Shared Practices, Come As You Are Eric Brown Shared Practices, Come As You Are Eric Brown

Small Ways to Come Back to Yourself Without Making It a Big Deal

Coming back to yourself doesn’t have to be dramatic. This gentle guide explores small, low-pressure ways to stop people pleasing, practice self-acceptance, and belong without disappearing.

This post is part of Come As You Are, a shared practice of self-acceptance and belonging.

Each post explores one small piece of the practice.

You don’t have to read them in order.

You don’t have to do them all.

You can take what feels useful and leave the rest.

The practice will still be here when you’re ready to come back.


A Small Place to Try Something New

If you’ve been reading along, you may have noticed two things already:

  • You sometimes edit yourself to fit in.

  • There were good reasons you learned to do that.

Once those pieces are in place, another question often shows up, quietly, cautiously:

What would it look like to come back to myself… just a little?

Not in a dramatic way.
Not in every relationship.
Not all at once.

This post is about small returns, the kind that don’t require announcements, confidence, or courage you don’t have yet.

What “Coming Back to Yourself” Actually Means

Coming back to yourself doesn’t mean:

  • suddenly saying everything you think

  • changing your personality

  • setting firm boundaries everywhere

  • becoming fearless or unapologetic

For most people, that version feels overwhelming, and unrealistic.

Coming back to yourself usually looks much quieter.

It’s less about becoming someone new and more about stopping one small act of self-erasure at a time.

Many people searching for things like:

  • how to be yourself without oversharing

  • how to stop people pleasing without guilt

  • how to be authentic without losing relationships

aren’t looking for transformation.

They’re looking for relief.

Why Small Returns Matter More Than Big Changes

When we try to “fix” people pleasing or stop changing ourselves all at once, we often trigger the same pressure that taught us to adapt in the first place.

Pressure sounds like:

  • I should be more confident by now.

  • I know better, why am I still doing this?

  • If I don’t speak up, I’m failing.

Small returns sound different.

They sound like:

  • I can choose one tiny moment.

  • I don’t have to explain myself.

  • This doesn’t have to be visible to anyone else.

Change that sticks usually starts where the nervous system feels safe enough to try.

Small Ways People Come Back to Themselves

There is no checklist here.

No “right” version.

But these are some quiet ways people begin practicing, not as rules, just as possibilities.

You might recognize one that fits your life right now.

  • Not adding the extra explanation after you say no

  • Letting a preference exist without defending it

  • Saying “I’m not sure” instead of performing certainty

  • Pausing before agreeing automatically

  • Choosing comfort over likability in a small moment

  • Letting a silence be awkward without filling it

None of these require confrontation.

None of them require confidence.

They’re simply moments where you stop moving away from yourself.

Returning to Yourself

If You Still Edit Yourself Sometimes (That’s Expected)

It’s important to say this clearly:

Coming back to yourself doesn’t mean you stop editing forever.

You will still:

  • adapt in certain spaces

  • choose ease over honesty sometimes

  • protect yourself when it feels necessary

That doesn’t undo the practice.

Self-acceptance isn’t about purity.

It’s about choice.

The practice works when you can notice:
I’m editing right now, and I understand why.

And then decide, gently, whether you want to return, now, later, or not at all.

When It Feels Safer to Wait

Some spaces don’t feel safe enough yet.

Some relationships are complicated.

Some environments still require adaptation.

Coming back to yourself is not an obligation.

Sometimes the most self-accepting choice is:

  • waiting

  • staying quiet

  • choosing ease

  • coming back later

You’re not failing the practice when you protect yourself.

You’re practicing discernment.

A Small Practice You Can Try (Optional)

This is optional, truly.

Once this week, notice a moment where you usually move away from yourself.

You don’t have to stop it.

You don’t have to change anything.

Just ask quietly:
What would one small return look like here?

You can answer with action.
You can answer with waiting.
You can answer with nothing at all.

Even asking the question counts.

How This Fits Into the Larger Practice

This post sits between understanding and integration.

  • Blog 1 helped you notice when you edit yourself.

  • Blog 2 helped you understand why that made sense.

  • This post offers a way to return gently, without pressure.

The final piece of the practice is about holding all of this in real life, relationships, work, family, and change, without expecting it to be easy.

That’s where we’ll go next.

👉 Internal link opportunity:
[How to Belong Without Disappearing (Even When It’s Hard) – Blog 4]

Where This Practice Lives

This post is part of Come As You Are, a shared practice of belonging without disappearing.

Not a program.
Not a personality shift.
Not a demand to be brave.

Just a place to come back, one small moment at a time.

You can explore the full practice here:

Come As You Are Shared Practice page

And if today is a day for reading without doing anything else, that’s enough.

The practice will still be here when you’re ready.

Read More