
Image by Michal Jarmoluk from Pixabay
The Pharmacist Wordsmith – June 12, 2025 – Life-Changing Words Post #50
Let’s be real for a second—most of us are carrying way more than we let on.
We show up with a smile. We say “I’m good” or “just tired” when someone asks how we’re doing. But underneath the surface? There’s often a whole mess of stuff going on. Regrets, longings, heartbreaks we haven’t fully healed from. Hopes we’re afraid to say out loud. Fears we don’t even want to admit to ourselves.
We’ve gotten really good at pretending we’re fine. So good, in fact, that Jackson Browne wrote a whole song about it—The Pretender. It’s about chasing the picture-perfect life while quietly struggling inside. That song hits because it’s true for so many of us. We keep going through the motions, playing the role, hoping nobody notices we’re not quite as okay as we seem.
You Are Not Alone in This
Part of that is survival. Life doesn’t always give us the space to fall apart. So we pull ourselves together, push through, and keep going. But the problem is—we start believing that everyone else is doing just fine too. And then we feel even more alone.
Here’s the truth: you are not the only one wrestling with hard things.
Everyone you pass by in the grocery store. Every co-worker in your Zoom meeting. That neighbor with the tidy yard. The parent at drop-off who always seems put together. They’ve got their own stories. Their own ache. Their own unanswered questions.
We All Want the Same Core Things
We all have deep desires. To be loved. To feel safe. To know we matter. And when life doesn’t line up the way we hoped, it hurts. That’s normal. That’s human.
So what do we do with that?

Try This Instead of Pretending
We stop pretending we’re fine when we’re not.
We don’t have to tell everyone everything, but we do need real connection. A safe person. A journal. A long walk. A space where we can stop performing and just be real.
Because here’s what I’ve learned: the more honest we are—with ourselves and with each other—the lighter it all starts to feel. Not instantly. Not perfectly. But slowly, we stop carrying the weight alone.
And the more we tell the truth about our heartache, the more room we make for healing. The more we admit our desires, the more likely we are to move toward them instead of stuffing them down.
A Simple Reminder
You don’t have to be fine all the time.
You just have to be real.

