She’s been ready for years. She just hasn’t started.
Six years ago, there was a woman who had already written the hardest parts of her story in her head. Probably a thousand times. She knew exactly which moments carried the most weight and which ones she’d have to find a way to write around. She just couldn’t make herself out there where other people could see it.
That woman was me.
I’d told the story privately. To a few people I trusted. In pieces, over years, in the careful way you share things when you’re not sure how they’ll land. The story of my marriage. Of what I didn’t know and then did. Of the years I spent performing in a version of my life that looked fine from the outside and felt like something else entirely from the inside.
People who knew parts of it would say, “You should write a book.” And I’d nod, and change the subject because I didn’t know how to explain what I was holding.
It wasn’t that I lacked the words. I had plenty of words—journals, blog posts, inspirational screenshots, and voice notes.
It was that going public with it felt like stepping out from behind the version of myself I’d spent years carefully maintaining. The competent one. The composed one. The good girl (hello Enneagram 1!) The woman who had navigated everything without making it everyone else’s problem.
What happens when people find out the rest?
That’s the question I couldn’t answer. And so I didn’t start.
I’ve been thinking about that version of me a lot lately. About how long she waited. About what she was actually afraid of — which was not, it turned out, what she thought she was afraid of.
More next time.
If this resonated — I’m building something around exactly this. It’s not open yet, but you can get on the list here. https://tinyurl.com/maybookworkshop
This originally posted on Substack.
