Being Someone’s Shadow
It always felt natural for me to step aside and let others take the spotlight. I felt safer behind someone — letting them make the decisions and speak for me.
I liked observing. Watching. Reflecting. I studied how people acted, responded, gestured, and spoke. I believed that one day, if I learned well enough, I could mimic those actions and finally build strong, lasting relationships.
But just because you study something, doesn’t mean you can replicate it.
And when I tried to — it didn’t feel right. It felt like bad acting in front of an audience I was desperate to impress. All I wanted was to run off stage, close the curtain, and find my quiet, safe place.
When You Become a Shadow
The danger of living in someone else’s shadow is that you slowly begin to disappear.
Your identity starts to fade.
The more you silence your voice, the harder it becomes to hear it at all. Eventually, you’re invisible — to others, and worst of all, to yourself.
Toxic Environments
You can move through life quietly, blending in or hiding behind someone else — and sometimes, that works when your environment is calm. But the moment you step into a toxic space, that habit becomes dangerous.
How can you tell you’re in a toxic environment?
Here are some of the red flags:
- Jealousy — They get angry or suspicious about your other relationships.
- Control — They micromanage where you go, who you’re with, and when you’ll be back.
- Possession – They make you feel like you should belong only to them, slowly pulling you away from others.
- Criticism — They constantly find fault and second-guess your decisions.
- Isolation — They push friends and family away and get upset when you make plans.
- Manipulation — They influence or control you in order to meet their own personal gains.
- Bullying — They label you, mock you, or treat you like an outcast.
I started to speak less. I second-guessed everything. I became afraid of saying the wrong thing.
I lost confidence.
I lost friendships.
I lost my voice.
I was afraid to make plans. Afraid to stay out too long. Afraid to be noticed.
Eventually, the anxious behavior became noticeable — and people stopped inviting me altogether.
When the anxiety didn’t go away, the labels started: weird, abnormal, never able to relax.
And over time, I believed them.
Maybe I am weird.
Maybe I am abnormal.
Maybe I’ll never be able to relax.
When I did speak, I was told I was wrong.
It started to feel like nothing I said ever came out right.
Eventually, I stopped trying to speak — unless absolutely necessary.
That’s how it happens.
That’s how you begin to lose yourself.
And you start to think:
Maybe I can’t do this on my own.
The Collapse
Eventually, the cracks became too deep to hide.
My confidence collapsed.
My mind grew hazy.
I stuttered.
I panicked.
I avoided everyone.
I hadn’t had a close friend in over 10 years.
I longed for connection — someone who could see me. But the desperation made everything harder. Friendships became pressure. Every attempt felt like too much.
And failure after failure slowly unraveled me.
I couldn’t function.
I went mute unless absolutely necessary.
My body and mind felt like an empty shell — like a DVD player with no disc. Unplayable. Gone.
Even basic requests exhausted me.
I pushed everyone away — including my own family at times.
Eventually, I reached out for help. I was prescribed anxiety and depression medication and encouraged to start therapy right away.
The Path to Recovery
Recovery hasn’t been quick or easy.
It’s been a long road of self-discovery, mental rewiring, and learning how to draw healthy boundaries. I’ve been learning to recognize unethical behavior — and more importantly, to stand up to it.
I still take anxiety and depression medication, and was recently diagnosed with ADHD.
That diagnosis helped everything make more sense. The medication I take now improves focus, calms the buzzing in my brain, and helps me complete tasks.
My memory is sharper. My mind is steadier.
And I’ve realized something crucial:
The parts of me that are fast-moving, detail-loving, and high-energy aren’t broken.
They’re just me.
Even with medication, I still bounce around the house and multitask like it’s my superpower — and that’s okay. I’m learning to embrace it, not erase it.
Still Healing
I’m still on this journey — day by day, moment by moment.
Books have been a key part of my recovery. If you’re on your own path of healing, here are some that have helped me:
📚 BOUNDARIES: Where You End, And I Begin — Anne Katherine, M.A.
📚 The Men’s Guide To Women — John & Julie Gottman, PhD
📚 From Panic to Power — Lucinda Bassett
📚 The Grief Recovery Handbook — John W. James & Russell Friedman (just getting started)
Thank you for reading.
If you’re somewhere in this story too — please know you’re not alone.
🩵
For the healing hearts,
Jenna
💬 If you’re navigating something similar, I’d love to hear from you. Let’s create space for each other — feel free to leave a comment or message me on Instagram/Twitter/Threads
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