There’s a quiet exhaustion that comes from always feeling like you need to improve before you can rest.
Like love is something you earn after you become calmer, stronger, more healed, more faithful.
Many women live with an invisible belief that says:
“Once I’m better, then I’ll be safe.”
So we turn healing into a project.
Growth into pressure.
Faith into performance.
We monitor our emotions.
We correct our reactions.
We try to become the version of ourselves that feels easier to love.
And without realizing it, we start relating to ourselves the same way we think God does — waiting to be fixed before we’re allowed to be held.
But healing was never meant to be a requirement for belonging.
You don’t have to arrive somewhere different to deserve gentleness.
You don’t have to resolve your past to be worthy of rest.
You don’t have to understand yourself fully to be met with compassion.
The part of you that feels messy, tired, confused, or behind — that’s not the obstacle.
That’s the place where tenderness is actually needed most.
Sometimes what we call “healing” is really just learning how to stop withholding care from ourselves.
There’s a quiet truth in Scripture that often gets overlooked:
God doesn’t wait for people to become whole before drawing near.
He meets them in their incompleteness.
Not after the breakthrough.
Not once the emotions are regulated.
Not when the faith feels strong.
But in the middle of the ache.
In the middle of the question.
In the middle of the becoming.
You might sit with these gently:
Where in my life do I feel like I need to “fix myself” before I can rest?
What would it feel like to offer myself care without needing to earn it?
When did I learn that love required improvement?
What part of me feels most tired of trying to be better?
If nothing else today, you can let this be true:
You are already allowed to be held.
Not because you’re healed.
But because you’re human.