Thursday musings on identity, behaviour, and the strange relief of being witnessed in your unguarded moments.
The heat has settled into everything here on the Sunshine Coast. It’s the kind of thick, persistent warmth that makes you move slower, think deeper, and abandon any pretense of having it all together.
We’ve had summer visitors the past week who arrived with suitcases and stayed long enough to see past your hosting face. I like extended company. It strips away the carefully curated version of yourself. By day three, you’re no longer performing “gracious host.” You’re just… you. Morning hair, questionable breakfast choices, and all.
It got me thinking about the difference between who we are and what we do. Or more precisely, the exhausting gap between them.
The performance trap
Most of us spend a lot of energy managing our behavioural repertoire. We’ve learned which version of ourselves gets approval, which gets results, which keeps the peace. We become skilled at code-switching between contexts rotating through professional you, family you, social you, and online you.
But what I’ve noticed in my work is that the more skilled we become at behavioural management, the further we drift from our actual identity. We mistake our performance for our personhood.
I had a client recently who described it perfectly. She said: “I’m so good at being what people need that I’ve forgotten who I am when nobody needs anything.”
The relief of being seen
When someone witnesses you beyond your behaviours, something special happens. When they see you grumpy before coffee, overwhelmed by simple decisions, or inexplicably moved by the way afternoon light hits the kitchen counter, it begins.
My summer guests have seen me walk the ducks in my pajamas, curse at technology, and get unreasonably excited about a perfect cucumber from the garden. They’ve watched me be human rather than helpful. And oddly, this feels more intimate than any deep conversation we might have had, because identity isn’t what you do. Identity is what remains when you stop doing.
The soul’s constant recognition
From a transpersonal perspective, your soul recognizes its own essence independently of behavioural patterns. It knows who you are under the learned responses, the people-pleasing, and the productivity performances. It recognizes itself in moments of authentic expression. In the laugh that surprises you, the tears that come from nowhere, and the sudden knowing that surfaces without thinking.
Think of it this way. Your behaviours are adaptive strategies while your identity is foundational truth. The confusion happens when we reverse this. When we think changing our behaviours will fundamentally change who we are. Or when we believe our worth depends on maintaining certain behavioural standards.
The summer slowdown wisdom
Heat does something useful. It makes performance unsustainable. You can’t maintain your usual pace, your usual facades, and your usual relentless productivity when the temperature forces a kind of surrender. And in that surrender, something essential comes through. The self that exists before you remember to be impressive. The identity that doesn’t need to earn its place.
I’ve been watching this with my visitors. By the end of their stay, they’ve stopped trying to be the perfect houseguests. They’ve settled into their own rhythm, their own needs, their own unguarded presence, and they’ve remembered who they are when they’re not performing who they think they should be.
The invitation
So here’s what the heat is teaching me, and what I’m wondering about you: What would happen if you stopped editing yourself before you spoke? What if you let someone see you first thing in the morning, or when you’re completely overwhelmed, or when you’re so tired you can’t remember to be charming?
What if the version of you that you’re trying so hard to improve is actually less interesting than the one you’re trying to hide?
I’ve said it before: the ducks don’t perform duck-ness. They simply are. And somehow, that’s more than enough. It’s everything. And maybe that’s the summer invitation: to stop performing yourself and start being yourself. To let the heat melt away everything that isn’t actually you. The world needs who you are, not who you think you should be.
I’ll sign off with deep appreciation for the relief of being witnessed,
Jonni
PS: If you’ve been feeling the exhaustion of maintaining behavioural patterns that no longer fit who you’re becoming, this work goes deeper than surface changes. Our souls are ready to shed old identities entirely. If that resonates, reach out. The heat makes everything clearer, including what needs to change.
