
There is a significant difference between expressing vulnerability and being vulnerable. Sharing the truth, digging deep, knowing we have weak points isn’t the same as saying we ARE vulnerable or weak. In the animal kingdom, being vulnerable puts creatures in a prey position and we avoid that at any cost. The human animal is engrained with the drive to not show weakness. The definition of weakness has changed over time and we’ve equated emotion to weakness. When we examine closer, weak people are the first ones to show their strength, to bark, to create noise and chaos. It’s all a distraction, a sideshow to prevent people from seeing anything underneath. Strong people know there are points that could use some work, and they do the work. Self-awareness is key and the more we know about ourselves the more we become a formidable force for the universe. When we know who we are and what we stand for, we can more easily identify our soft spots and improve. Pretending those points don’t exist creates a wound that doesn’t heal.
We are communal creatures, meant to help each other and complement each other with our respective strengths. We aren’t meant to carry the burden of life all alone. This is why we have community and the innate desire to find those who share our beliefs. Sharing the burden requires immense strength and trust because we rely on others and that isn’t always easy. However, sharing can mean something as simple as sharing the emotional weight, the thought process we may be stuck on. We don’t need people to do things FOR us, rather we need to take the best parts of each and make something better. Vulnerability isn’t about singling out one weak point, it’s about identifying what needs strengthening. We don’t need to twist it into something weaponized against people.
There is a misconception that sharing emotion makes us weak, that knowing what we feel and where our response is coming from somehow inhibits us from meaningful action. We often fear that exposing the truth behind actions or feelings makes us a target—and I won’t deny that can happen—but we miss major connection with ourselves, others, and the universe when we live in a state of shields up. No, I’m not advocating for the other extreme where we are paralyzed by what we feel and everything that happens is an affront to us personally—it doesn’t work, and nowadays, ANYTHING can be seen as an attack if we let it (and some people do). I lived that way for a long time and it did nothing other than keep me exactly where I was, telling other people what they should be doing so I didn’t have to develop my own resilience. I told myself a story of how people saw me and believed that I was held back by the viewpoint I told myself they had of me. I never knew what they really thought, it was what I told myself. How often do we live like that, believing we know the truth when we haven’t heard it from the source?
That isn’t to say people won’t judge us, but we need to remember: Those who do judge us aren’t our people. We need to find our people, those who support us as we are, who help us highlight our strong points, and help us develop our soft-spots and those who allow us to do the same for them. It’s also a sign of strength to know we can help people do the same, that we are meant to help people evolve by highlighting our strengths and sharing our light. And that is the other side of vulnerability: sharing our strengths is equally as vulnerable as sharing our weakness. We shine a light in the dark corners and suddenly there isn’t anything left to hide. We show our power by working on ourselves and loving ourselves. It takes great courage to express vulnerability. It takes even greater courage to acknowledge the strength in sharing those pain points and to show the common ground we all have. Never mistake sharing vulnerability for being vulnerable. Knowing who we are is strength and standing on that foundation no matter what comes our is the strongest we can be. Vulnerability isn’t weakness, it’s a superpower.








