



Why I Stopped Forcing Connections
Thereβs a quiet question many of us carry but rarely say out loud:
Do I actually enjoy being alone⦠or did I simply stop forcing connections that no longer felt aligned?
At some point, solitude stops feeling temporary and starts feeling intentional. Not in a dramatic way, just in a quiet, honest one.
For me, that realization didnβt come from one moment , it came gradually, after college, when friendships stopped being shaped by constant proximity and familiar environments. Not because you dislike people , but because you learned that you are most consistent when it comes to yourself. You show up. You follow through. And when you realize you are the one who shows up most consistently for yourself, it changes how much emotional safety you are willing to hand over to other people.
Maybe you were once the friend who wore their heart on their sleeve. The one who dropped everything the moment someone called. The one who celebrated everyone elseβs milestones , loudly, wholeheartedly , even when no one asked you to.
You showed up when it mattered. You showed up when it didnβt. And when it was finally your turn? Silence. Crickets. Absence.
So you adapted.
That was around the same time I began reflecting on friendships more deeply.
I realized many of the connections I once had werenβt built on alignment , they were built on routine, proximity, and shared environments.
When the setting changed, the relationships didnβt always follow.
Milestones always brought it to the surface, and birthdays were the clearest example.
Before I ever noticed it around birthdays, I noticed it around milestones. Big moments have a way of surfacing old fears. A quiet tension would creep in, wondering if people would actually show up for me when it mattered.
That fear did not come from nowhere. It came from earlier experiences of having to be self sufficient, from learning young not to expect much because people often did not follow through. When that becomes familiar, you start anticipating absence before it happens. You brace yourself. You plan for disappointment.
I noticed this most in my early twenties, especially when my birthday came around. There was always pressure to plan something, to gather people, to make it mean something, to prove to myself and others that I was worthy of love, even if I had to perform for it.
I would invite people and, almost instinctively, add: βItβs totally okay if you canβt make it, Iβll understand.β
At the time, I thought I was being easygoing. Looking back, I see what was really happening.
I was leading with permission for disappointment. Because if they didnβt show up, I could tell myself it was fine , I had already said it would be. It was control disguised as understanding. A way to soften a potential hurt before it could land.
And eventually, I stopped planning birthdays altogether.
You learned that if you donβt invite anyone, you wonβt have to sit with the ache of no one showing up.
And maybe you tell yourself you prefer solitude , because deep down, you know youβll always have your own back.
Iβve had birthdays since then where I chose to be alone. No dinner reservations. No waiting on anyone to show up late. No quiet anxiety about flaking or forced enthusiasm.
And in that choice, there was freedom.
No stress. No expectations. No measuring my worth by who showed up. Just peace. Things get done. You survive. You move forward.
But hereβs the part we donβt talk about enough.
Sometimes isolation isnβt peace , itβs protection. Sometimes it isnβt healing , itβs armor.
When friendships fail us, we donβt just grieve the people , we grieve the version of ourselves who believed so openly. And even when we think weβve moved on, a part of that sting lingers. It hardens us. Jades us. Convinces us that needing people is weakness.
So we shrink our world. We convince ourselves we donβt need anyone. All because of a few.
Society sells us the idea that love is loud. Birthdays. Weddings. Baby showers. Graduations. Love is measured by how many people show up and how visible the celebration becomes.
But the truth is, not everyone has a village. Some of us have a few people who matter deeply. Some of us have connections that live far away. Some of us are still waiting to meet the people who truly feel like home.
And even when community exists, not everyone wants a spectacle. For some of us, love looks quieter. It looks like taking yourself out on a solo date. Showing up for your body. Finishing what you start. Choosing peace in the ways that actually feel nourishing.
Seeing that unfold showed me the kind of connection I was willing to choose.
I didnβt want that.
What we donβt realize is that many of our earliest friendships werenβt built on alignment , they were built on proximity. Same schools. Same neighborhoods. Same circumstances.
If you met those people outside of that environment , without history, without obligation , would you still choose them?
Not every ending is a failure. Some relationships are simply lessons.
And yes, opening up again is terrifying when youβve been disappointed time and time again. But that pain came from a small pool , not the entire ocean.
There is so much more beyond your hometown. Beyond your past. Beyond the versions of people who couldnβt meet you where you were.
The longer we isolate, the harder it becomes to truly see ourselves. Because healing in isolation is only half the work.
The real test comes when youβre outside of your control , in rooms, relationships, and conversations that mirror parts of you back to yourself.
Some of us avoid people because weβre avoiding ourselves. Because everyone is a mirror. Because everything is connected.
So ask yourself:
The traits that once triggered you in past friendships , what were they reflecting? Was there a part of you that felt seen? Or a part of you that wished it had what they carried?
Now, I donβt expect much from others , not because Iβm closed off, but because Iβve learned to choose peace.
Some people genuinely love grand celebrations, and they are blessed with many deep, aligned connections. That just wasnβt my story.
And thatβs okay.
Solitude can be sacred. But connection is where growth sharpens.
You donβt need to let everyone in. You donβt need to overextend. You donβt need to bleed for people to prove your worth.
But you do deserve friendships that meet you with the same depth you offer. And they exist , beyond the few who taught you to protect yourself.
The ocean is bigger than the burns that taught you how to swim alone.
And maybe the takeaway isnβt that you need more people.
Maybe itβs simply this:
You donβt need to perform connection to be worthy of it. You donβt need a room full of people to prove you are loved. And choosing peace , even if it looks like a party of one , is still a valid, powerful form of self-respect.
Written from personal experience,
Impera
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