all devotionals

Coming Home to Yourself

Fitting in drains you, while belonging fills you. God shaped you to be known, not performed, and that changes everything about how you show up.

You've done it before.
Walked into a room and felt the quiet pull to become a slightly different version of yourself.
Adjusted your laugh.
Softened your opinion.
Nodded when you disagreed.

You didn't even decide to do it. It just happened.

That's the trap Brené Brown spent years studying, and what she found stopped her cold.
Fitting in and belonging aren't the same thing.
They're almost opposites.

Fitting in says: become what they need, and you'll be accepted.
Belonging says: show up as you are, and the right ones will stay.

One fills you.
The other quietly drains you every time.

Every moment you've chosen honesty over comfort.
Every time you've stayed true when it would've been easier to disappear into the crowd.
You've been practicing the harder and better thing.

But it doesn't always feel like progress.
Sometimes it feels like standing in a cold room by yourself.

Brown sat across from a man in his forties, confident, successful.
The kind of guy who looks like he has everything sorted.
His voice cracked when he said it:
"I'm 45 years old and I don't think a single person really knows me."

That's where the hustle for acceptance ends up.
You get the approval.
You lose yourself.

God didn't wire you to perform.
He shaped you to be known.
And being known starts before anyone else sees you:
it starts with you being willing to see yourself honestly, to stop editing the parts that make you you.

The people who are meant for your life don't need the curated version.
They need you.

Here's your focus for today:

Notice the pull: When you feel yourself shifting to fit a room, pause and ask whose version of you just showed up.

Choose one honest moment: Say something true today that you'd normally soften or swallow.

Let someone see you: Share a real thought, a real struggle, or a real joy with someone who's earned that access.

Anchor your day in this truth: “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you” (Jeremiah 1:5)

You don't need a better performance.
You need to come home to yourself.
Start there.

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