You Are Not a Monument of the Past: How Letting Go Liberates Your Mind and Life

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How fascinating to you is a Historical Monument? Do you want to stand strong enduring the test of time just like that?  You Are Not a Monument of the Past — Let Go, Reclaim Peace, and Begin Again Are you a living monument of every wound life ever carved into you? Do you stand tall and silent, like stone—carrying pain you no longer speak about yet never truly released? Maybe life has weathered you. Maybe memories still cling like shadows. Maybe every hurt you survived is still etched inside you, as if you were meant to preserve it forever. But hear this: You were never designed to be a museum of past hurt. You are meant to be a living being — changing, breathing, evolving. Letting go is not surrender. Letting go is liberation. How We Become Prisoners of the Past People don’t hold on to the past because they love suffering. They hold on because the past feels familiar. Predictable. Safe. Pain can become identity. You may unconsciously say: “This is who I am now.” “Thi...

Comparison: The Silent Thief of Self-Worth, Identity & Peace

Comparison: The Quiet Thief of Identity, Peace, and Self-Worth



There is a strange sadness growing inside people today. A silent heaviness. A quiet exhaustion 

that doesn’t come from work or physical strain but from a constant invisible competition — a 

competition most people never agreed to join, yet are forced to participate in every day.

It begins the moment we open our eyes.

Before we even speak a word, we’ve already compared our life with someone else’s. Someone’s

vacation. Someone’s body. Someone’s marriage. Someone’s success. Someone’s happiness.

And slowly, without noticing, we stop living our life and start measuring it.

Comparison has become so normal, so socially accepted, that we don’t even see it as 

problem 

anymore — yet it is one of the biggest reasons people feel unhappy, unworthy, and 

directionless.

Not because life is bad.

But because someone else’s life appears better.

Where It Begins — The First Lessons of Not Being Enough

Nobody is born insecure.

No child looks at another child and says,

“I wish I had their face.”

or

“I wish I were like them.”

Children simply are.

They exist. They express. They explore. They live without apology.

Until someone — a parent, a teacher, a relative — tells them who they should be.

It happens in casual comments:

“Look at your brother — always responsible.”

“See your cousin — already doing so well.”

“Look how disciplined their child is.”

“Why can’t you be like them?”

These words don’t sound violent. They don’t look harmful.

But they carry a message the child feels deeply:

“Who you are is not enough.”

And that is how comparison enters — not loudly, but quietly, through people who believe they 

are helping.

From there, the child stops seeing themselves through their own eyes and starts seeing 

themselves through comparison lenses.

That’s where insecurity begins.

That’s where identity cracks.

That’s where self-doubt takes birth.

Growing Up in a World That Demands Proof

As we grow older, comparison doesn’t go away.

It evolves.

Marks become degrees.

Degrees become jobs.

Jobs become salaries.

Salaries become status.

Status becomes validation.

And somewhere in this cycle, people forget to ask the most important question:

“Who am I — when I am not performing for approval?”

Most adults don't know the answer.

They only know themselves as:

  • better than someone
  • worse than someone
  • ahead of someone
  • behind someone

There is no self — only position.

The Role of Society — A Race Without a Finish Line

Society thrives on comparison. It teaches us subtly and constantly:

  • Be relevant.
  • Be impressive.
  • Be more than the next person.

From family gatherings to school competitions, from professional meetings to social media 

scrolling — everything pushes us toward constant measurement.

And the cruel part?

There is no finish line.

Even when you win, someone else will achieve something new, and the cycle restarts.

You buy a car — someone buys a luxury one.

You get a job — someone opens a business.

You travel once — someone travels every month.

You become financially stable — someone becomes rich.

There will always be someone ahead — because life is not a race, yet we treat it like one. 

When you thought it's over as enough damage is already done and then struggled hard to gain 

confidence somehow then there appears another component which sweeps you off the 

slippery floor of the newly attained confidence.

Social Media: Where Comparison Becomes a Habit, Not an Accident

There was a time when comparison was limited to what we could see around us.

Today, it is global.

Social media has turned comparison into a daily reflex.

You don’t go online to learn.

You go online to measure — without realising.

You see carefully edited bodies, success stories with missing struggle, perfectly curated 

relationships, filtered beauty, and staged lifestyles.

You compare your real life with someone else’s highlight reel.

No wonder people feel:

  • Behind
  • Incomplete
  • Dissatisfied
  • Not enough

Even if their life is perfectly fine.

You begin to question your journey, not because it is wrong — but because someone else’s 

journey looks easier, faster, prettier, more successful.

Internal Consequences — The Cost of Constant Comparison

Comparison doesn’t just change how you think.

It changes:

  • How you feel
  • How you behave
  • How you make decisions
  • How you see yourself

It creates:

Anxiety — because you’re always trying to catch up.

Insecurity — because your worth depends on others’ achievements.

Jealousy — because someone else’s success feels like your failure.

Shame — because you feel like you should be more.

And the worst part?

You stop celebrating your own growth.

You could’ve come a long way. You could’ve overcome battles no one knows about. You 

could’ve survived storms quietly — but you won’t give yourself credit, because someone else 

appears further.

This is how comparison kills gratitude.

And without gratitude, nothing feels enough — even when you have more than you once 

prayed for.

Identity Loss — When You Don’t Know Who You Are Anymore

A girl comparing herself with a succesful symbolically reaching atop hill

Maybe this is the biggest tragedy:

People are losing their identity.

They are chasing trends, career paths, beauty standards, lifestyles, and values that don’t 

belong to them — just to feel equal, included, acceptable, worthy.

You begin to choose:

  • not what makes you fulfilled
  • but what makes you look successful.

Slowly, you stop living with yourself and start living against yourself.

You become a version shaped by pressure, not authenticity.

And that’s when life feels heavy — not because it is hard, but because it is not yours.

Example 1: The Girl Who Stopped Laughing

Aisha was the loud, bubbly, curious child in her family. She sang loudly, spoke her mind, and 

laughed with her whole heart.

But she had a cousin — the quiet, graceful, obedient one — the one every adult admired.

Every family gathering came with the same sentence:

“Why can’t you be like her? So well-behaved. So polite.”

At first, Aisha ignored it.

Then she began lowering her volume.

Then she began shrinking her personality.

Then she stopped sharing opinions.

By the time she was 17, she had become the kind of girl society approved of — silent, 

composed, controlled.

People praised her transformation.

No one noticed she didn’t laugh anymore.

Example 2: The Boy Who Lost His Passion

Rajat loved art. He could spend hours sketching, painting, creating worlds no one else could 

see. His notebooks were filled with drawings, not equations.

But his best friend got selected into a top coaching institute for engineering, and suddenly 

everyone repeated the same line:

“Look at him — focus like that if you want a future.”

Slowly art became “a distraction.”

Creativity became “a waste of time.”

Passion became “a phase.”

He forced himself into science, not because he wanted it — but because comparison convinced 

him art wasn’t enough.

Today he has a stable job, a good salary, and a tired soul.

His canvas is still empty.

Example 3: The Woman Who Thought She Was Failing at Life

At 30, Sana was unmarried, building her own small business, traveling, learning, exploring, 

understanding herself.

But every time she met relatives, the first question was never:

“How are you?”

It was:

“Your batchmates are married… when is your turn?”

“People younger than you already have children.”

“Don’t you think you’re behind?”

She never felt behind until people told her she should be.

Comparison didn’t change her timeline —

it only made her doubt it.

Some nights she lay awake wondering:

“Am I living wrongly, or just differently?”

Her life was fine — but comparison made her believe something was missing.

Example 4: The Successful Man Who Still Felt Like a Failure

Arjun had everything society applauds — a good salary, a respected career, a loving family. Yet 

something inside him always whispered:

“Not enough. Not yet.”

Why?

Because his brother earned more.

Because his colleague bought a luxury car.

Because his school friend moved abroad.

Because someone else was always ahead.

Even with achievements most people wished for, he couldn’t celebrate himself.

Success means nothing when comparison teaches you to constantly move the goalpost.

Example 5: The Mother Who Compared Her Parenting

Maya loved being a mother — until comparison turned it into a competition.

Her friend posted pictures of her child reading early.

Another shared trophies.

Another shared perfect vacations.

Suddenly motherhood stopped being connection —

and became scoreboard pressure.

She forced her child into classes he didn’t enjoy.

Not because he needed them —

but because she feared being “less than.”

One day, during homework, her child looked up with tears and said:

“Mama, am I not good like others?”

That sentence broke her heart.

That day she realized:

She wasn’t comparing children —

she was comparing herself.

Example 6: The Silent Impact

Sometimes comparison doesn’t break people dramatically.

Sometimes it does something quieter —

something more dangerous.

It makes them numb.

They stop fighting.

Stop expressing.

Stop dreaming.

Stop feeling deserving.

They live, but not fully.

They survive, but never thrive.

Not because they aren’t capable —

but because comparison convinced them they never will be enough.

(Here I would like to add my daughter's case as example 7. She was an early bird ie she was too impatient to stay inside her mother until the mandatory duration. 

So her growth was pretty slower compared to her peers who had completed the tenure and came out healthy. Every month we used to visit the Child Development Centre to monitor her progress, her motoring ability was indeed slower which began slowly building pressure on us. 

We were subjected to the inevitable realistic  comparison at a  medical level. She was lagging behind at every milestones of a growing child. There was a time when even we hesitated to visit the center. But after the brief lull the storm arrived making all of us happy. She not only caught up with the pace but also outsmarted it in more than one ways thanks to the grace of God. You may read the story here https://miscverse.blogspot.com/2025/11/the-cocoon-fathers-first-moments-with.html)

Every one of these stories has one thing in common:

comparison didn’t help anyone grow — it only made them shrink.

Comparison never builds identity —

it replaces it with fear, confusion, and self-doubt.

And real life doesn’t need people who are perfect versions of someone else —

it needs people who are fully themselves.

So How Do We Break Free?

Not by disconnecting from the world.

Not by deleting apps.

Not by isolating ourselves.

But by remembering one truth:

Your journey is only meaningful when you walk it as yourself.

Comparison ends where self-understanding begins.

Ask yourself:

  • What do I truly want?
  • Who am I without expectations?
  • What feels genuine to me?
  • What actually matters—not to society, but to my soul?

You don’t have to be better than anyone.

You don’t have to match anyone.

You don’t have to run where others are running.

You are allowed to move slow.

You are allowed to choose differently.

You are allowed to grow quietly.

Everyone starts at a different point in the scale of time. 

Understanding that 'success is not the destination but the journey itself' can relax the burden you have carried till now.

                Life is not a competition — it is a journey of becoming. 

A Softer Truth to Hold

Maybe the real problem was never that others had more.

Maybe the real pain came from believing you had less.

But nothing is missing in you.

You are not late.

You are not failing.

You are not behind.

You are not inadequate.

You are just different — and that is exactly how it’s supposed to be.

Your life does not need to look like anyone else’s to be meaningful.

Live your story — not someone else's template.

Because the only person you ever need to be better than…

is the version of you who forgot that you were enough.


"If you think you are perfect, then this planet is not for you"



Thank you for reading.

– KV Shan

Comments

  1. Well said. But this had been in our society since ages. And will be there till the end of the universe.

    ReplyDelete

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