Spotlighting Remarkable Women and Girls

What I’m Leaving Behind This Year Isn’t a Person, It’s a Pattern

By Chloe Beaufoy

We often imagine growth as something loud. A dramatic ending. A final conversation that gives us permission to move on. A clear villain, a clean break, a story we can tell that explains everything neatly. Society loves visible endings because they are easier to understand and easier to validate.

But the truth is, most change doesn’t happen that way.

As this year begins, I’m realizing that what I’m leaving behind isn’t a person, a place, or even a specific moment. It’s a pattern. And that kind of departure is quieter, harder to explain, and far less celebrated.

Patterns are deceptive because they feel familiar. They don’t always arrive as chaos; sometimes they arrive as comfort. They look like staying too long because leaving feels like failure. Like over-explaining boundaries so they sound reasonable instead of simply true. Like accepting emotional inconsistency in exchange for proximity, access, or the promise of potential.

For many women, these patterns are not accidental. They are learned.

We are raised to value endurance. To believe that patience is maturity and self-sacrifice is love. We are taught subtly and directly that being “understanding” is a virtue, even when it costs us our peace. So we remain in cycles that drain us, not because we don’t recognize the harm, but because we’ve been conditioned to normalize it.

If something isn’t openly abusive, we tell ourselves it must be workable. If it doesn’t leave bruises, we assume it deserves our tolerance. We convince ourselves that discomfort is just part of commitment, whether in relationships, careers, or family dynamics. And when we struggle, the question we’re asked is rarely “Why is this system broken?” but “Why can’t you endure it better?”

Leaving a pattern requires a different kind of honesty. There is no confrontation to point to, no single moment that justifies the decision. It looks like pausing before responding instead of reacting out of habit. It looks like declining invitations that once felt obligatory. It looks like choosing not to re-enter spaces that require you to shrink in order to belong.

This kind of change is often misunderstood. From the outside, it can look like inconsistency, emotional distance, or even selfishness. But what it really is, is awareness. It is the moment you recognize that you are repeating an old version of yourself in new environments—and decide to stop.

There is grief in that realization. Not just for what was, but for how long you stayed once you knew better. For the energy spent negotiating your worth in rooms that never intended to value it. For the younger version of you who believed love, loyalty, or success had to hurt in order to count.

Yet there is also relief.

Relief in understanding that growth does not always require explanation. That closure is not something other people grant you, it’s something you create when you decide to move differently. That peace does not need to be dramatic to be real.

This year, I am questioning the stories I’ve told myself about staying. Why does consistency feel safer than joy? Why do we confuse familiarity with stability? Why are women so often praised for how much they can carry, but rarely supported in putting things down?

Choosing to leave a pattern is an act of self-respect, even when no one applauds it. It is choosing alignment over attachment. It is refusing to keep auditioning for spaces that benefit from your silence. It is understanding that endurance is not the same thing as strength, and that suffering is not a prerequisite for growth.

As we enter a new year, many of us are pressured to announce bold resolutions and dramatic reinventions. But perhaps the real work is quieter. Perhaps it looks like paying attention to where we abandon ourselves out of habit. Perhaps it means recognizing that the hardest cycles to break are the ones we no longer question.

Not every ending will come with a goodbye. Not every shift will be visible. But quiet change still counts. Choosing yourself in small, consistent ways is still radical. Growth does not always arrive with noise, it often arrives with clarity.

And sometimes, the most powerful thing you can say in a new year isn’t “I’m starting over.”

It’s “I’m no longer repeating what no longer serves me.”

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Raising Women Magazine Issue 046 – June 2026

There is something deeply revealing about the way a society treats its children. Not just in policy or parenting, but in the stories it tells them, the spaces it creates for them, and the kind of world it quietly prepares them to inherit. In this Children’s Day edition, Raising Women Magazine turns its attention to childhood itself, not as a sentimental phase of life, but as the foundation upon which identity, confidence, memory, and humanity are built.

Our cover star, Ms. Rachel, represents a refreshing reminder that gentleness still matters in an age of noise. Through patience, intentionality, and emotional safety, she has transformed songs and screen time into a global classroom for millions of children and families.

Across this issue, we explore the emotional architecture of childhood, from the girls who learn too early to shrink themselves, to the children quietly carrying adult burdens before they fully understand their own. We also interrogate modern parenting, digital culture, family, safety, and the futures young people are already shaping.

Because childhood is never just preparation for life.

In many ways, it is life itself.

Raising Women Magazine Issue 045 – June 2026

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Somewhere between the notifications, deadlines, responsibilities, ambitions, and endless demands of modern life, many of us have become exceptionally good at keeping going. We show up. We deliver. We carry. We cope. Yet beneath the appearance of productivity, an important question remains: are we truly well?
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by The Lulu I miss my childhood. I miss the version of me that laughed from the stomach, that ran