Something I’ve noticed is how difficult it becomes to answer simple questions after years of being needed.
What do you want?
What do you need?
What feels good to you?
Not strategically.
Not practically.
Emotionally.
Many women can tell you what everyone else needs instantly. But freeze when asked about themselves.
Because their inner world has been organized around response, not preference.
They’ve spent so long adjusting to others that they’ve lost access to their own signals.
So desire feels distant.
Needs feel unclear.
Wants feel indulgent.
They don’t feel empty — just disconnected.
Like they’re living a life that makes sense but doesn’t feel like theirs anymore.
Not wrong.
Not unhappy.
Just slightly misaligned.
Over time, this creates a strange numbness.
Not sadness.
Not depression.
Just a lack of direction.
They’re moving, but they don’t know toward what.
And noticing:
How often you make choices based on obligation instead of desire.
How rarely you ask yourself what you actually want.
How foreign your own needs feel compared to everyone else’s.
And noticing:
How long it’s been since you felt fully present in your own life.
Not pushing for answers.
Not trying to fix anything yet.
Just letting yourself tell the truth about how it actually feels to be you.