But this time, I’m choosing differently. I’m choosing to do the hard thing: to build a life that’s mine. To uphold my boundaries. To protect my peace. To discover who I am, not who I needed to be to keep everyone else comfortable.

The past two years have been heavyβ€”grief mixed with anxiety, depression, and a lot of questioning myself. There are still moments where I think, β€œMaybe I am too sensitive.” But then I look back at what actually happened, and I remember: sensitivity isn’t a flaw. It’s my radar. It’s how I survivedβ€”and how I’m learning to thrive.


🍽 Dinner and Discomfort

When my dad reached out about having dinner last night, I said yesβ€”hesitantly, but yes. All day yesterday I was a bundle of anxiety and anger. I nearly cancelled. I didn’t want to be triggered or spiral backwards. But I also wanted to see my dad. So I decided to prepare myself the best way I know how: through intentional self-care.

I walked on the walk pad. I did yoga. I soaked in a Flewd anxiety-easing bath (this one, if you’re curious). I took a shower and put on an outfit that made me feel confident and grounded. I was still anxious, but underneath it, there was something newβ€”trust in myself. Trust that no matter how dinner went, I could handle it differently this time.

And you know what? It went… okay. It was even, dare I say, fun. But that’s where the emotional conflict comes in. I’m relieved we had a nice time, but that doesn’t mean everything is fixed. Most of the conversation was light, surface-level. And while it felt good to laugh, there’s still a part of me waiting for the other shoe to drop. One good evening doesn’t rebuild trust. It’s a start, not a solution.


πŸ•― Where I Am Now

So that’s where I am today: in between emotions. Hopeful but cautious. Tired but proud. Grateful but guarded. And that’s okay. I don’t have to have it all figured out. My only job right now is to keep listening to my intuition, being gentle with myself, and making choices that feel aligned with who I am in this exact momentβ€”not past Bailz, not future Bailz, just right-now Bailz.

Today, that looks like walking again. Eating a protein-heavy meal. Sitting down to write this even though it scares the absolute shit out of me. Because I know I’d regret staying silent more than I’ll ever regret being honest.

I’m showing up scaredβ€”againβ€”because I know in my gut that it’s the right thing to do.

Love always,
Bailz πŸ’œ


PS – 🌿 If you’re walking through something similar β€” learning to set boundaries, navigating family pain, or just figuring out how to take up space again β€” I hope my story reminds you that you’re not alone. Healing isn’t linear, but it is possible. One honest moment at a time. πŸ’œ

Never miss a post β€” subscribe below to have new reflections sent straight to your inbox. πŸ’Œ

Comments

2 responses to “πŸŒ™ Showing Up Scared (Again)”

  1. groovynachof08c5d403e Avatar
    groovynachof08c5d403e

    Your on the right track, your path! Where you need to be doing what you need to do. Great job!!! πŸ‘ πŸ™‚ when you follow your inner voice you cannot expect other can hear or understand. Often with expansion of your conscientiousness you become a mirror to those around you. They see themselves and their issues. You reflect that back to them. Let it go. Love and kindness to all, but they have to deal with their own stuff. Their actions are a form of control. There is a new Bailey and they are using the old button that used to work to control you.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. bkukla Avatar
      bkukla

      Thank you so much! I appreciate you and all your kind words! I’m gonna keep on keeping on! Thank you so much!

      Like

Leave a reply to groovynachof08c5d403e Cancel reply