The Art of Making Yourself Smaller Than You Are
You learn how to do it so well, it almost looks like humility.
Someone praises you and you laugh.
“It’s not a big deal.”
“Anyone could’ve done it.”
“You should see what they did.”
Deflect. Redirect. Minimize.
You do it quickly, almost automatically.
Like you’re swatting away something dangerous.
Because letting it land would mean standing still inside it.
And that feels exposed.
So you make yourself smaller.
Smaller than your effort.
Smaller than your intelligence.
Smaller than your impact.
You call it staying grounded.
You call it being self-aware.
You call it not wanting to seem arrogant.
But if you’re honest?
You’re protecting yourself.
If you reject yourself first, no one else gets to.
If you downplay your ability, no one can expect more from you.
If you pretend you’re not that capable, you’re not responsible for becoming anything bigger.
It’s strategic.
It’s subtle.
And you get very good at convincing people.
That’s the part that stings.
You’re persuasive.
You say it with a smile.
You say it casually.
You say it so often that eventually people stop arguing.
And then one day you realize something uncomfortable:
They believe you.
They believe you’re not that talented.
Not that impressive.
Not that strong.
Exactly the way you taught them to.
Your boss stops expecting more because you said you’re “still figuring it out.”
Your friend stops asking for your opinion because you always say “I don’t really know.”
Your partner stops celebrating you because you taught them your wins don’t count.
What started as protection became the truth they know about you.
The worst part?
When someone finally says “You know you’re actually brilliant at this, right?” — you shut it down.
You laugh it off.
You change the subject.
You point out your flaws before they can.
Even though there’s a quiet part of you that wishes they’d fight you on it.
That they’d say, “No. Stop. Let me finish.”
That they’d stay in the praise a little longer.
That they’d insist on your size.
But they don’t.
Because you already closed the door.
So you walk away feeling unseen…
Without admitting you were the one who dimmed the lights.
It’s easier to be underestimated.
No pressure.
No expectations.
No responsibility to live up to the full version of yourself.
Small is manageable.
Small is safe.
But small is also a story you keep repeating.
And repetition has a way of turning performance into belief.
At some point, you have to notice it.
The way you rush to shrink.
The way you edit yourself mid-sentence.
The way you offer disclaimers before anyone asks for them.
At some point, you have to ask whether you’re being humble…
Or whether you’re just afraid of being fully seen.
Because here’s what it would actually take to stop:
You’d have to let a compliment land.
All the way.
Without deflecting.
Without laughing.
Without offering a disclaimer.
You’d have to just… stand there.
In your actual size.
And let someone see it.
That’s the part that feels impossible.
Not because you can’t do it.
But because standing still inside praise feels like standing still inside danger.
Like if you let yourself be seen fully, something bad will happen.
But here’s what you’re not considering:
Something bad is already happening.
You’re disappearing.
And the longer you keep teaching people how to misunderstand you,
the harder it becomes to remember your actual size.
No one is coming to correct the narrative you keep reinforcing.
That part is yours.
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