
The Cost of Forgetting Yourself
Many of us were conditioned to believe that being a “good person” means always considering others first.
For empathic, caring individuals, this conditioning often turns into a lifelong habit of placing the self last - or not at all.
Over time, this comes at a cost.
Your dreams quietly fade.
Your motivation weakens.
Your desires feel distant.
And the energy required to bring your deepest longings to life slowly drains away.
We tell ourselves we should be able to handle it all - to be superhuman caregivers, supporters, and problem-solvers. Yet science and spirituality agree on one truth: energy cannot flow where there is chronic neglect.
“When we forget or neglect ourselves and our honest compassion, a tiredness settles over us.
It is not a bone tiredness, it is a soul tiredness.”
This is why so many people feel exhausted even after weekends, holidays, or rest.
It’s not physical fatigue alone - it’s the exhaustion of a soul that has been ignored for too long.
Neuroscience shows us that living in constant self-sacrifice keeps the nervous system activated, never fully restored. Consciousness teaches us that we cannot play our purposeful role in life if we never open the door to ourselves.
Prioritising your needs is not selfish.
It is responsible.
It is necessary.
It is life-giving.
When you honour yourself, you don’t take away from others - you finally have something real to give.










