Chapter 113: Change of perspective
Chapter 113: Change of perspective
It wasn’t that I wanted to renounce being good entirely. In the deepest recesses of my being, I knew that a certain kindness was part of my essence, a golden thread running through my veins since birth. But in my painful introspection, I began to distinguish clearly between authentic kindness and the one imposed on me as a burden. The kindness they taught me was nothing but a suffocating mask, a tool to keep me docile, predictable, manageable.
—Don’t do that; it looks bad —they told me as a child.
—Be a good girl.
And I, with an innocently open heart and fear of rejection as my only guide, had learned to adapt obsessively, to soften my natural edges, to swallow my deepest truths until I choked on them. What they called virtue, I now perceived as a twisted form of survival, a mechanism to avoid the punishment of being labeled «bad.»
Finally, I understood the harsh truth: a human being determined to act at all times as a perfectly good person was irrevocably destined for ruin in a world populated by those who didn’t share that ideal. Not because they openly glorified cruelty, but because they exposed a truth I had cowardly evaded: while I strove to be the ideal person, others took without remorse what they wanted, occupied spaces that were rightfully mine, imposed their will over mine. And I, in my obsessive pursuit of being just and compliant, had remained perpetually asking permission to exist. That wasn’t a life worth living. It wasn’t an authentic life but a pathetic existence approved by others.
I felt something fundamental break within me, not with destructive violence but with a liberating clarity that illuminated every corner of my being. My kindness, which I had naively considered my greatest strength, had too often been a subtle way of disappearing.
What I had called empathy was often nothing but a paralyzing fear of facing inevitable conflicts. What I considered understanding was, in reality, usually a visceral terror of being left alone, abandoned. And what I labeled as humility was far too frequently my self-esteem crumbling under the suffocating weight of countless fears someone else had forced me to carry.
Each time I silenced my inner truth, I surrendered an irrecoverable fragment of my dignity. Each time I forgave the unforgivable, I drifted further from the self-love I so desperately needed. And each time I accepted the unacceptable, I whispered to myself the corrosive lie that I deserved nothing better. This cycle exhausted me because it was never enough. I could give everything, become the most just, most available, most understanding person… and still, they would ignore me, use me, discard me as if I were worthless.
But now, I felt the birth of something new within me: a burning spark of rebellion, not against others, but against the version of myself that had docilely allowed others to define me from the outside. I didn’t wish to abandon my natural kindness entirely, but I did want to transform it radically.
I yearned for a kindness that wasn’t passive and self-destructive, that didn’t mean erasing myself to please others. A firm, clear kindness that stemmed first from unwavering self-respect before the pathetic desire to please everyone. I wanted to be seen, not as the «good person» everyone took for granted, but as someone whose presence carried its own weight, whose voice resonated with unquestionable authority.
At that moment, a raw reality broke through my mind, tearing away the facade of civilization: the world wasn’t moved by noble ideals but by interest, fear, and power. Whether we liked it or not, those raw forces decided who would be revered and who would be trampled. I realized that, if I had to choose, it was infinitely safer to be feared than loved. Not a cruel fear, the kind that fuels tyrannies, but a respect forged in something more than the purity of my intentions, because good intentions alone were never enough.
The world didn’t see my heart; it reacted to my tangible presence, to my ability to set unbreakable boundaries. I realized I needed to be both the lion and the fox: strong enough that no one would ever dare underestimate me, cunning enough to recognize the subtle traps of others’ manipulation. Only then could I finally claim absolute sovereignty over my own existence.
I didn’t intend to become a cold, calculating person to the core. I didn’t need to abandon my essential values entirely to free myself. But I did need to stop using them as self-imposed chains, as pathetic excuses for not defending myself when necessary.
Being genuinely good, I understood with clarity, required strategic wisdom, cunning, and unwavering courage. It demanded discerning when to retreat tactically and when to confront without hesitation. It required occupying the space that was rightfully mine, without ever apologizing for my mere existence.
I breathed deeply, filling my lungs with renewed determination, and stepped through the portal to the next floor. Though the world continued spinning out there with its relentless rhythm, something fundamental within me had changed irrevocably.
With each revealing thought, I grew closer to becoming not just a good person by others’ standards, but a complete human being: whole, authentic, and unafraid to claim my rightful place in the world. It wasn’t yet an absolute transformation, not yet. But it was a promising start: a resolute step toward a version of myself that no longer feared being whole, human, and powerfully authentic in every dimension of my existence.
As I crossed the luminous threshold, I felt the past slough off my shoulders like dead skin. I would no longer be the KathyIn everyone expected, the compliant figure molded by others’ expectations. From the ashes of that imposed identity, something new emerged, something fierce and authentic. The name my mother had given me—pure benevolence—would no longer be a chain but a conscious choice. If I chose to be kind, it would be from my strength, not my weakness.