Buddhism teaches that suffering arises when we abandon our authentic selves to gain approval from others, as this creates internal conflict, emotional exhaustion, and prevents true inner peace; genuine compassion requires maintaining healthy boundaries and self-respect rather than self-sacrifice, and authentic living leads to liberation while constant self-betrayal for others' comfort creates lasting suffering.
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Why Buddhism Says You Should Never Abandon Yourself for OthersAdded:
Imagine this.
You're always the one who says yes, even when your soul screams no.
You shrink your dreams, silence your truth, and dim your light just so others don't feel uncomfortable.
You call it kindness.
Buddha called it self-abandonment.
And it's quietly destroying your life.
Today, we're diving into the raw, often misunderstood Buddhist truth that will set you free. You should never abandon yourself for others. If you're tired of making yourself small so the world feels bigger, stay with me.
This might be the most important video you watch this year.
One.
The person who betrays you most is often you. Most people spend their lives believing their suffering comes only from other people.
>> [music] >> They blame toxic relationships. They blame betrayal.
They blame rejection. They blame society, family, friends, or enemies.
And yes, sometimes people truly do hurt you.
But Buddhism asks a far more uncomfortable question.
At what point did you begin participating in your own suffering?
Because many times, the deepest wounds in life are not created in a single moment by someone else.
They are created slowly through the moments where you abandoned yourself.
You knew something felt wrong, but you ignored it.
You felt disrespected, but you stayed quiet.
You felt emotionally drained around certain people, but you kept chasing their approval anyway.
You kept saying yes while your entire body wanted to say no.
This is how self-betrayal begins.
Not loudly. [music] Not dramatically.
But silently.
One compromise at a time.
At first, it feels harmless.
You tell yourself you are keeping the peace. You convince yourself you are being mature, patient, or compassionate, but deep inside something [snorts] begins to fracture.
Because every time you silence your truth to avoid rejection, you teach yourself that your feelings do not matter. And eventually, your mind starts [music] believing it.
This is why so many people feel empty without understanding why.
>> [music] >> Their suffering is not only caused by what others did to them.
It is also caused by how long they ignored themselves.
Buddhism [music] teaches that suffering arises when we refuse to see reality clearly.
And one painful reality is this.
You cannot heal while constantly acting against your own inner truth.
Imagine carrying a heavy stone every single day.
At first, >> [music] >> the weight feels manageable.
But over time, your body weakens. Your energy disappears. Eventually, you become exhausted.
Self-abandonment works the same way.
Every time you tolerate what destroys your peace, you add another stone.
Every time you stay in places where you feel unseen, disrespected, or emotionally unsafe, the burden grows heavier. And after years of this, many people no longer recognize themselves.
They become emotionally numb.
They smile on the outside, but feel dead inside.
>> [music] >> They laugh with people while secretly feeling lonely.
They constantly help others while silently resenting everyone around them.
This is spiritual exhaustion.
And Buddhism warns deeply against living this way.
Many people misunderstand compassion.
They think compassion means endlessly sacrificing themselves for others, no matter the cost. But real [music] Buddhist wisdom is far more balanced than that. Compassion does not mean becoming a doormat. Compassion does not mean tolerating abuse.
Compassion does not mean destroying your mental peace just to keep others comfortable.
Because if your kindness requires you to constantly betray yourself, then it is no longer pure compassion.
It becomes fear.
Fear of rejection, fear of conflict, fear of being disliked, fear of ending up alone.
And fear always creates suffering. The Buddha never taught people to erase themselves. He taught awareness, truthfulness, balance, inner clarity. [music] But many people live completely disconnected from themselves.
They become experts at reading everyone else's emotions while ignoring their own.
They know when others are upset. They know when others feel uncomfortable.
They know how to make everyone feel accepted.
But they no longer know what they themselves truly feel.
That is dangerous.
Because the longer you ignore your inner voice, >> [music] >> the quieter it becomes.
At first, your mind warns you clearly.
This relationship is hurting you.
>> [music] >> This environment is draining you.
This person does not respect you.
But if you ignore those signals long enough, eventually, [music] you stop hearing them.
And this is why many people wake up years later feeling lost, depressed, and disconnected from life [music] itself.
Not because they were weak, but because they spent too many years abandoning themselves to maintain temporary approval from others.
Buddhism teaches mindfulness for this exact reason.
>> [music] >> Mindfulness is not only about meditation.
It is about becoming aware of where you are betraying yourself in daily life.
Are you constantly pretending?
Are you constantly suppressing your truth?
Are you shrinking yourself so others feel more comfortable around you?
>> [music] >> If so, suffering will continue no matter how much external validation you receive because peace can never grow inside a divided mind.
A person who abandons themselves lives in constant internal conflict.
>> [music] >> One part of them wants freedom, another part wants acceptance, one part wants honesty, >> [music] >> another part fears rejection, and this inner war slowly drains all joy from life.
That is why many people feel exhausted even when doing nothing physically difficult.
Mental conflict consumes enormous energy.
>> [music] >> Pretending is exhausting. Wearing masks is exhausting.
Constantly monitoring your words, your personality, and your behavior just to avoid upsetting people creates [music] endless tension inside the mind.
And over time >> [music] >> this tension becomes suffering.
The Buddha taught that liberation begins with truth.
Not the truth about other people, >> [music] >> the truth about yourself.
The moment you honestly admit, >> [music] >> "I am abandoning myself just to keep others in my life."
awareness begins.
And awareness is the beginning of freedom.
Because once you see the pattern clearly, you can finally stop repeating it.
You begin understanding that protecting your peace is not selfish.
Speaking honestly is not selfish. Having boundaries is not selfish.
Walking away from what constantly harms your spirit is not selfish.
What is truly harmful is spending your entire life betraying your own soul just to avoid disappointing other people.
Many people are terrified of losing others, but Buddhism asks something deeper.
What about losing yourself?
Because that loss is far more devastating. The first step toward inner peace is not gaining everyone's approval.
It is rebuilding trust with yourself.
Keeping the promises you make to yourself.
Listening to your inner [music] truth.
Respecting your emotional limits.
Stopping the habit of silencing your pain for the comfort of others.
This is where healing truly begins.
Not when the world finally understands you, but when you finally stop abandoning yourself.
Two.
People respect authenticity [music] more than weakness.
One of the biggest mistakes people make in life is believing that shrinking themselves will make them more loved, [music] more accepted, or more valued.
They think that [music] if they become quieter, softer, easier to control, and less honest about their real feelings, people [music] will appreciate them more. So, they slowly start editing their personality to [music] fit what others want.
They hide parts of themselves, suppress their opinions, tolerate disrespect, and constantly worry about being too much for the people around them.
At first, this behavior may seem harmless.
You tell yourself you are simply avoiding conflict or [music] trying to maintain peace.
But over time, something dangerous begins happening inside your mind.
You stop living naturally.
Instead of expressing yourself honestly, you start performing. Every conversation becomes calculated. Every decision becomes filtered through one question.
>> [music] >> How can I avoid making people uncomfortable?"
This creates a life built on fear instead of truth.
Buddhism teaches the middle way, which means balance.
It does not teach arrogance, selfishness, or ego obsession.
But it also does not teach self-erasure.
Many people misunderstand humility and turn it into weakness.
They think being spiritual means constantly lowering themselves, constantly apologizing for existing, and constantly sacrificing their dignity to keep others happy.
But there is a major difference between humility and self-neglect.
Humility comes from inner peace.
A humble person does not need to dominate others to feel important.
They are calm, [music] grounded, and secure within themselves.
But self-neglect comes from insecurity and fear.
A person [music] who constantly neglects themselves secretly believes their own needs, feelings, and boundaries matter less than everyone else's.
And people [music] can feel this energy, even if nobody says it out loud.
Human beings naturally respond to confidence, clarity, [music] and authenticity.
When someone is honest about who they are, others feel it. There is a certain peace and stability around people who are comfortable being themselves.
They do not desperately [music] seek approval.
They do not constantly change personalities depending on who they are around.
Their words feel real because they are not pretending all the time.
But when someone constantly suppresses themselves to gain acceptance, people unconsciously sense the weakness behind it.
Even if others take advantage of it, deep down, they rarely respect it.
This is why people pleasers often feel invisible.
They spend years trying to make everyone comfortable, yet they still feel unappreciated.
They constantly give energy to others, but secretly feel emotionally empty.
The reason is simple. When you abandon yourself to gain love, the relationships you build are no longer based on your true self.
They are based on the version of yourself you created to avoid rejection.
And eventually, that becomes exhausting.
Buddhism teaches that suffering grows when you become attached to false identities. Many people create a false identity built entirely around pleasing others.
They become the nice person who never says no.
The understanding person who tolerates everything.
The easy-going person who never expresses real emotions.
But internally, resentment slowly grows because their outer behavior no longer matches their inner truth.
This creates division within the mind.
A divided mind cannot experience peace.
Imagine spending years >> [music] >> acting in ways that do not reflect how you truly feel.
Imagine smiling when you are hurt, >> [music] >> agreeing when you disagree, and remaining silent when something deeply bothers you.
Eventually, [music] your own personality starts feeling unfamiliar.
You no longer know who you truly are because you became too focused on becoming acceptable to others.
This is one reason so many people feel emotionally disconnected today.
They are not living authentically.
They are managing impressions.
The Buddha never taught people to hide themselves for the comfort of society.
In fact, throughout his life, many people disagreed with him, criticized [music] him, and rejected his teachings.
But did not distort the truth to gain approval.
He spoke with clarity because truth mattered more than temporary acceptance.
This does not mean becoming aggressive or insensitive.
Buddhism is not about forcing your opinions onto others or acting superior.
Authenticity is not loud ego.
Authenticity simply means your outer actions match your inner truth. It means you stop pretending to be someone else just to feel worthy of belonging.
Many people fear authenticity because they believe honesty will make them lose relationships.
And sometimes it will.
But, Buddhism reminds us that attachment to unhealthy relationships creates suffering anyway.
If someone only accepts you when you suppress your real self, then what they truly love is not you.
They love the version of you that is easiest to control.
That is not genuine connection.
>> [music] >> Real connection can only exist where truth exists.
This is why authentic people often [music] appear more peaceful.
Their energy is not being wasted on endless performance.
They are not constantly monitoring every word, every reaction, and every expression to make sure nobody feels uncomfortable.
Their mind becomes lighter because they are no longer carrying the burden of pretending.
Pretending drains enormous mental energy.
You see this clearly in people who constantly seek approval.
They overthink every interaction.
They replay conversations repeatedly in their minds.
They worry about whether others are upset with them.
They become emotionally dependent on external validation because they never develop trust in themselves.
And this creates endless anxiety.
Buddhism teaches that true confidence does not come from forcing people to admire you.
It comes from inner alignment.
When your actions, values, and truth become unified, the mind naturally becomes calmer.
A lotus flower does not become beautiful by hiding beneath muddy water forever.
It grows upward toward the light despite the mud around it.
In the same way, your [music] authentic nature was never meant to remain hidden just because other people feel threatened, insecure, or uncomfortable around your truth.
Many people spend years shrinking themselves in relationships, >> [music] >> workplaces, friendships, and even family environments.
They speak less, dream less, express less, and slowly become smaller versions of themselves.
Then one day, they wonder why they feel empty inside.
The answer is painful, but simple.
Your spirit cannot [music] thrive inside a false life.
The more disconnected you become from your true self, the heavier life begins to feel.
>> [music] >> Even success, relationships, or social approval cannot fill that emptiness because the deepest part of you knows you are not living honestly.
And this is why Buddhism places such importance on awareness and truthfulness.
Awakening begins the moment you stop running from who you are.
>> [music] >> Not everyone will approve of you when you become authentic.
Some people will become uncomfortable when you stop [music] people pleasing.
Some relationships will change when you start setting boundaries.
Some people will accuse you of changing simply because you stop tolerating behavior that harms your peace.
But losing false acceptance is not a tragedy.
Losing yourself [music] is.
The people who truly belong in your life will not require you to constantly shrink, silence, or betray yourself in order to be loved.
Genuine relationships do not demand self-erasure.
They allow honesty, individuality, and emotional truth to exist without punishment.
At the moment you stop apologizing for your existence, something powerful begins happening inside you.
Your mind becomes quieter. Your emotions become clearer.
>> [music] >> Your energy returns.
Because for the first time in a long time, you are no longer fighting against yourself just to make other people comfortable.
Three.
Attachment to approval creates endless anxiety.
One of the most painful forms of suffering is living your entire life through the opinions of other people.
Many people do not even realize they are doing this because it has become so normal in modern society.
They wake up thinking about how others see them.
>> [music] >> They speak carefully to avoid judgment.
They constantly analyze reactions, messages, [music] facial expressions, and tone of voice.
Their emotional state rises and falls depending on whether they feel accepted [music] or rejected.
This creates a mind that is never truly at peace.
Buddhism teaches that attachment is the root of suffering.
Most people think attachment only refers to material things like money, luxury, or possessions.
But attachment to approval is often far more dangerous because it controls your identity itself.
The moment your sense of worth depends on how others respond to you, you lose your inner stability.
Your peace becomes external.
And anything external is unstable by nature.
People's opinions change constantly.
Someone who praises you today may criticize you tomorrow. Someone who loves you deeply may later become distant.
Human emotions are temporary, [music] unpredictable, and constantly shifting.
Buddhism teaches impermanence because everything in life changes.
Relationships change. Feelings change.
Social status changes.
Even the image people have of you changes over time. So, if your emotional security depends on something unstable, anxiety becomes unavoidable.
This is why approval-seeking creates such a restless mind.
You become emotionally dependent on reactions you cannot control.
You begin overthinking everything.
>> [music] >> You replay conversations repeatedly in your head wondering if you said something wrong. You analyze people's behavior searching for signs of rejection.
You constantly adjust your personality depending on who you are around because you fear losing acceptance.
Slowly, [music] you stop living naturally.
Instead of asking yourself what feels true to me, you begin asking, "What will make people approve of me?"
>> [music] >> That shift changes everything because once approval becomes your priority, authenticity disappears. You start becoming whatever others want you to be.
Around one group, you act confident.
[music] Around another group, you become quieter.
Around certain people, you hide your opinions completely because you fear disagreement. You carefully manage your personality like an actor performing different roles >> [music] >> depending on the audience.
This creates inner fragmentation.
Buddhism teaches that a divided mind suffers deeply because it has no center.
When you constantly change yourself to fit external expectations, your identity becomes unstable.
You lose connection with your real thoughts, [music] emotions, and values because your attention is always focused outward >> [music] >> instead of inward.
And eventually, this becomes exhausting.
Many people today are mentally drained not because life itself is impossible, but because they spend enormous energy trying to maintain approval from everyone around them.
They constantly monitor themselves. They try to appear perfect, agreeable, attractive, successful, intelligent, kind, and emotionally acceptable all at once.
But no matter how hard you try, you can never fully control how people perceive you.
This is one of the hardest truths Buddhism forces you to accept.
Some people will misunderstand you no matter how honest you are.
Some people will judge you no matter how kind you are.
Some people will dislike you simply because your existence challenges their insecurities.
And trying to control all of that is impossible.
Yet many people spend their entire lives trying.
The Buddha compared the uncontrolled mind to a monkey constantly jumping from branch to branch.
Approval addiction creates this exact mental condition.
Your mind never rests because it constantly jumps toward external validation.
One moment you feel confident because someone praised you.
The next moment you feel anxious because someone ignored you.
Your emotional state becomes controlled by temporary reactions from the outside world.
This is emotional slavery.
And most people never recognize it because society rewards approval-seeking behavior.
People are taught from childhood to seek validation from parents, teachers, friends, workplaces, and society itself.
They become conditioned to believe they are only valuable when accepted by others. But Buddhism points toward a completely different path.
It teaches that real peace comes from non-attachment, not hatred toward others, not isolation, not emotional coldness, but freedom from dependence.
There is a massive difference between enjoying love and depending on approval to feel worthy.
One comes from connection. The other comes from fear.
A person attached to approval cannot relax because they are constantly afraid of losing acceptance.
This fear silently controls their behavior.
They avoid difficult conversations. They tolerate disrespect. They stay in unhealthy relationships. They suppress their real thoughts.
They become overly agreeable because rejection feels emotionally unbearable.
But every time you betray yourself for approval, anxiety grows stronger because deep inside, your mind knows you are abandoning your truth.
This is why approval-seeking never truly satisfies you.
Even when people praise you, the relief is temporary.
Soon the fear returns again.
You begin needing more validation, more reassurance, more attention, and more acceptance just to maintain emotional stability.
It becomes an endless cycle.
Buddhism teaches that anything dependent on external conditions will eventually create suffering because external conditions always change.
Real peace begins when your self-worth is no longer controlled by public opinion.
This does not mean becoming arrogant or pretending you do not care about anyone.
Human connection matters.
Love matters. Community matters.
But there is a difference between valuing relationships and losing yourself inside them.
A peaceful person can listen to criticism without collapsing emotionally.
They can experience rejection without hating themselves. They can stand alone without feeling worthless because their identity is no longer fully dependent on external validation. That kind of inner stability is powerful.
And it only develops when you stop building your life around approval.
Many people fear what will happen if they stop people-pleasing. They fear losing relationships, attention, or social acceptance. But Buddhism teaches that clinging itself creates suffering.
The tighter you cling to being liked by everyone, the more anxious your mind becomes because you are trying to control something uncontrollable.
No human being is universally accepted.
Even the Buddha himself faced criticism, rejection, and opposition. Yet he did not abandon truth to gain approval because wisdom mattered more than public acceptance. Most people today do the opposite.
They abandon truth immediately if it risks making others uncomfortable.
And that is why their minds remain restless. The moment you stop chasing approval, your inner world starts becoming quieter. You stop over-explaining yourself. You stop obsessing over every reaction. You stop needing everyone to validate your existence before you can feel worthy.
For the first time you begin standing on your own emotionally.
And that is where freedom begins.
Because peace is impossible when your happiness depends on constantly being accepted by people whose opinions change like the weather.
True peace begins the moment you realize you do not need universal approval to live truthfully.
Four. Suppressed truth eventually becomes suffering.
One of the most dangerous things a person can do is continuously suppress what they truly feel.
At first it may seem harmless.
You stay quiet to avoid conflict.
You ignore discomfort to keep a relationship.
You hide your emotions because you do not want to appear difficult, emotional, or weak.
Over time this behavior becomes automatic.
You become so used to suppressing yourself that you no longer even notice how disconnected you have become from your own inner truth.
But Buddhism teaches that truth cannot be permanently buried.
No matter how deeply you suppress your emotions, your pain, or your inner reality, it eventually rises to the surface in another form.
Sometimes it appears as anxiety.
Sometimes as emotional numbness.
Sometimes as silent resentment.
Sometimes as exhaustion that no amount of sleep can fix.
And many people never understand why they feel this way.
They believe they are simply stressed or unlucky.
But often the real problem is much deeper.
They have spent years living against themselves.
Buddhism teaches that suffering arises when there is resistance to reality.
And one of the greatest forms of resistance is pretending something does not hurt when it actually does.
Many people become experts at this kind of pretending.
They smile while internally feeling empty.
They continue relationships that drain their spirit because they fear loneliness. They tolerate disrespect because they fear rejection.
They constantly say I'm fine even when their mind feels heavy every single day.
Eventually, the body and mind begin carrying the burden of all these unspoken truths.
This is why suppressed emotions do not simply disappear.
They accumulate.
Imagine steam trapped inside a sealed container. At first, the pressure is manageable.
But if the pressure keeps building with no release, eventually something breaks.
The human mind works the same way.
Every emotion you suppress without understanding, every truth you deny, every boundary you ignore, adds more internal pressure.
And because most people are disconnected from themselves, they often do not realize how much pain they are carrying until they suddenly collapse emotionally. This is why some people reach a point where they feel completely exhausted by life even when nothing dramatic happened recently.
The exhaustion did not appear overnight.
It was slowly building for years. Years of pretending, years of tolerating, years of suppressing, years of abandoning inner truth for external peace.
But external peace built on self-betrayal is never real peace.
It is emotional imprisonment.
Buddhism teaches mindfulness because mindfulness forces you to see reality clearly instead of escaping from it.
Most people spend their lives distracting themselves from uncomfortable truths.
They stay constantly busy.
They consume endless entertainment. They surround themselves with noise because silence would force them to confront what they truly feel.
And many people are terrified of that confrontation because deep down they already know certain truths they have been avoiding.
They know certain relationships are damaging them.
They know certain environments destroy their peace.
They know they are living in ways that contradict who they truly are.
But acknowledging those truths feels frightening because truth demands change.
And change threatens comfort.
So instead of facing reality, many people continue suppressing themselves while hoping things will somehow improve on their own. But Buddhism teaches that suffering cannot end while illusion continues.
You cannot heal while constantly pretending.
The mind and body are deeply connected.
When you continuously silence your truth your entire nervous system begins carrying tension.
You may notice constant overthinking, emotional heaviness, irritability, fatigue, or a strange feeling of emptiness that follows you everywhere.
This happens because your inner world is divided.
One part of you knows the truth. Another part keeps suppressing it.
And living in that conflict drains enormous energy.
A person who constantly suppresses themselves loses their natural sense of aliveness.
They become disconnected from joy because authentic joy requires emotional honesty.
You cannot experience deep peace while constantly forcing yourself to live against your own instincts. Many people today are not physically exhausted. They are spiritually exhausted. Their soul is tired from years of pretending, pretending to enjoy situations that hurt them, pretending to feel safe around people who disrespect them, pretending to be okay with things that deeply violate their inner peace.
Eventually, this creates emotional numbness.
And emotional numbness is dangerous because many people mistake it for strength.
They think becoming emotionally detached means they are healing, but often it simply means they have suppressed themselves for so long that they no longer know how to feel naturally.
Buddhism does not teach emotional suppression.
It teaches awareness.
Awareness means honestly observing your inner state without running from it.
It means admitting when something hurts.
It means acknowledging when a relationship drains your spirit.
It means recognizing when your life has become disconnected from your deeper truth.
This honesty can feel uncomfortable at first because many people are conditioned to ignore themselves.
From childhood, they are taught to prioritize pleasing others, maintaining appearances, and avoiding conflict.
Over time, they become disconnected from their authentic emotions.
But healing only begins when honesty returns. The Buddha taught that awareness is the path to liberation because awareness destroys illusion.
The moment you fully see your suffering clearly, transformation becomes possible. But if you keep suppressing your truth, suffering continues repeating itself in cycles.
This is why many people find themselves trapped in the same painful patterns again and again.
Different people, different situations, same emotional suffering because the external problem changes, but the internal behavior remains the same.
They continue abandoning themselves.
They continue ignoring inner warnings.
They continue tolerating what destroys their peace.
And until that pattern changes, suffering continues.
One of the hardest truths to accept is that your mind always knows when you are betraying yourself. Even if you convince others that everything is fine, internally your consciousness recognizes the dishonesty.
That is why suppressing truth creates anxiety.
Your inner self is constantly trying to pull you back toward alignment.
Sometimes through discomfort, sometimes through emotional pain, sometimes through exhaustion, not to punish you, but to wake you up.
Pain often becomes the signal that something in your life is no longer aligned with your truth.
Buddhism teaches that awakening begins when illusion falls apart.
And one of the biggest illusions people maintain is the illusion that they can suppress themselves forever without consequences.
But eventually, the truth always surfaces. The mind can only tolerate self-betrayal for so long before suffering becomes unbearable.
And strangely, this suffering can become the beginning of wisdom.
Because many people only begin changing when the pain of pretending finally becomes greater than the fear of being honest.
That is the turning point.
The moment you stop saying I'm fine when you are not.
The moment you stop forcing yourself to remain in environments that destroy your peace.
The moment you stop silencing your emotions just to avoid making others uncomfortable.
That is where inner healing truly begins.
Not through pretending to be spiritually perfect, but through finally becoming honest with yourself.
Because Buddhism teaches that peace is not created through suppression.
Peace is created through alignment.
When your actions, your emotions, your words, and your inner truth finally become one, the mind slowly begins releasing its suffering, and for the first time in a long time, you no longer feel divided against yourself.
Five. Compassion without boundaries becomes self-destruction.
One of the most misunderstood ideas in spirituality is compassion. Many people hear teachings about kindness, patience, forgiveness, and love, then interpret them in the most unhealthy way possible.
They begin believing that being a good person means endlessly tolerating disrespect, sacrificing their peace, and allowing others to drain them emotionally without resistance.
They think spirituality requires them to always stay available, always stay understanding, and always continue giving, no matter how exhausted they become. But Buddhism never teaches self-destruction in the name of compassion.
In fact, true Buddhist wisdom always balances compassion with awareness.
Without awareness, compassion becomes dangerous. Many people spend years trapped in relationships where they are constantly hurt, manipulated, ignored, or emotionally drained because they believe enduring suffering makes them spiritually mature.
They convince themselves that if they just become more patient, more forgiving, or more understanding, eventually the other person will change.
But often, this belief is not compassion.
It is attachment mixed with fear.
Fear of abandonment, fear of loneliness, fear of conflict, fear of being seen as selfish.
So instead of protecting their peace, they continuously sacrifice themselves hoping love alone will fix everything.
And slowly, this destroys them from the inside.
Buddhism teaches compassion, but it also teaches wisdom.
Wisdom means seeing reality clearly instead of emotionally clinging to fantasy. And one painful reality many people avoid is this.
Not everyone changes because you love them.
Some people simply take.
They take your energy.
They take your patience.
They take your kindness. They take your emotional stability.
And the more you tolerate unhealthy behavior without boundaries, the more you teach others that your suffering is acceptable.
This is why compassion without boundaries eventually becomes self-abandonment.
Many people do not realize that constantly rescuing others can become a form of emotional attachment.
They become addicted to being needed.
Their identity starts revolving around fixing people, saving relationships, and carrying everyone's emotional burdens.
At first, this behavior feels meaningful.
It gives them purpose.
They feel valuable because others depend on them.
But over time, they begin losing themselves completely.
Their peace disappears.
Their mental energy disappears.
Their emotional health slowly collapses because they spend all their time managing other people's chaos while neglecting their own inner world.
Buddhism teaches that attachment creates suffering. This includes attachment to the role of the helper or the savior.
Many people secretly believe their worth comes from how much they sacrifice for others.
So, they continue over giving even when it is destroying them internally.
But, real compassion is not rooted in self-neglect.
A healthy mind understands balance.
Imagine trying to pour water into everyone else's cup while your own cup remains empty.
Eventually, there is nothing left to give.
This is exactly what happens to people who constantly prioritize others while ignoring themselves.
They become emotionally exhausted, resentful, and spiritually drained. And eventually, even their kindness becomes poisoned by hidden anger.
This is why so many people secretly feel bitter despite appearing compassionate on the outside. They spent years sacrificing themselves without boundaries, then became frustrated when others failed to appreciate them properly.
But, the deeper issue is not simply that others took too much. It is that they never learned to stop over giving.
Buddhism teaches mindfulness because mindfulness reveals unhealthy patterns within ourselves.
One of those patterns is confusing love with self-sacrifice.
Many people believe love means enduring unlimited pain for someone else. But, suffering endlessly inside unhealthy situations does not make you enlightened.
Sometimes, it simply means you are afraid to let go, and fear is not wisdom.
The Buddha himself never taught people to remain trapped in toxic environments.
He walked away from unnecessary conflict, avoided people committed to ignorance, and understood the importance of protecting inner peace.
Yet, many modern people believe spirituality means allowing everyone unlimited access to their energy regardless of the consequences. This misunderstanding creates enormous suffering.
A person without boundaries becomes emotionally consumed by other people's problems.
They absorb stress constantly. They feel guilty whenever they say no.
They feel responsible for everyone's emotions.
If someone becomes upset with them, they immediately blame themselves and try to fix the situation even when they did nothing wrong.
Overtime, this creates chronic anxiety and emotional exhaustion because no human being was meant to carry everyone else's emotional weight.
Buddhism teaches compassion, but it does not teach emotional slavery. You are not responsible for healing every wounded person who enters your life.
You are not required to tolerate disrespect to prove you are kind.
You are not obligated to destroy your mental peace simply because someone else refuses to manage their own behavior.
These truths may sound harsh to people conditioned to people please, but they are necessary for inner freedom. Many people remain trapped in painful relationships because they confuse guilt with compassion.
They fear that creating boundaries makes them selfish, so they continue tolerating behavior that damages them emotionally. But, boundaries are not cruelty. Boundaries are clarity.
A boundary simply says, "I will not allow this behavior to continue harming my peace."
That is not hatred.
That is self-respect.
And without self-respect, compassion eventually becomes unhealthy.
This is why people who never create boundaries often attract relationships where they are constantly drained.
Unconsciously, others learn that this person will tolerate almost anything.
So, the cycle continues.
The person over gives.
Others take advantage.
The person becomes exhausted.
Then they continue over giving again because they fear rejection.
This cycle can continue for years, sometimes decades, and many people do not realize how deeply they have abandoned themselves until their mind and body finally collapse under the emotional pressure.
Buddhism teaches that peace comes from non-attachment.
But one of the hardest attachments to release is the attachment to being needed by others.
Some people would rather suffer endlessly than risk disappointing someone.
Think about how dangerous that is.
Imagine sacrificing your peace, energy, identity, and emotional stability simply because you fear someone becoming upset with you.
That is not compassion. That is emotional dependency disguised as kindness.
True compassion includes yourself, too.
This is something many people completely forget. They become incredibly understanding toward others while being completely merciless toward themselves.
They forgive everyone except themselves.
They care for everyone except themselves.
They protect everyone except themselves.
And eventually, their inner world becomes empty.
Buddhism teaches the importance of awareness because awareness reveals when your kindness has become unhealthy.
Are you helping people from genuine compassion or are you helping because you fear rejection?
Are you forgiving because your heart is peaceful or because you are terrified of losing someone?
Are you staying because love exists or because loneliness scares you?
These are difficult questions but they are necessary questions because many people remain trapped in suffering simply because they never honestly examine their motives.
There is also another painful truth many people avoid.
Some people only remain in your life because you have weak boundaries. The moment you stop over giving, stop tolerating disrespect, or stop sacrificing yourself endlessly they disappear.
This can feel heartbreaking at first but Buddhism teaches impermanence.
Not every relationship is meant to last forever.
Some connections exist only because you abandoned yourself to maintain them and relationships built on self-abandonment can never bring true peace.
Real love does not require self-erasure.
Real connection does not demand emotional exhaustion.
Healthy relationships allow honesty, balance, and mutual respect to exist together.
A spiritually healthy person understands when to help and when to step back. They understand that compassion does not mean absorbing unlimited pain from others.
Sometimes the wisest and most compassionate action is distance not revenge, not hatred, not bitterness.
Distance because protecting your peace is necessary for spiritual clarity.
A constantly drained mind cannot become peaceful. A constantly manipulated person cannot hear their inner truth clearly.
And a person who continuously abandons themselves in relationships slowly loses connection with their authentic nature.
This is why boundaries are deeply connected to inner peace. The moment you stop allowing others unlimited control over your emotional state, your mind begins becoming lighter.
You stop feeling responsible for fixing everyone.
You stop carrying emotional burdens that were never yours to carry.
You stop sacrificing yourself just to maintain relationships built on imbalance.
And slowly, your energy returns.
Your clarity returns.
Your peace returns.
Because for the first time in a long time, your compassion is no longer destroying you.
It is finally existing alongside wisdom.
Six.
Your real nature was never meant to be hidden. One of the saddest ways a person can live is by spending their entire life hiding who they truly are.
Many people become so focused on fitting into society, pleasing others, avoiding rejection, and maintaining approval that they slowly disconnect from their authentic nature.
Over time, they stop expressing their real thoughts, >> [snorts] >> stop following what genuinely matters to them, and stop living honestly.
Instead, they create a version of themselves designed to be accepted.
At first, this may seem necessary.
As children, most people quickly learn that acceptance often comes with conditions.
They are praised when they behave a certain way, speak a certain way, or meet certain expectations.
Slowly, they begin understanding that being fully authentic can sometimes lead to criticism, rejection, or discomfort from others.
So, they adapt.
They learn which emotions are acceptable to show and which emotions must be hidden.
They learn when to stay quiet, when to pretend, and when to suppress parts of themselves to maintain connection with others.
And eventually, this behavior becomes automatic.
By adulthood, many people no longer even know who they truly are beneath all the roles, masks, and performances they have created. Buddhism teaches that much of human suffering comes from illusion.
One of the greatest illusions is the false identity people build in order to survive socially.
They become attached to an image instead of living from inner truth.
This is why so many people feel disconnected from themselves, even when life appears successful from the outside.
They may have relationships, careers, social approval, or public admiration, yet internally, they feel empty because their outer life no longer reflects their real nature.
The deeper self has been buried beneath years of pretending.
Many people live almost entirely through performance.
Around one group, they act strong.
Around another, they act agreeable.
Around certain people, they hide their intelligence, opinions, or emotions because they fear making others uncomfortable.
This constant self-editing creates deep internal tension because no matter how convincing the performance becomes, the mind always knows when it is pretending.
And pretending is exhausting.
Buddhism teaches mindfulness because mindfulness reveals where dishonesty exists within the self.
Not only dishonesty toward others, but dishonesty toward your own soul.
Most people think lying only means deceiving other people, but one of the deepest forms of deception is continuously denying who you truly are.
You know what matters to you, yet you suppress it.
You know what kind of life feels meaningful, yet you ignore it.
You know certain environments drain your spirit, yet you continue staying there to maintain approval.
Overtime, this creates suffering because the authentic self cannot disappear completely.
It remains inside you quietly waiting to be acknowledged. This is why many people feel restless even when everything seems fine externally.
Their spirit knows they are living in misalignment.
Imagine a bird trapped inside a beautiful golden cage. From the outside, the cage may appear valuable and impressive, but no matter how beautiful the cage becomes, the bird still cannot fly.
Many people live exactly like this.
They build socially acceptable lives while internally feeling trapped. They become prisoners of image, expectation, and fear.
Their decisions are no longer based on truth.
They are based on what will gain approval, avoid criticism, or maintain belonging.
But Buddhism teaches that attachment to false identity creates suffering because anything false requires constant maintenance. When you are pretending, you must continuously protect the mask.
You monitor your behavior constantly.
You overthink your words.
You become anxious about how others perceive you, because your entire identity depends on external validation.
But authenticity creates a completely different kind of energy.
A person who accepts their real nature no longer wastes enormous mental energy trying to appear perfect for everyone.
Their mind becomes quieter because they stop fighting themselves internally.
This does not mean they become arrogant or selfish.
Buddhism does not teach ego worship.
Authenticity is not about loudly forcing your identity onto others.
It is about alignment. It is about your outer life honestly reflecting your inner truth.
Many people fear authenticity because they associate it with rejection.
And the fear is understandable.
The moment you stop pretending, some people may become uncomfortable. Certain relationships may weaken.
Some people who benefited from your silence may resist your growth.
But Buddhism teaches impermanence.
Not every relationship is meant to survive your awakening.
This is one of the hardest truths people must accept.
Sometimes the reason certain people like you is because you abandoned yourself around them.
You stayed quiet to protect their comfort.
You tolerated behavior you should have challenged. You made yourself emotionally smaller so they could continue feeling secure.
The moment you stop doing this, the relationship changes.
And while painful, this change often reveals an important truth. Some people were connected to your mask, not your real self.
This is why authenticity can feel lonely at first.
When you stop performing, you begin seeing which relationships were built on truth and which were built on self-erasure.
But Buddhism teaches that temporary loneliness is far less destructive than permanent self-betrayal because a person who constantly hides themselves eventually becomes spiritually exhausted.
They lose touch with their instincts, desires, creativity, and emotional truth.
Life starts feeling empty because nothing feels fully real anymore.
Imagine spending years acting in ways that contradict your deeper nature.
Eventually, you begin feeling disconnected from your own life.
You may continue functioning externally but internally there is a silent feeling of emptiness that follows you everywhere.
This emptiness is often misunderstood.
People try to fix it through achievement, relationships, entertainment, or endless distractions.
But external things cannot solve a problem caused by inner disconnection.
The real problem is not always the outside world. The real problem is that the authentic self has been neglected for too long.
Buddhism teaches that awakening begins when illusion collapses.
And one of the greatest illusions people maintain is the belief that they can permanently ignore their true nature without consequences.
But the consequences always appear eventually.
Anxiety, emotional numbness, restlessness, depression, exhaustion, a constant feeling that something is missing. Often these feelings are not signs that you need to become someone else.
They are signs that you need to return to yourself.
This return requires honesty.
It requires sitting quietly enough to recognize where you have been pretending.
It requires questioning which parts of your personality are genuine and which parts were created only to survive socially.
It requires the courage to stop shrinking yourself for people who only accept the edited version of you.
And this process can feel terrifying because the false self often feels safer than authenticity.
The mask protects you from judgment, but it also imprisons you.
A person who hides constantly never experiences true freedom because they are always emotionally dependent on maintaining appearances.
They become trapped inside their own performance.
>> [snorts] >> This is why authentic people often appear calmer.
It is not because life became easier for them.
It is because they stopped dividing themselves internally.
Their words, actions, values, and emotions are no longer constantly fighting each other.
That inner alignment creates peace.
The Buddha taught that liberation comes through awareness and truthfulness, not through becoming what society expects, but through seeing clearly beyond illusion.
And perhaps one of the greatest illusions modern people live under is the belief that they must become smaller versions of themselves in order to deserve love or belonging.
But your real nature was never meant to be hidden permanently.
Your voice was not meant to stay silent forever.
Your truth was not meant to remain buried beneath fear.
The more honestly you live, the lighter your mind becomes because you are no longer carrying the exhausting burden of pretending.
Yes, authenticity may cost you certain relationships. Yes, some people may misunderstand you.
Yes, some environments may no longer feel comfortable once you stop performing.
But losing false acceptance is not the same as losing yourself.
In fact, many people only begin finding real peace after they stop trying to become acceptable to everyone else.
Because peace does not come from perfect performance.
Peace comes from inner alignment.
The moment you stop hiding your authentic nature, something powerful begins happening inside you.
Your mind becomes quieter. Your emotions become clearer.
Your energy returns.
Your spirit feels lighter.
Because for the first time in a long time, you are no longer living as a stranger to yourself.
Seven.
Inner peace begins when you stop shrinking yourself.
Most people spend their entire lives trying to become acceptable instead of becoming truthful.
From childhood, they learn that approval often comes when they stay quiet, behave correctly, avoid conflict, and make themselves easy for others to handle.
Slowly, without realizing it, they begin shaping their personality around other people's comfort instead of their own inner truth.
At first, this shrinking feels small.
You stay silent during certain conversations even when something bothers you deeply.
You lower your standards to avoid losing people.
You hide your intelligence around insecure individuals.
You suppress your emotions because you fear being judged as too sensitive.
You pretend to agree simply to avoid rejection.
And over time, these small acts of self-erasure become your identity.
You become someone who constantly adjusts themselves depending on the environment. Around certain people you become quieter.
Around others you become softer.
Around controlling individuals you suppress your real opinions completely because you fear their reactions.
Eventually, you no longer know how to exist naturally.
Everything becomes performance.
And this is where suffering quietly begins. Buddhism teaches that attachment creates suffering, but one of the deepest attachments people carry is the attachment to being accepted by everyone around them.
Many people would rather betray themselves than risk disapproval.
They would rather feel internally miserable than externally rejected.
Think about how dangerous that is.
Imagine sacrificing your peace, your identity, your truth, and your emotional freedom simply because you fear making other people uncomfortable.
This is why so many people feel spiritually exhausted even when their life appears stable on the outside.
Their suffering does not always come from dramatic tragedy.
Often, it comes from years of shrinking themselves in ways that slowly destroy their spirit.
The human mind cannot remain peaceful while constantly suppressing its authentic nature.
You may temporarily maintain approval by becoming smaller, but internally, the mind begins carrying tension.
Deep down, your consciousness knows when you are abandoning yourself.
And this internal conflict slowly drains your energy.
Buddhism teaches that peace arises when there is alignment between your inner world and outer life. But a person who constantly shrinks themselves lives in division.
Their outer behavior becomes disconnected from their inner truth.
They say yes while internally feeling no.
They smile while internally feeling resentment. They remain silent while internally feeling pain.
They tolerate disrespect while internally feeling anger. This creates a divided mind.
And a divided mind cannot experience lasting peace. Many people mistakenly believe shrinking themselves is kindness.
They think avoiding conflict at all costs makes them spiritually mature.
But Buddhism does not teach emotional self-erasure.
It teaches awareness, balance, and truthfulness.
There is a major difference between being peaceful and being afraid.
A peaceful person remains calm because they are internally stable.
But a fearful person stays silent because they are terrified of rejection.
From the outside, these behaviors may appear similar, but internally they come from completely different places. Many people are not truly peaceful.
They are simply afraid. Afraid of being disliked, afraid of abandonment, afraid of disappointing others, afraid of standing alone.
So, they spend years shaping themselves around external approval.
But external approval is unstable by nature.
People's opinions constantly change.
One person praises you while another criticizes you.
Someone accepts you today and rejects you tomorrow. Buddhism teaches impermanence because nothing external remains fixed forever.
So, if your peace depends on keeping everyone comfortable, your peace will always remain fragile.
This is why people-pleasing creates chronic anxiety.
You become hyper-aware of everyone's emotions. You constantly monitor reactions. You overthink your words and behavior because your emotional stability depends on staying accepted.
Life becomes mentally exhausting because you are no longer living freely.
You are managing perceptions.
And eventually, this endless performance disconnects you from your authentic self.
Many people become so focused on avoiding discomfort that they stop asking themselves important questions.
What do I truly feel?
What actually brings me peace?
What kind of life feels honest to me?
Which relationships force me to abandon myself? Without these questions, people remain trapped in unconscious patterns for years.
Buddhism teaches mindfulness because mindfulness interrupts unconscious living.
It forces you to see how much suffering is created by attachment, fear, and illusion.
One painful illusion many people live under is the belief that they must become smaller to deserve love.
But genuine love does not require self-erasure.
A healthy relationship does not force you to silence yourself constantly.
Real connection allows honesty to exist.
It allows emotional truth to exist. It allows individuality to exist without punishment.
If someone only accepts you when you suppress your needs, opinions, boundaries, or emotions, then they are not accepting the real you.
They are accepting the version of you that is easiest to control.
And remaining trapped inside that dynamic slowly destroys inner peace.
Many people do not notice this destruction immediately because self-abandonment often happens gradually.
It becomes normal to prioritize everyone else's comfort over your own emotional reality.
You become accustomed to swallowing your truth. You adapt to emotional exhaustion until it feels ordinary.
But the body and mind always keep score.
Eventually, the exhaustion becomes too heavy to ignore.
This is why so many people feel emotionally numb later in life.
They spent years disconnected from themselves.
Their energy became consumed by maintaining relationships, appearances, and approval.
Deep inside, they stopped feeling alive because they stopped living honestly.
Buddhism teaches that awakening begins when illusion breaks apart.
And one of the biggest illusions people must break is the belief that shrinking themselves creates peace.
It does not.
It only creates temporary acceptance at the cost of long-term suffering.
Real peace begins the moment you stop negotiating away your soul.
This does not mean becoming selfish, arrogant, or emotionally cold.
Buddhism never teaches ego obsession.
True inner freedom is not about dominating others or forcing your truth onto everyone around you. It is about no longer abandoning yourself out of fear.
It is about speaking honestly without constantly apologizing for your existence.
It is about setting boundaries without drowning in guilt.
It is about accepting that not everyone will understand you, approve of you, or remain in your life forever.
And Buddhism teaches that this is natural.
Impermanence is part of life.
Some relationships end. Some people drift away. Some connections dissolve the moment you stop sacrificing yourself endlessly.
But losing relationships built on self-erasure is not always a loss.
Sometimes it is liberation.
Because every time you stop shrinking yourself, your inner world becomes lighter.
You stop carrying the exhausting burden of pretending. You stop monitoring every word to avoid upsetting people.
You stop living in constant emotional tension, and slowly your nervous system begins calming down. For the first time in years, you begin experiencing moments of real stillness. Because there is no longer a war happening inside you.
A person who no longer abandons themselves walks differently through life.
They are not desperate for universal approval anymore.
They understand that some people will misunderstand them no matter what they do.
They understand that trying to satisfy everyone is impossible. This understanding creates freedom.
The Buddha himself was criticized, rejected, and misunderstood by many people.
Yet he did not distort truth to gain approval, because truth mattered more than public comfort. Most people today do the opposite. They sacrifice truth immediately if it threatens acceptance.
And that is why their minds remain restless.
A peaceful mind cannot exist where constant self-betrayal exists. This is why inner peace begins the moment you stop shrinking yourself.
The moment you stop apologizing for your needs. The moment you stop suppressing your voice. The moment you stop tolerating what destroys your spirit.
The moment you stop making yourself emotionally smaller so others can feel more comfortable around you.
That is where healing begins.
Because peace is not created by becoming less of yourself.
Peace is created when you finally allow yourself to exist fully without fear.
And perhaps that is one of the deepest forms of awakening Buddhism points toward.
The freedom of no longer abandoning your own soul just to remain accepted by the world.
At the end of life, one painful question remains.
Did you live as your true self?
Or did you spend your entire life becoming whatever others needed you to be?
Most people never ask themselves this question until it is too late.
They spend years chasing approval, maintaining appearances, suppressing emotions, tolerating disrespect, and shrinking themselves just to avoid rejection.
Slowly, they lose connection with their own spirit.
They become so focused on keeping everyone else comfortable that they forget what peace even feels like inside themselves.
But Buddhism teaches that suffering begins the moment you abandon your inner truth.
No amount of validation can heal the pain of self-betrayal.
No relationship can bring lasting peace if you must constantly hide who you are to keep it.
And no amount of external acceptance can replace the deep stability that comes from finally being honest with yourself.
This is why awakening is not about becoming someone new.
It is about returning to who you were before fear, attachment, and approval addiction made you hide yourself from the world.
Your soul was never meant to live in constant performance.
You were never meant to spend your life apologizing for your existence.
You were never meant to silence your truth just to protect other people's comfort.
And you were never meant to carry relationships that require your self-destruction in order to survive.
Real peace begins when you stop negotiating away your authenticity. When you stop begging to be accepted. When you stop fearing disapproval. When you stop shrinking yourself to fit into places that were never meant for you.
Because the truth is this. Not everyone will understand you. Not everyone will stay. Not everyone will approve of your growth.
And Buddhism says that is perfectly natural.
Everything in life is temporary.
Opinions change. Relationships change.
People change. But if you abandon yourself for temporary acceptance, the suffering remains permanent inside you.
So protect your peace carefully.
Speak honestly.
Set boundaries without guilt.
Walk away from what continuously destroys your spirit.
And stop making yourself smaller just so others can remain comfortable in your presence.
Because true awakening begins the moment you stop betraying yourself.
And perhaps the greatest freedom in life is finally reaching a point where you no longer need the world's permission to exist as you truly are.
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