šŸ‘“ What If You’re Not Seeing It Clearly?

Spread the Curiosity

As a lifelong Harry Potter fan, I’ve always been drawn to the deeper magic beneath the spells—the moments where curiosity, choice, and truth intersect. One of my favorite lines comes at the very end of the series, when Harry, caught between life and death, asks Dumbledore:

ā€œIs this real? Or is it just happening inside my head?ā€

And Dumbledore replies:

ā€œOf course it’s happening inside your head, Harry. But why on earth should that mean it’s not real?ā€

That line has always stayed with me. Because isn’t that what so much of life is—learning to question the stories inside our own heads, the lenses we’ve been taught to see through, and daring to ask what’s actually real?

This post is about that exact moment—when curiosity interrupts illusion, and truth begins to make itself known.


šŸ’­ The Lens We Don’t Know We’re Wearing

We like to think we’re making choices based on facts.
Logic. Reason. Maybe even instinct.

But more often than not, we’re making decisions through a lens we don’t even realize we’re wearing.

The lens of desire.
The lens of fear.
The lens of ā€œthis better work out.ā€
The lens of ā€œthis has to mean something.ā€

We’re not seeing what’s really there—we’re seeing what we hope is there. What we wish could be. What we need it to be.

But what if it’s not?
What if we’re not actually seeing it clearly at all?


šŸŒ«ļø The Distorted View

Think about it—

How many times have you stayed in something (a job, a relationship, a belief system) not because it was good…
…but because you kept telling yourself:

  • It has potential.
  • It’ll get better.
  • They didn’t mean it like that.
  • Maybe I just need to try harder.

When we want something badly enough, we’ll contort the evidence to match the outcome we’re rooting for. We will actually search harder for anything that helps validate what we want.

We’ll call red flags ā€œchallengesā€ and ā€œopportunities for growth.ā€

We don’t want to see it—we want it to be what we imagined. We don’t want to be wrong.


🚩 When Red Flags Look Like ā€œGrowth Opportunitiesā€

Let’s talk about the mental gymnastics we do when we want something to work.

When we’re attached to an outcome, we become expert narrators.
We don’t just explain things—we reinterpret them.
We soften them.
We try to make the messy parts make sense.

We turn red flags into character development arcs.
We turn boundary violations into ā€œmiscommunications.ā€
We turn our gut instincts into ā€œoverreactions.ā€

šŸŽ­ Example 1: The Relationship Lens

🚩 They ignore your emotional needs, but you say:
šŸ‘‰ ā€œThey just haven’t learned how to communicate yet. I can help them.ā€

🚩 They become distant and disconnected, but you say:
šŸ‘‰ ā€œThey just need space. They’ve been through a lot.ā€

🚩 You feel anxious more than you feel safe, but you say:
šŸ‘‰ ā€œThat’s probably just my trauma speaking. I don’t want to give up too soon.ā€


šŸ’¼ Example 2: The Work Lens

🚩 Your job consistently drains you, but you say:
šŸ‘‰ ā€œIt’s supposed to be hard. This is how you grow, right?ā€

🚩 You’re working well beyond your hours, but you say:
šŸ‘‰ ā€œThey’re counting on me. I don’t want to seem ungrateful.ā€

🚩 You keep getting passed over or undervalued, but you say:
šŸ‘‰ ā€œIf I just prove myself a little more, they’ll see what I bring to the table.ā€


šŸ§˜ā€ā™€ļø Example 3: The Self Lens

🚩 You’re constantly overwhelmed, but you say:
šŸ‘‰ ā€œI just need to be more disciplined.ā€

🚩 You’re numbing out or coping in ways that don’t serve you, but you say:
šŸ‘‰ ā€œThis is just how I unwind. It’s fine—I’ve got it under control.ā€

🚩 You feel out of alignment, but you say:
šŸ‘‰ ā€œMaybe I’m just being dramatic. Everyone feels like this sometimes.ā€


We call the discomfort growth.
We call the inconsistency mystery.
We call the chaos passion.

Why?
Because we don’t want to let go.
Because if we call it what it really is… we might have to change something. 😬

And change is scary.

✨ Here it is—the root of it all: Fear.
Fear is the fuel that keeps the lens in place.

  • Fear of being wrong.
  • Fear of losing something or someone.
  • Fear of having to start over.
  • Fear of not knowing who you are if you’re not this anymore.

So the lens stays. Because the lens gives you a sense of control.

But at what cost?

You stay stuck.
You don’t see clearly.
You keep making choices based on a version of reality that might not even exist.


🧠 Why You Don’t See the Lens

Let’s get a little science-y, shall we?

Your brain doesn’t show you the world as it is—it shows you the world as it needs you to see it.

That lens?
It’s not accidental.
It’s part of your survival system.

And survival doesn’t care about truth. It cares about safety.

Your brain wants you to avoid pain.
Predict outcomes.
Stay in familiar territory.

So it filters reality—focusing on what confirms your beliefs, what supports your preferred outcome, what keeps the emotional waves nice and manageable.

This is called confirmation bias.

And it’s not a glitch—it’s a feature.

  • Your brain rewards you with certainty—even if it’s false.
  • It soothes you with stories—even if they’re incomplete.
  • It offers safety—even if it’s not real.

šŸ›” How Your Brain Tries to Protect You

Here’s the deal: your brain is always scanning for threats—social, emotional, physical.

It’s not just guarding your body.
It’s guarding your identity, your beliefs, and your sense of control.

So when something contradicts what you want to believe, your brain actually shuts it down:

🚫 ā€œNope. That’s too uncomfortable. Doesn’t fit the story. Let’s ignore that.ā€

This is your amygdala working overtime—treating emotional discomfort like danger.

Sometimes the lens is denial.
Sometimes it’s rationalization.
Sometimes it’s hope in a really good disguise.

But underneath it all?

It’s just your brain… trying to protect you from pain.


šŸ”„ Flip the Lens: What Happens When You Get Curious Instead

This is it—
The Curiosity Crossroads. šŸ›£ļø

Curiosity doesn’t shame you for what you wanted.
It simply asks:

šŸ” What if I’m not seeing the full picture?
šŸ” What else might be true?

Let’s flip those lenses—together.


🧠 Relationship Lens: Flipped

šŸ’¬ ā€œThey just haven’t learned how to communicate yet.ā€
šŸ” What if they’re not interested in learning?
šŸ” Am I in love with their potential—or their reality?
šŸ” Would I be okay if nothing ever changed?

šŸ’¬ ā€œThey’ve just been through a lot.ā€
šŸ” Is their past a reason—or an excuse?
šŸ” Is their healing costing me mine? – (Let this one sink in!!)

šŸ’¬ ā€œMaybe that’s just my trauma talking.ā€
šŸ” Even if it is… what if my trauma is telling the truth?
šŸ” What’s the difference between being triggered and being mistreated?


šŸ’¼ Work Lens: Flipped

šŸ’¬ ā€œIt’s supposed to be hard.ā€
šŸ” Is this challenging—or misaligned?
šŸ” Do I feel expanded here, or just depleted?

šŸ’¬ ā€œThey’re counting on me.ā€
šŸ” Am I being responsible—or people-pleasing?
šŸ” Would they still value me if I said no?

šŸ’¬ ā€œIf I just prove myself…ā€
šŸ” Why do I feel I have to earn basic respect?
šŸ” Do I want to stay where I constantly feel unseen?


šŸ§˜ā€ā™€ļø Self Lens: Flipped

šŸ’¬ ā€œI just need to be more disciplined.ā€
šŸ” Is this about discipline—or capacity?
šŸ” What if I don’t need to push harder—I need to listen more?

šŸ’¬ ā€œThis is just how I unwind.ā€
šŸ” Is this soothing—or numbing?
šŸ” What am I avoiding by checking out? (Yikes—this one got me!)

šŸ’¬ ā€œMaybe I’m just being dramatic.ā€
šŸ” What if this isn’t drama—it’s data?
šŸ” What is this discomfort trying to teach me?


🧭 A New Path, A New Question

Here’s where it gets powerful:

Once you admit your lens might be skewed—
You get to choose.

You can keep walking the familiar path—driven by attachment, fear, and assumption.

Or you can try something radically different:

✨ Curiosity.
🫶 Not knowing.
🌱 Letting it be—just as it is.
No edits. No filters. Just… truth.


šŸ”® So… Are You Feeling Curious Today?

Maybe today’s the day you try on a different lens.
Maybe today, instead of chasing clarity, you allow space for it to find you.
No agenda. No forcing. Just noticing.

This is why curiosity is so powerful. And so terrifying.

Because it requires you to loosen your grip on what you think you know.
It asks you to be wrong.
To sit with uncertainty.
To explore what’s underneath the fear—without trying to fix it.

It doesn’t demand that you act—only that you look.

What’s really there, underneath the story you’ve been telling yourself?

It might be hard.
It might be freeing.

But either way?
It will be honest.

And maybe—just maybe—that’s where your next path begins.

šŸ§™ā€ā™‚ļøSo… are you feeling curious today?

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1 Response

  1. August 6, 2025

    […] it gets worse… thanks to confirmation bias (remember this?), your brain will start looking for more evidence to support that story — and conveniently ignore […]