Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Getting Comfortable with the New You

 

A railway track diverging into three paths, symbolizing life’s turning points, personal growth, and the journey of embracing change.

Photo by Pixabay

The hardest part of change isn’t always the change itself — it’s accepting the new version of ourselves after we have changed.

We resist change not because we dislike what’s coming, but because we’re uncertain how to feel about the person we’re becoming.

Let’s understand this with something simple — something many of us have lived through during our teenage years.

In those days, when appearance was everything, a mustache slowly became part of our identity — a quiet symbol of growing up.

At the same time, we were fascinated by movie stars — Amitabh Bachchan, Clint Eastwood, Richard Gere — and their unmistakable clean shaven style. But we weren’t allowed to shave until we reached the threshold set by our parents.

And when that day finally came, it wasn’t easy. Shaving felt like a betrayal — not of innocence, but of self. We were unsure of the new look and unsure of how others would see us.

For me, I shaved just before boarding a long-distance train to New Delhi. Those twenty-four hours on the train helped me get used to my reflection again — to know me, to like me, to be myself.

Self-acceptance sometimes needs distance — from places, from people, from the mirror that remembers too much. It takes a little space where the old identity cannot interfere with the new one taking shape. Perhaps that’s why the sages preferred isolation.

Transformation rarely happens in an instant.
It unfolds in the quiet hours between what was and what will be — like those twenty-four hours on the train.

Change asks for courage.
But acceptance asks for gentleness.

So, when life demands a new version of you — a new role, a new rhythm, a new mindset — take a pause. Give yourself time to meet the stranger you’re becoming.

Because the first person who must accept the change is you.



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4 comments:

  1. What a beautiful rumination I love "Self-acceptance sometimes needs distance" This was quite literal true for me as I moved to the other side of the world ; a new culture, loose from old ways of being I changed a lot. I also love "Change asks for courage.
    But acceptance asks for gentleness." True and beautiful

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for your thoughts and time. I am one who has been settled and unsettled in 7 countries and I can understand very well how you would have felt to leave Netherlands and settle in New Zealand.

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  2. I think Marja is much better with words than I! I echo her comment, she said it so well! Thank you so much for sharing.

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  3. Many thanks Linda for visiting my blog and sharing your thoughts. Greetings to everyone in Montreal.

    ReplyDelete

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