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You’re the One Making This Heavy | prickly oxheart
You’re the One Making This Heavy | prickly oxheart
Resistance feels like fear but hides grief. This essay unpacks avoidance, procrastination, and self-protection to reveal what you're really postponing — your next becoming.
Your body knows before your mind catches up. There's a particular quality of avoidance that feels different from regular procrastination — it's more like watching yourself walk around a hole in the ground, pretending it's not there while your entire route gets shaped by where you refuse to step.
resistance isn't a wall to be knocked down or a problem to be solved. It's information. It's your psyche pointing directly at the place where you've decided you end and something else begins. It's the exact spot where you're most invested in staying who you think you are.
The invitation isn’t to become fearless — that’s another performance — it’s to get curious about what you’re protecting by staying afraid. What identity are you maintaining by not touching this thing? What story about yourself gets to stay intact as long as you keep circling?
Most of what we resist doing holds grief just beneath the surface. We're mourning the version of ourselves that gets to remain small and safe and uncomplicated. We're grieving the luxury of not knowing what we're capable of. That grief doesn’t mean stop — it just means something old in you is being asked to end
the thing you're avoiding isn't usually as difficult as the elaborate system you've built around it. The email doesn't get longer the more you wait to write it. The conversation you've been dreading takes fifteen minutes. The project that feels impossible has a first step that takes an hour.
Your resistance has its own ecology. It feeds on distance and abstraction. It grows stronger when you think about it. In reality, it’s more like a shadow — one that only exists when you’re not looking directly at it.
turn around the way you might approach a spooked animal — curious, present, not trying to fix or conquer anything.
This is about discovering that you can be afraid and still show up. You can be uncertain and still take a step. You can feel like you're about to fall apart and still send the email, have the conversation, start the thing.
The change isn't in the doing — it's in being willing to be transformed by it. It's in letting yourself discover that you're bigger than you thought, stranger than you imagined, more resilient than your protective mechanisms would have you believe
It’s the trembling before your next becoming.
What you're avoiding isn't just a task or a conversation or a project. It’s the version of you that stops waiting to be more ready than this. It's the end of the story where you're too afraid to find out what happens next
·prickly.oxhe.art·
You’re the One Making This Heavy | prickly oxheart
James Rosen-Birch ⚖️🕊️ on X: "Great discussion. A few thoughts: - the author dances around explicitly stating or confronting the underlying question of whether a cohesive Jewish identity (or “imagined community” à la Anderson) exists without religion or the state of Israel, despite a clear belief it does not" / X
James Rosen-Birch ⚖️🕊️ on X: "Great discussion. A few thoughts: - the author dances around explicitly stating or confronting the underlying question of whether a cohesive Jewish identity (or “imagined community” à la Anderson) exists without religion or the state of Israel, despite a clear belief it does not" / X
Argues that Israel is actively distancing itself from Diaspora Jews, forcing the emergence of a non-Zionist Jewish identity, as the Israeli state abandons its self-proclaimed role as the center of Jewish identity while many Diaspora Jews haven't yet recognized this fundamental shift.
·x.com·
James Rosen-Birch ⚖️🕊️ on X: "Great discussion. A few thoughts: - the author dances around explicitly stating or confronting the underlying question of whether a cohesive Jewish identity (or “imagined community” à la Anderson) exists without religion or the state of Israel, despite a clear belief it does not" / X
Dr. Laura Robinson on X: "I think a huge part of the draw of tradwife content is that it markets the idea that we actually don't need social services, schools, or a government because everyone has an endless possibility of bootstrapping inside them. Tradwife content usually deliberately obscures or" / X
Dr. Laura Robinson on X: "I think a huge part of the draw of tradwife content is that it markets the idea that we actually don't need social services, schools, or a government because everyone has an endless possibility of bootstrapping inside them. Tradwife content usually deliberately obscures or" / X
·x.com·
Dr. Laura Robinson on X: "I think a huge part of the draw of tradwife content is that it markets the idea that we actually don't need social services, schools, or a government because everyone has an endless possibility of bootstrapping inside them. Tradwife content usually deliberately obscures or" / X
(2) Michael's Italian Restaurant 🤌 on X: "this line may be the most definitive thing i’ve ever experienced from a television show. It rings in my ear in daily life and reveals itself to be true again and again. https://t.co/zuNeTIEWE6" / X
(2) Michael's Italian Restaurant 🤌 on X: "this line may be the most definitive thing i’ve ever experienced from a television show. It rings in my ear in daily life and reveals itself to be true again and again. https://t.co/zuNeTIEWE6" / X
— Michael's Italian Restaurant 🤌 (@aurelioacts)
·x.com·
(2) Michael's Italian Restaurant 🤌 on X: "this line may be the most definitive thing i’ve ever experienced from a television show. It rings in my ear in daily life and reveals itself to be true again and again. https://t.co/zuNeTIEWE6" / X
Ok… thoughts on Challengers
Ok… thoughts on Challengers
Overall fun, but could have been better. I was left wanting some complexity. I couldn’t help but feel it was surface level the whole time. Pacing also got weird a couple times for me It was shot wonderfully. The glass tennis court undershot is one… — Reggie James (@HipCityReg)
·x.com·
Ok… thoughts on Challengers
Dr. Nicole LePera on Twitter
Dr. Nicole LePera on Twitter
At the foundation of dysfunctional family dynamics is denial. Everyone must remain in denial to keep the relationships going. Waking up would mean we have to mourn the story of our family in favor of the truth.— Dr. Nicole LePera (@Theholisticpsyc) November 25, 2022
·twitter.com·
Dr. Nicole LePera on Twitter
Sherry on X
Sherry on X
I watched Barbie thrice to come up with this idea: What stops most people from living out their true selves is not ignorance of their own mortality but an inability to distinguish between wants and oughts. Most are too busy going through the motions (ie. planned choreography):
·twitter.com·
Sherry on X
Angela Li on Twitter
Angela Li on Twitter
The way we can love people so much but not know how to show it in a healthy way is the most tragic thing to me— Angela Li (@hiangelali) November 20, 2022
·twitter.com·
Angela Li on Twitter