When The Work Stops Feeling Like Yours
I was at the dinner table scrolling through comments on a post I’d written, and a woman I’d been in community with left three words on it.
“Oh, that’s deep.”
I started welling up with tears and couldn’t figure out why. The more I sat with it, the clearer it became. I took an innocent comment and internalized it as something it was probably never meant to be: I’m too much. They missed what I was trying to say.
And that moment opened something in me, because I realized that for a while, without fully knowing it, I had started writing for the people who needed me to be easier to understand, trimming the depths and asking myself whether this was too much or too deep or too hard to explain. And the more I tried to become understandable, the further I felt from the woman who started creating in the first place.
That’s what I mean when I say: success can stop feeling like freedom.
It’s not always that the wrong thing is happening. Sometimes the wrong thing is what you start doing with the right thing. You take the part of your story that people can see, the visible transformation, the credential, the obvious next step, and you start building your whole message around it because that’s the part people know what to do with. And over time, you stop creating from the deeper truth and start packaging the surface layer in ways people can categorize and approve of. You start shrinking, trying to become legible to the people who can only see the most marketable part of you.
The result isn’t just a business problem, but rather an identity problem. Because you can become someone new and still not fully know how to live as her yet, and when you spend your energy performing for the audience that can understand you instead of building from the truth that’s harder to explain, the work starts to feel like another box you’re performing inside of.
I learned this from trying to turn fitness into the whole story when it was only part of the testimony. From a note I wrote in 2020 that still stops me: I didn’t want the very thing that helped me heal to become another box I had to perform inside of. And the last line of that note gets me every time: “I’m not here to help you change your dressing. I’m here to help you heal.”
That truth was what I was always trying to build from. And when I started editing it down to fit what was easier to explain, the work slowly stopped feeling like mine.
Here’s where I want you to look.
Where you’ve been editing yourself down to be more digestible. This isn’t always a strategy problem. Sometimes it’s the slow process of trimming yourself to fit what feels safe or approved. If your work has been feeling flat, disconnected, or like it’s missing something you used to have, it may be because you’ve been creating for the room that can understand you instead of from the truth that’s still forming inside you.
Where you’ve mistaken someone else’s clarity for your own. The people in your life who have a clear answer for what you should do next aren’t wrong for having it. They’re just working with what they can see. There’s a difference between receiving wise counsel and handing someone else the authority to define what God is doing in you. One brings clarity. The other slowly pulls you away from yourself.
Where the work has started feeling heavy in a way that isn’t just tiredness. Burnout and misalignment feel similar from the inside, but misalignment has a specific texture. It’s the feeling of working hard at something that doesn’t feel like it belongs to you, not because you’re doing it wrong, but because you’ve been doing it from the wrong starting place.
Sometimes, the next step people see for you is only the part of your story they can understand. That doesn’t make them wrong. It just doesn’t make them fully right either. You still have to pay attention to the part of you that knows when something is too small for the work God is doing inside of you.
Scripture for the Soul
“Am I now trying to win the approval of human beings, or of God?” — Galatians 1:10
This question cuts through everything we just talked about, not as condemnation but as clarity. The approval trap isn’t always obvious. It can look like responsible strategy, like listening to wise counsel, like building around the part of your story that’s easiest to explain. And every time, it slowly costs you the version of the work that was supposed to matter most.
Points to Ponder
- Where have you been building around the part of your story people can see, while moving away from what God is still healing underneath?
- Where have you been trying to become more understandable to the wrong audience when God may be asking you to go deeper for the right one?
- What would it look like to stop editing yourself down and start building from the truth that’s still forming in you?
Your Next Step
If this gave way to something you’ve been carrying, start with the I Am Enough Identity Reset. It takes ten minutes, and it’s free, built for the woman who needs to pause long enough to get honest about what she’s actually building from before the pressure to become more understandable drowns out the truth she already knows. → Start here
And if you’re past the reset and ready to do the actual work of rebuilding confidence from the inside out, actually living it instead of performing it for people who need you to be simpler, The Confidence Reset is where that begins; it’s built for moments like these. → Get instant access
This Week on The Confident Woman Podcast
E376: When Success Stopped Feeling Like Freedom
The episode version of everything in this letter, and then some. I talk about the season after Chasing Perfection, the dinner table moment, why fitness was part of my testimony but not the whole assignment, and what it costs to keep building around the part of your story that’s easiest for other people to understand.
→ Listen to the full episode here
So, tell me.
Has there ever been a moment where you felt misunderstood by someone who meant no harm — and the sting of it told you something important about what you’d been building from? Hit reply. I read every one.
XO,

P.S. If this reminds you of a woman in your life who has been editing herself down to fit a room that was never built for her — forward this to her today. She may not have words for it yet, but she’ll know it the moment she reads it.
Whenever you’re ready, here’s where to go next:
I Am Enough: The Identity Reset — For the woman who feels lost, exhausted, disconnected, or unsure of who she is anymore. Ten minutes to pause, name what you’ve been believing, and come back to what’s actually true. Start your reset
The Confidence Reset — For the woman who has been surviving too long without space to reset. A guided experience to help her move out of burnout and emotional depletion so she can rebuild confidence, regain clarity, and reconnect with the woman she is becoming. Get instant access
I Am Becoming — For the woman who knows this is deeper than one hard season. A faith-led, soul-paced journey into who she is becoming. Weekly devotionals, audio reflections, and journal prompts delivered straight to your inbox. No logins. No pressure. Just you, God, and the truth of who you were always meant to be. Learn more
The Becoming — For the woman who is ready to go all the way in. The deeper work. The full integration of identity, confidence, healing, and alignment into the life she is actually living. When you’re ready, this is where it goes next. Start your journey