There’s a point where self-awareness crosses a line.
It stops being insight
and becomes monitoring.
You notice your tone.
Your reactions.
Your emotional states.
And that can be healthy.
Until it becomes constant.
You track yourself.
Correct yourself.
Regulate yourself in real time.
So you’re never fully inside the experience.
You’re always slightly outside, observing it.
You don’t just feel.
You evaluate your feelings.
You don’t just respond.
You manage your response.
And it feels like emotional intelligence.
But internally, it creates distance.
From spontaneity.
From softness.
From being affected.
You become very good at being “aware.”
But less practiced at being embodied.
Because self-surveillance keeps your nervous system alert.
Always scanning.
Always adjusting.
Always staying appropriate.
And appropriateness becomes more important than authenticity.
Not because you’re hiding.
But because you’re highly attuned to impact.
There’s a difference between awareness and presence.
Awareness watches.
Presence inhabits.
You might sit gently with this:
Where do I monitor myself instead of feel myself?
What would it be like to experience without evaluating?
What am I regulating that doesn’t actually need control?
Because leadership that feels grounded
isn’t built on perfect self-management.
It’s built on being real enough
to stay inside your own experience.