Sacred Sunday: Letting Them
Learning to release the need to fix others and focus on your own growth.
There’s a certain kind of exhaustion that comes with trying to be everyone’s savior—the fixer, the guide, the one who shows the way.
I’ve learned this lesson the hard way through some of my closest relationships. I’ve poured my energy into trying to help people heal, grow, and find their happiness, only to realize it’s not my job to do that.
Unless I’m a licensed therapist (spoiler: I’m not), it’s not my responsibility. And even therapists know they can only guide; the actual work is up to the client.
We’ve all heard the phrase, “You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink.” That’s exactly what this is about.
You can give someone the tools, the wisdom, and the encouragement, but you can’t force them to use it. Trying to do so often backfires. Instead of gratitude, your advice can be met with resistance, frustration, or even resentment.
What starts as an effort to show your care and support can quickly slip into what feels like nagging to the other person. It’s a recipe for resentment on both sides—yours for their lack of action, and theirs for your unsolicited guidance.
The Codependent Trap
This dynamic often traps us into a codependent cycle.
It’s surprisingly easy to dodge our own inner work by fixating on what others “should” (vocabulary we could all use a little less) be doing. I know this pattern all too well because I’ve lived it.
For years, I neglected my shadow work and avoided the deeper layers of my own healing by focusing on fixing other people’s problems instead. On top of that, I spent much of my life living according to what others thought was best for me—because, surely, everyone else outside of me knew what I needed better than I did. Or at least, that’s what I told myself.
Looking back, I realized that this is a subconscious method of projecting.
Sometimes we try to solve in others the exact issues we aren’t ready to confront in ourselves. I’ll be the first to admit that I’d hand out advice I wasn’t even following. It’s how we distract ourselves from facing our own pain.
*Spoiler: it doesn’t work.
The truth is, it’s okay to stumble. We all know what we should be doing, but follow-through isn’t always easy—and falling off the horse now and then doesn’t make us bad people. We all deserve some compassion and grace for being… human.
But what I’ve learned is that it’s best not to speak on someone else’s journey if we haven’t addressed our own. Micromanaging others’ lives, healing, and growth is more than unnecessary—it’s counterproductive.
In my last Sacred Sunday post, I talked about the “manager” people-pleaser type—the one who mistakes control for care, trying to guide every situation and steer everyone’s path.
I’ve come to see this tendency for what it is: a response to feeling unsafe or powerless in our own lives. Instead of taking control of what’s ours, we try to control others. And while that might feel helpful in the moment, it only deepens the disconnection within ourselves.
Accepting People Where They’re At
One of the biggest lessons I’ve had to internalize is this: we have to accept people as they are, not as we want them to be.
Meeting someone where they’re at is the ultimate act of compassion, but it requires boundaries and self-awareness. Pushing for people to do the work they aren’t ready to do—or don’t even see the need for—will only drain you.
Some people aren’t honest with themselves, and if they can’t face their own truth, how can we expect them to be honest with us?
As much as we might want to help them see themselves, it’s not our responsibility to make them take accountability or accept the hard truths. We can influence their decisions, but ultimately, it’s up to them.
Mel Robbins put it simply: “Let them.”
If they want to grow, they will.
If they want to be better—whether that’s for themselves, for you, or for anyone—they will make that choice.
It’s not on us to micromanage people’s healing or their happiness, to tell them how to better people, or how to live their lives. Our only role is to live our truth, chase our own happiness, and focus on our own journey.
Since I started pulling back from the fixer role, I’ve noticed how much lighter I feel. I’ve stopped trying to teach people how to “be better” for me or anyone else and started to lead by example.
I’m finally prioritizing my own growth and happiness; actively implementing these lessons into my life and hopefully motivating others to do the same.
The Takeaway
Letting go of the fixer role doesn’t mean you stop caring. It means you care enough to let people figure it out for themselves while you focus on your own path.
It doesn’t mean abandoning the ones you love, it means showing up for yourself first, so you can show up for others in a way that’s healthy and sustainable.
It means allowing people the freedom to take charge of their own lives.
If you’ve been in a cycle of trying to fix or micromanage someone else’s life, take a moment today to ask yourself: What work am I avoiding in my own life by focusing on theirs?
The answers might be hard to face, but they’ll set you free.
Here’s to releasing the fixer in you and embracing the freedom that comes with letting others choose their own path. Let them…and yourself, grow🌱.
Thank you for another beautiful, caring offering. 💛💛💛💛