Sunday Reflection: The Self That Won’t Sit Still
A friend asks what you do, and for a moment you feel a tiny shudder — as if you’re being asked to pull a finished painting out of a studio that’s still chaotic with half-mixed colours and abandoned sketches. You reach for the shorthand. “I’m a marketer,” or “I write,” or some neat three-word identity that’s true enough but completely wrong, because it freezes a process into a product. It offers the clean narrative that social media bios and performance reviews demand, while the living reality — the indecision, the excitement about something you can’t yet name, the guilt of not having become anything fixed — gets quietly hidden. You sense that the definition, however useful, is a tiny act of self-betrayal.
This discomfort isn’t just an introvert’s social anxiety. It’s a philosophical tremor. The week we’ve just walked through kept circling a single, stubborn tension: the self we try to stabilise with labels and the self that is always, quietly, breaking its own frames. We want to know who we are, but we also sense that the moment we know, we stop becoming. And so the real question is not “How do I define myself?” but something more unsettling: What if the need for a fixed definition is precisely what keeps you stuck, and what if the most alive version of you is the one that refuses to be finalised?
The Living Question
Monday’s piece plunged us into Kierkegaard’s strange diagnosis: that the frantic search for a definition isn’t a path to clarity — it’s a form of evasion. Living forward means tolerating the vertigo of the not-yet, the anxiety of being a question without an answer. That takes courage most of us weren’t taught. The whole week then deepened this into a single, live tension: How do you actually inhabit an unfinished life in a world that asks for résumés, elevator pitches, and tidy personal brands? Do you simply discard all definitions? That feels impossible, even irresponsible. But clinging to them is what makes so many of us feel, by Tuesday afternoon, that we’ve already been given a life sentence in a version of ourselves we no longer recognise.
Doorways You Can Step Into
On Wednesday, we took up Nietzsche’s invitation to collapse our sense of time — to live as if you are already becoming who you are, right now, in the middle of your ordinary morning. The deep dive didn’t offer a five-step plan. Instead, it confronted a question most of us are too polite to ask: If you truly believed you were becoming — not striving toward some distant finish line, but unfolding in real time — what would you stop tolerating? What would you dare? The argument forced a reckoning with the stories we tell about “someday,” and why so many of them are a kind of elegant procrastination dressed up as hope. I won’t say what it concluded. [That one’s for members.]
Then on Friday, the conversation shifted to Bakhtin, and to a claim that sounds almost too humble to be revolutionary: that the most profitable skill of the twenty-first century isn’t persuasion, branding, or even “authenticity” — it’s dialogical listening. The episode started from the unsettling premise that the self is never a solo project; it is perpetually unfinished, and only comes into sharper focus through the voice of another. The question it pressed on us was this: If your identity is not something you carve in private, but something that gets shaped in every real conversation, what kind of listener must you become to stop repeating who you already are? The answer was stranger than you’d expect. [That one’s for members, too.]
Notice what both of these pieces do: they refuse the comfort of a new, shiny label. They don’t hand you an improved definition to replace the old one. Instead, they ask you to live differently with the absence of one. That’s a harder ask — and far more interesting.
The Cost of Being Pinned Down
Here’s an insight I keep returning to, and it’s one that this week’s thread has sharpened for me: The search for a definition is often a covert search for permission to stop becoming. A definition feels like arrival; becoming feels like endless exposure. When you call yourself a “writer,” you can finally take a breath — the identity has been secured. But the moment you do, the wide, wild field of things you might yet become shrinks to a manageable fenced plot. You become legible to others, but slightly less legible to yourself. Kierkegaard saw this; Nietzsche, in his own way, built a whole philosophy against it; Bakhtin showed that it happens relationally, in every encounter. And yet we keep returning to the safety of the definitive statement: This is who I am.
The trouble is, a life lived entirely within a definition is a life that has stopped metabolising experience. It becomes a monument, not a movement. The weekend feeling many of us have — that low-grade sense of being trapped in our own storyline — is the scar of this closure.
But here’s the dilemma we’re left with at Sunday’s end: If you release your grip on a fixed self, what do you hold onto? How do you show up as someone reliable, coherent, capable of making promises, without that inner anchor? Does “becoming” just become a licence for flakiness? The week’s paid pieces each take a different angle on this exact conundrum — not by softening the tension, but by revealing that the answer isn’t to banish coherence; it’s to reimagine it as something that happens in motion, not in stone. And that, I suspect, changes everything.



