Recognition
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
About this listen
I’ve learned
that I shouldn’t need it.
That freedom means
not depending on other people’s eyes.
That strength is
standing alone in what I do.
My mind has repeated this
so many times
it sounds like truth.
If I don’t need recognition,
no one can trap me.
No one can control me.
No one can disappoint me.
And yes —
I understand the logic.
But I don’t live in my head.
I live among people.
And the truth is,
I feel too much.
Think too much
about what others see,
hear,
understand.
I’m affected
by looks.
By silence.
By applause
that never comes.
And at the same time —
something else.
A tiredness
from constantly
having to rise above it.
As if wanting recognition
were a flaw
to be corrected.
Then I had another thought.
What if it’s allowed?
What if the desire
isn’t weakness,
but relation?
Because something happens
between people.
When I make something
that matters to someone else.
When someone says:
That touched me.
That made me glad.
That meant something.
And I respond,
without shame:
Thank you.
That matters to me.
Something moves.
Not manipulation.
Not dependency.
But momentum.
I do something
that brings joy to others.
They tell me.
I feel motivated to continue.
A healthy spiral.
Not a dangerous one.
Maybe freedom
isn’t indifference.
Maybe freedom
is being able to receive recognition
without losing yourself to it.
Let it arrive.
Let it pass.
Right now,
it feels like relief
to give myself permission.
Not to chase recognition —
but to stop running from it.