
Language matters. I say it all the time: Our word choice affects how we think. How we think affects how we feel and how we feel affects how we behave. Therefore, changing our language can change how we think, feel, and behave. One of the most important distinctions in self talk linguistics is the difference between being and behaving.
Unconditional acceptance is understanding people are not defined by their behavior. People may behave a certain way but it doesn’t mean they are a certain way. We all too often overuse the verb being when we mean behaving. The issue is that saying (and thinking) people are a certain way leads to labeling. It suggests rigidity and establishes absolutes within our thinking,
Behavior vs. Identity
So often we collapse someone’s entire identity into one word:
She’s rude.
He’s stupid.
I’m lazy.
The problem is, once we label someone (including ourselves), we stop leaving room for growth. But when we describe behavior instead, it opens up possibility:
She’s behaving in a way that feels inconsiderate.
He’s behaving immaturely.
I’m behaving in a way that isn’t aligned with my values.
Behavior can change. Identity is bigger than that.
You Are Not Your Worst Moment
This shift matters most when we turn it inward. Many of us define ourselves by our worst mistake, our lowest moment, or even our deepest trauma.
I failed, so I’m a failure.
I yelled, so I’m a terrible person.
This trauma defines me—I’ll never move past it.
But here’s the truth: you are not the worst thing you’ve done, and you are not your trauma.
Our mistakes and traumas are part of our story — but they don’t have to be the headline. Sometimes, the hardest chapters become the very soil where resilience, compassion, and strength grow.
The Hidden Gift
Sometimes the hardest parts of life become the very experiences that shape us most. Pain doesn’t become a blessing because it was “good” or “okay.” It becomes a blessing because we discover meaning, strength, or compassion in the aftermath.
Even our worst behavior can serve as a turning point—an invitation to reflect, repair, and grow.
✨ A Gentle Invitation
This week, notice when you catch yourself saying “I am…” or “I’m being” in a negative way. Try shifting it to:
- I’m struggling with…
- I’m working on…
- I’m learning to…
See how it feels to hold your challenges as temporary struggles, not permanent identities. My hope is that these small shifts in language give you space to breathe, reflect, and choose growth over judgment.
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Until next time,
David Zerella, LCSW
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