đż Questioning the Rules Youâre Living By
In the past few years, Iâve realized something kind of wildâŚ
I live by a lot of rules.
Rules I never consciously chose.
Rules I didnât sit down and agree to.
Rules I donât even fully remember learning.
And the truth isâit matters less where they came fromâŚ
and a lot more, whether they are:
- actually valid đ¤
- actually mine
- actually serving me⌠or quietly holding me back
You donât wake up one day and consciously decide:
- what success should look like
- how you should behave in relationships
- whatâs âacceptableâ or âtoo muchâ
- what youâre allowed to want
And yetâŚ
đ youâre living by a set of rules every single day.
đ§ The Invisible Rulebook
Somewhere along the way, you picked up beliefs like:
- âI should always be productiveâ
- âI shouldnât disappoint peopleâ
- âI need to have it all figured outâ
- âRest means Iâm being lazyâ
- âIf I slow down, everything will fall apartâ
You didnât sit down and choose these.
You absorbed them.
From:
- family
- school
- work environments
- relationships
- culture
- social media
And over timeâŚ
they stopped feeling like beliefs.
They started feeling like facts.
đ Why This Matters More Than You Think
Because these ârulesâ are quietly shaping:
- your decisions
- your stress levels
- your self-worth
- your sense of success
- your capacity for joy
Without you ever questioning them.
Youâre not just living your lifeâŚ
youâre living a life filtered through rules you didnât consciously agree to.
⥠Where This Shows Up
This is where people start to feel:
- constantly behind đľâđŤ
- never âenoughâ
- guilty when they rest
- anxious when they slow down
- stuck between what they want and what they feel they should do
Not because theyâre doing something wrongâŚ
âŚbut because theyâre trying to meet a set of expectations that may not even be theirs.
đ§ The Brain Science
Your brain is wired to:
- seek approval
- avoid rejection
- create certainty
So when a belief helps you:
- fit in
- feel safe
- gain validation
Your brain tags it as important.
And then?
It reinforces it. đ
Over and over againâŚ
Until questioning it feels uncomfortableâor even wrong.
đ Time to Plug Into Curiosity
Instead of:
- âI should be doing moreâ
Try:
- Who says?
- According to what standard?
- Do I actually believe this⌠or did I inherit it?
Instead of:
- âI canât slow downâ
Try:
- What am I afraid would happen if I did?
Instead of:
- âThis is just how I amâ
Try:
- Is it⌠or is this something I learned?
đĄ The Truth Most People Miss
Not all rules are badâwe know thatâs true.
Some create structure, safety, and order.
Some serve you.
Some donât.
But you donât always get to choose which is whichâŚ
đ until youâre willing to look at them.
đą Itâs Study Time
This is what studying yourself really looks like.
Not judging.
Not fixing.
Just noticing:
- What am I assuming is true?
- What am I treating as a rule?
- Where did this come from?
Because the moment you question a ruleâŚ
you create space.
And in that spaceâŚ
⨠you get to decide.
đ The Rule No One Questions: âI Should Always Feel Goodâ
Letâs talk about the one that hits deep.
Thereâs a belief that has become so normal, we donât even realize weâre carrying it:
I should feel good most of the time.
And if I donât⌠something must be wrong.
So when we feel:
- anxious
- overwhelmed
- bored
- restless
- sad
- uncomfortable
We donât just feel itâŚ
đ we immediately try to fix it.
đ§ Where This Comes From
We are surrounded by messages that reinforce this constantly:
- âDo what makes you happyâ
- âProtect your peaceâ
- âGood vibes onlyâ
- âIf it doesnât feel good, itâs not rightâ
Add in:
- instant dopamine (phones, scrolling, entertainment) đą
- quick relief solutions (food, alcohol, shopping, distractions)
- a culture that pathologizes discomfort
âŚand weâve created an environment where feeling anything less than good feels like a problem to solve.
⥠The Subtle Shift
Discomfort used to mean:
đ This is part of being human.
Now it often means:
đ This needs to go away.
So we start believing:
- If I feel anxious â I need to fix it
- If I feel off â something is wrong with my life
- If I feel uncomfortable â I need to escape it
And without realizing itâŚ
we lose our ability to simply sit with ourselves.
đˇ My Alcohol-Free Experiment
This is where everything shifted for me.
Because alcohol wasnât just about the drinkâŚ
or the social âfun.â
It was about what it did:
- it took the edge off
- it softened discomfort
- it created a temporary âbetterâ feeling
- it helped me escape the pressure of feeling like I should always feel good
And when I removed itâŚ
I didnât just remove a habit.
đ I removed a tool I used to manage discomfort.
Which meant I came face-to-face with something most people avoid:
my actual emotional experience.
And to this dayâŚ
⨠itâs one of the best decisions Iâve ever made.
đĄ The Truth That Changes Everything
You are not supposed to feel good all the time.
You are supposed to feel everything.
- discomfort
- uncertainty
- frustration
- boredom
- sadness
- joy
- excitement
All of it.
Because those emotions arenât problemsâŚ
đ theyâre information.
đ Why This Matters for Mental Health
When you believe you should always feel good:
- you resist normal human emotions
- you judge yourself for feeling âoffâ
- you constantly try to escape discomfort
- you disconnect from what your mind is trying to show you
And that resistance?
It often creates more anxiety⌠not less.
đą The Reframe
Instead of:
đ Why donât I feel good?
Try:
đ What am I feeling right now⌠and why?
Instead of escaping:
Get curious. đ
Instead of fixing:
Start understanding.
⨠Curiosity SaysâŚ
Youâre not struggling because you feel bad sometimes.
Youâre struggling because youâve been taught youâre not supposed to.
đ Self-Study Practice for Week 2
Try this:
Catch one âshouldâ each day.
Write it down.
Then ask:
- Is this objectively true?
- Where did I learn this?
- Do I actually want to keep living by this?
Thatâs it.
No pressure to change anything yet.
Just⌠see it. đ
This is what studying yourself really looks like.
Not chasing a constant high.
Not trying to optimize every emotion.
But learning:
- what you feel
- why you feel it
- what itâs pointing to
Because when you stop trying to feel good all the timeâŚ
⨠you actually start to feel free.





OH, this hit home….first born daughter syndrome to a T for me….turning 50 (55 now) helped me realize I don’t HAVE to do this, that or the other. Ah-ha moment for sure.
Same here Melissa.
Iâve been going through a tough process right now. Hitting midlife, changing mindest, first born daughter and finally speaking on some family trauma, being diagnosed with severe anxiety disorder, learning to let go and so on and so on. This article is very accurate with a lot of my feelings right now