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

How to Notice When You’re Editing Yourself to Fit In

Many of us edit ourselves to fit in without realizing it. This gentle practice helps you notice when it’s happening, without judgment, pressure, or the need to change right away.

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

It’s for anyone who’s tired of editing themselves to fit in, but not interested in fixing, reinventing, or performing their way into confidence.

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 Begin

Most of us don’t wake up thinking, Today I’m going to change who I am so people will like me.

It happens quietly.

Automatically.

Almost kindly.

We soften a reaction.

We agree faster than we mean to.

We laugh when something doesn’t land.

We tuck away an interest because it feels “too much,” “too quiet,” or “not the vibe.”

And usually, we do it without realizing we’ve done anything at all.

If you’ve ever felt exhausted after being around people, even people you like, this post is for you.

Not because something is wrong with you, but because you may have been editing yourself to fit in without knowing it.

This is the first practice in Come As You Are: not changing anything yet, just learning how to notice.

What “Editing Yourself” Actually Means

When we talk about editing yourself, we’re not talking about basic social skills or kindness.

We all adjust how we communicate.

We all read rooms.

We all learn when to listen more and when to speak.

That’s not the problem.

Self-editing becomes heavy when it’s not about communication, it’s about belonging.

Editing yourself can look like:

  • Saying yes when you mean no because you don’t want to disappoint

  • Downplaying excitement so you don’t seem “too much”

  • Agreeing publicly while quietly disagreeing inside

  • Becoming a different version of yourself depending on who you’re with

  • Hiding parts of your personality to avoid judgment or rejection

This kind of self-editing isn’t a flaw.

It’s often a learned survival skill.

Why Belonging Feels Conditional

Why This Is So Hard to See in Ourselves

Most of us learned how to fit in before we had language for self-acceptance.

We learned it in classrooms.
In families.
In friend groups.
At work.
Online.

At some point, being adaptable felt safer than being fully ourselves.

So now, when someone says:

“Just be yourself.”

…it can feel confusing, or even frustrating.

Which version?
The quiet one?
The agreeable one?
The confident one?
The one people seem to like?

If you’ve ever searched things like:

  • Why do I change my personality around others?

  • How to stop people pleasing

  • Why do I feel like I don’t belong

  • How to be yourself around people

You’re not alone, and you’re not broken.

You’re just very practiced at adapting.

The Goal Isn’t to Stop Editing (Yet)

This is important, so we’ll say it clearly:

The goal is not to stop editing yourself.

Not right now.
Not all at once.
Not everywhere.

Trying to “fix” this immediately can actually add more pressure, and pressure is usually what created the editing in the first place.

The goal of this first practice is simpler:

Can you notice when it’s happening?

That’s it.

No correction required.
No bravery required.
No confrontation required.

Just noticing.
Come As You Are Shared Practice hub

How to Notice When You’re Editing Yourself (Without Judging It)

You might start to notice self-editing in small, everyday moments.

Not dramatic ones.
Not defining ones.
Just real ones.

Here are a few gentle questions you can hold, not interrogate yourself with, just keep nearby:

  • Did I say that because it was true, or because it was easier?

  • Did I soften something I care about to make it more acceptable?

  • Did I hide a preference without really thinking about it?

  • Do I feel a little relieved now that the interaction is over?

That last one matters more than people realize.

If you regularly feel relief after social interactions, not relief because they ended naturally, but relief because you can finally relax, that can be a quiet sign that you were performing more than you knew.

What Noticing Feels Like (At First)

Noticing doesn’t usually feel empowering right away.

It often feels:

  • Awkward

  • Tender

  • Slightly uncomfortable

  • Like, “Oh… I didn’t realize I do that.”

That’s normal.

You’re not uncovering a flaw, you’re uncovering a pattern that once helped you belong.

And patterns don’t disappear just because we see them.

They soften when we meet them with kindness.

Why We Learn to Change Ourselves to Belong

A Small Practice You Can Try (Optional)

This is optional.

Truly.

Sometime this week, just once, notice a moment where you feel the urge to edit.

You don’t have to stop yourself.
You don’t have to say anything different.
You don’t have to explain it to anyone.

Just name it quietly:

Oh. I’m editing right now.

That’s the whole practice.

Awareness without action is still awareness.

And awareness is where self-acceptance actually begins.

If This Feels Personal, That Makes Sense

A lot of people think self-acceptance is about confidence.

But often, it’s really about safety.

Safety to:

  • like what you like

  • be unsure

  • change your mind

  • not perform for approval

  • belong without disappearing

If you’ve been looking for ways to feel more like yourself, without burning bridges or blowing up your life, this practice is meant to meet you gently.

You don’t have to become someone new.
You don’t have to unlearn everything at once.

You just start by noticing.

Returning to Yourself

Where This Practice Lives

This post is one small part of a larger shared practice we call Come As You Are.

Not a challenge.
Not a reset.
Not a personality makeover.

Just a place to return, again and again, when you’re tired of editing.

If you want to explore the full practice, you can find it here:

Come As You Are Shared Practice page

And if you want to go deeper, the next post builds on this one by answering a question many people ask next:

Why did I learn to do this in the first place?

That’s where we’re going next, slowly, together.

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