Sometimes the hardest thing to name is distance from yourself.
You’re present, but not fully here.
Functioning, but not connected.
Living, but not really feeling.
You go through routines.
You meet expectations.
You respond to life.
But inside, something feels muted.
Like you’re watching yourself instead of being yourself.
Many women lose connection to themselves slowly.
Through over-responsibility.
Through people-pleasing.
Through emotional survival.
They learned how to adapt so well that they forgot how to listen.
To their needs.
To their limits.
To their inner voice.
So disconnection becomes normal.
And reconnection feels unfamiliar.
But feeling distant from yourself isn’t a flaw.
It’s a signal.
A signal that you’ve been prioritizing safety over truth.
Function over feeling.
Belonging over authenticity.
There’s a gentle truth in faith that restores hope:
God doesn’t meet you in who you perform as.
He meets you in who you actually are.
Even if you’ve lost touch with her.
You might sit with these gently:
When did I start feeling disconnected from myself?
What parts of me do I ignore to stay functional?
What do I feel but rarely acknowledge?
What would it look like to listen inward again?
You don’t need to become someone new.
You’re being invited to remember who you’ve always been.