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The Grief of Outgrowing Old Versions of Yourself
A reflection of breaking up with your past self
I found my old journal last week.
Tucked between some worn books and a forgotten scarf, it sat quietly like a time capsule I didn’t ask to open. I flipped through the pages. Dramatic affirmations. Big plans. The kind of deep, late-night introspection only a 2019 version of me could commit to with that level of sincerity.
And then I found a list.
A goals list titled: “Who I Want to Be by 30.”
Let’s just say: if 2019-me met 2025-me in a parking lot, she might call me a sellout. Or a disappointment. Or maybe just quietly wonder what happened to all that “potential.”
I closed the journal and sat with that weird ache in my chest; the one you feel when you realise you’re not who you thought you’d be… and maybe that’s okay.
Maybe that’s part of the process.
Here’s the truth: Sometimes, growing means grieving.
Not everyone talks about it, but outgrowing old versions of yourself can feel like a tiny funeral with no eulogy, no closure, no one cheering you on. Just you, sitting in the quiet, wondering why becoming “better” still hurts.