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The Moments Archive

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the space between want and need

Knowing the difference doesn't solve everything, but it makes the asking clearer.

Dear Reader,

Our daughter is fifteen months old now, and one thing we've been noticing is how clear her needs still are. When she's hungry, she goes to the fridge. When she's uncomfortable, she lets us know immediately. When she's tired, she gets fussy and rubs her eyes. There's no confusion, or second-guessing or wondering if she's being too demanding. Her body tells her what it needs and she (and we) respond.

Somewhere between infancy and adulthood, most of us lose that clarity. We learn to override our needs, to question whether they're legitimate, to feel guilty for having them at all. And in that confusion, wants and needs start to blur together until we can't tell which is which anymore.

But needs are actually pretty straightforward. Your body needs food, water, rest, safety, connection. Your mind needs stimulation, purpose, some measure of control over your life. Your heart needs to be seen and valued by people who matter to you. That's mostly it. Everything else lives in the territory of want, and there's nothing wrong with that except when we pretend otherwise.

The confusion causes problems when we treat wants like needs. When we act like we'll fall apart without something we actually just prefer to have. When we create urgency around things that are genuinely optional. When we make other people responsible for meeting wants we've convinced ourselves are needs. That's when relationships get strained and we end up feeling perpetually deprived even when we have enough.

It works the other way too. Sometimes we minimize real needs by calling them wants, as if needing things makes us weak or burdensome. You might tell yourself you want your partner to listen when you talk about your day, when what you actually need is to feel like your inner life matters to them. You might say you want more rest when what you need is to stop running yourself into the ground.

What helps us is getting specific. Instead of "I need this to feel better," we ask "What would actually happen if I didn't get this?" If the answer is genuine harm or a serious compromise to well-being, it's probably a need. If the answer is disappointment or discomfort but we'd ultimately be fine, it's a want. Both matter, but they don't matter in the same way.

Knowing the difference doesn't solve everything, but it makes the asking clearer.

Yours in the journey,

 

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how you walk the path

We spend a lot of energy thinking about outcomes.

Dear Reader,

We spend a lot of energy thinking about outcomes. Did it work? Did we get there? Was it worth it? But somewhere along the way, we started measuring our lives only by endpoints, as if the hours and days we spend getting somewhere don't count unless we arrive at the right destination.

I've been thinking about this because I watched a client recently finish a project they'd been working on for months. The result was good, exactly what they'd hoped for. But getting there had been miserable. They'd pushed through exhaustion, snapped at people they cared about, and spent weeks feeling anxious and disconnected. When it was done, they felt relieved but not proud. The finish line didn't erase how they'd gotten there.

What if how we do something matters as much as what we accomplish? Not in some precious, everything-must-be-perfect way, but in a more honest one. The way you treat people while you're stressed reveals something. The shortcuts you're willing to take tell you what you actually value. The parts of yourself you're willing to sacrifice to get somewhere faster, those losses don't disappear just because you arrived.

This applies to the small things too. You can get dinner on the table and also make everyone around you tense in the process. You can finish your work and leave a trail of half-answers and avoided conversations behind you. You can reach your goal and realize you became someone you don't recognize along the way.

I'm not saying the middle has to feel good. Hard work is hard, and growth often comes with discomfort. But there's a difference between difficulty that's part of the process and cruelty you're inflicting on yourself or others because you've decided only the end result matters. One builds something. The other just burns through people and hope until you get where you're going.

The path shapes you as much as the destination does. Maybe more.

Yours in the journey,

 

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when being right doesn’t matter

Being right doesn't always get you what you want.

Dear Reader,

A couple sat in my office last week, locked in an argument about something that happened months ago. He was convinced she'd agreed to something. She was equally certain she hadn't. What struck me wasn't who was right, it was how badly they both needed to be.

He pulled out his phone to show me the text thread that would prove his point. She immediately tensed, arms crossed, already preparing her defense before he'd even found the message. I watched them both gearing up for a battle neither of them actually wanted to fight.

I asked them to pause. Then I asked him what he hoped would happen if he could prove he was right. He stopped scrolling and looked up. After a long silence he said he just wanted her to stop treating him like he makes things up. She wanted him to stop acting like her memory couldn't be trusted. Neither of them cared about the original disagreement anymore. They were fighting about feeling dismissed.

This happens constantly in relationships. We argue about facts when what we're really fighting for is to be seen, to be valued, to not feel small or wrong or like we're losing our grip on reality. Being right becomes a stand-in for being heard, and we convince ourselves that if we can just prove our version of events, the other person will finally understand.

But proving someone wrong doesn't make them feel understood. It makes them feel defensive. You can be factually correct and still damage the relationship by insisting on it. The person across from you stops listening the moment they realize you're trying to win rather than trying to connect.

Being right doesn't always get you what you want. Sometimes it just gets you right.

Yours in the journey,

 

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the shape of enough

enough has no fixed measurement

Dear Reader,

Enough has no fixed measurement. It shifts with context, with season, with what your body and life actually need rather than what the world says you should want. For years I kept thinking I'd recognize it when I got there, this feeling of enough. Enough peace, enough self-improvement, enough proof that I was doing it right. But enough kept moving, always just past whatever I'd achieved.

What I've come to understand is that enough isn't a destination you arrive at through accumulation. It's a boundary you draw around what you already have and decide to stop there, at least for now. Not because you've given up on growth or desire, but because you've recognized that the chase itself was costing you something you couldn't afford to keep spending.

The shape of enough looks different for everyone, and it changes. Some months ‘enough’ means getting through the day without falling apart. Other months it means pushing toward something that matters. Enough sleep for one person leaves another exhausted. Enough solitude for you might feel like isolation to someone else. There's no universal template, which is part of what makes it so hard to trust your own sense of it.

The shape of enough is yours to define. You get to draw that line.

Yours in the journey,

 

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outgrowing the past

making peace with the past doesn't mean the past becomes peaceful

Dear Reader,

My therapist once told me that making peace with the past doesn't mean the past becomes peaceful. The things that happened still happened. The people who hurt you might never apologize. The opportunities you missed aren't coming back. Peace isn't about changing any of that.

What changes is how much space it takes up in your present life.

I used to think healing meant I'd stop caring about what happened. That one day I'd wake up and it just wouldn't matter anymore. But that's not what happened. Instead, I started noticing longer stretches between the times I thought about it. Conversations where I didn't bring it up and decisions I made without consulting that old story first.

The past loses its authority slowly, often in ways you don't notice until you look back. What helped me wasn't trying to make peace with what happened. It was making peace with the fact that I'll probably always have a reaction to certain things, and that's okay. My body remembers even when my mind has moved on. That's not a failure of healing, that's just being human.

This week, maybe don't try to make peace with anything. Just notice if there's somewhere you're still arguing with the past, still trying to get it to make sense or be fair or turn out differently. You can stop arguing. It doesn't mean you're okay with what happened. It just means you're done spending your energy there.

The past doesn't need your permission to be in the past. It's already there. You're here.

Yours in the journey,

 

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