“Why You Don’t Feel Like Yourself Anymore”

This thought has probably crossed your mind before:

I don’t feel like myself anymore.

Not overnight. Subtly, over a long time. 

Like you’ve drifted away from yourself without fully noticing when it happened.

You still show up.
You still do what needs to be done.
You still carry the responsibilities, meet the expectations, and keep everything moving.

From the outside, your life probably looks completely normal.

But internally, something feels different.

Less connected.
Less energised.
Less alive.

And it’s hard to explain because it’s not like your life is bad.

It just doesn’t fully feel like you anymore.

When You Start Feeling Disconnected From Yourself

This feeling rarely arrives all at once.

It builds slowly over time.

Life gets busy.
Responsibilities increase.
People need more from you.

And gradually, your energy starts going almost entirely toward:

  • keeping things running
  • supporting everyone else
  • doing what has to be done

You become reliable.
Capable.
Needed.

And while none of those things are bad…

somewhere along the way, you stop feeling fully connected to your own life.

Not because you stopped caring.

But because so much of your energy has been going outward for so long.

 

What This Actually Looks Like

Sometimes it looks like:

  • getting through the day without feeling engaged in it
  • feeling flat even when life looks “fine”
  • realising you’re not even sure what genuinely excites you anymore 
  • feeling more like the person who manages life than the person actually living it
  • sensing there’s more in you… but not feeling connected to it anymore

And often, the strangest part is this:

Nothing is obviously wrong.

Which makes the feeling even harder to validate.

 

Why This Is So Easy to Ignore

Because technically, your life might be working.

You’re functioning.
You’re coping.
You’re handling things.

And when you’re capable, people often stop asking how you are doing.

Because you look fine.

You handle things.
You keep going.

Which makes it very easy to minimise your own disconnection.

To ignore the quiet feeling that something about your life no longer feels fully connected to you.

To tell yourself:

  • “This is just adulthood.”
  • “Everyone feels like this.”
  • “I should just be grateful.”

But deep down, there’s often another feeling underneath all of that:

There has to be more than this.

Not more stuff.

Not necessarily a completely different life.

Just… more aliveness in the life you already have.

Not because your life is terrible.

But because somewhere underneath the responsibility and routine, you can still feel the part of you that wants more from life than just maintaining it.

 

It’s Not That You’ve Lost Yourself

This is important.

You haven’t become a completely different person.

And you haven’t “failed” at life.

More often, what’s happened is this:

The parts of you that make you feel most alive haven’t had much room to exist lately.

The parts of you that:

  • engage
  • create
  • choose
  • grow
  • feel fully alive in your own life 

have slowly been replaced by:

  • responsibility
  • maintenance
  • routine
  • obligation

And over time, that changes how your life feels.

Not because something is wrong with you.

But because you’re no longer fully participating in your own life.

 

This Is What It Means to Be on the Sidelines of Your Own Life

It’s what I call being on the sidelines of your own life.

Not fully out of it.

But not fully in it either.

You’re still there.
Still involved.
Still showing up for what matters.

But you’re not:

  • fully engaged
  • fully energised
  • or fully connected to yourself anymore 

And the longer you stay there, the more life starts to feel like something you manage… instead of something you actually feel part of.

 

Why This Feeling Doesn’t Just Disappear

This kind of disconnection doesn’t usually disappear on its own.

Because it’s not just about being busy.

It’s about spending so long being who everyone else needs you to be…
that you slowly lose connection to the parts of yourself that feel most alive.

And over time, that changes how your whole life feels.

Quietly.

Until one day, you realise you don’t fully feel like yourself anymore.

 

This Isn’t About Becoming Someone Else

And this is where people often get it wrong.

This isn’t about reinventing yourself.

Or becoming a completely different person.

It’s about stepping back into the parts of yourself that have been sitting on the sidelines for too long.

The capable parts.
The engaged parts.
The alive parts.

Because deep down, most women already know:

There’s more in them than the version of life they’ve been living lately. 

 

The Shift That Starts to Happen

At some point, this becomes harder to ignore.

You start to notice:

  • you’re capable of more
  • you want something more
  • and staying where you are starts to feel heavier than it used to

Not because anything is wrong.

But because something in you wants back in.

 

You Probably Already Recognise the Feeling 

If some of this landed, you don’t need to overhaul your life overnight.

You don’t need to panic.

And you don’t need to have all the answers yet.

But it is worth recognising what’s happening.

Because the moment you start seeing this clearly…
is often the moment things begin to shift.

 

You Might Also Want to Read

Why You Feel Flat Even Though Your Life Looks Full 

Why Your Life Doesn’t Reflect What You’re Capable Of 

 

Your Next Step

If this feels familiar, the next step isn’t to change everything.

It’s simply to see clearly where you are right now.

This short reflection will help you do that—
without overthinking it, and without pressure.

👉  The Sidelines Reflection

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