By Anonymous
Somewhere along the way, I became “the strong one.” I don’t know exactly when it happened. Maybe it was the first time I held myself together because there wasn’t room for me to fall apart. Maybe it was when people realised I was dependable. The one who remembered birthdays, organised plans, showed up at hospital visits, gave advice, and somehow knew exactly what to say when someone else’s world was falling apart.
At first, I wore the title like a badge of honour.
Being needed made me feel important. It gave me purpose. It made me believe that strength was measured by how much I could carry without complaining. So I carried everything. My own worries. Other people’s problems. Expectations I never questioned. Responsibilities I didn’t ask for but accepted anyway.
When people asked how I was doing, I gave the same answer every time.
“I’m fine.”
It became automatic. Even when I was exhausted. Even when I cried in the shower because it was the only place no one expected anything from me.
Even when I sat in my car for an extra ten minutes before going inside the house because I couldn’t bear the thought of having one more conversation where I had to be okay. I kept saying I was fine because everyone around me seemed to need that version of me.
My parents needed the daughter who had everything under control. My friends needed the reliable listener. My colleagues needed the competent professional who could handle pressure. The people I loved needed reassurance that things would work out.
And somewhere between meeting everyone’s expectations and protecting them from my own struggles, I forgot that I was a person too. I became a function. A role. A source of support.
But not someone allowed to need support herself.
The truth is, I wasn’t fine. I was anxious. I was overwhelmed. I was carrying resentment that frightened me because it wasn’t directed at anyone in particular.
It was directed at the impossible standard I had created for myself. The belief that being loved depended on being useful. That people would only value me if I continued to hold everything together.
I don’t know when strength became synonymous with silence. I don’t know who taught us that being “low maintenance” was a virtue, or that asking for help was a burden we should avoid placing on others. What I do know is that pretending has a cost.
The breaking point wasn’t dramatic.
No public meltdown.
No life-changing event.
Just an ordinary Tuesday when someone asked me how I was doing, and for the first time in years, I said, “Honestly? Not great.”
I expected discomfort. Instead, I was met with kindness.
I learned that people who love you are not only meant to receive your strength. They should also be trusted with your honesty.
Since then, I have been practising something that feels both terrifying and freeing. I say no when I need to. I admit when I am struggling. I let texts go unanswered until I have the energy to respond. I ask for help before I reach breaking point.
I am learning that vulnerability is not weakness. It is simply the courage to stop performing wellness when what you really need is rest.
I still slip back into old habits sometimes. I still want to reassure everyone that I can handle it. But now, when someone asks how I am doing, I try to answer truthfully.
Not because I have stopped being strong.
But because I finally understand that strength was never supposed to mean suffering in silence.
For years, I lied and said I was fine because everyone needed me to be.
Now, I am learning that the people who truly love me can handle the truth.
And so can I.





