The Freedom Of Accepting What Is
What changes when you stop arguing with reality.
“When you left, it was a shock, because you told me we were going to build our lives together. Now I’m left with half a plan, a heart that feels torn, and the remnants of memories I no longer want.”
🎉 A Note from Me
Hi, I’m Jessica.
I write NP Fellow Become The CEO of Your Health— a weekly mental health and functional medicine newsletter about building a healthier relationship with your mind, your body, and yourself.
Acceptance has been one of the hardest lessons for me to learn because it asks us to stop negotiating with what has already happened.
However, every time I’ve been able to do it, even imperfectly, I’ve found something unexpected on the other side: not defeat, but freedom to take the next step.
🚨🔊My New Annual Summer Vibes playlist - 2026 edition is now out on Spotify along with my podcast called NP Fellow Collective!
The Freedom Of Accepting What Is
There are moments in life that don’t end when they happen.
They keep happening in your mind.
You replay the conversation.
Maybe if I had said that differently...
Maybe if I had noticed sooner...
Maybe if I had tried harder...
You imagine the version where the diagnosis never came.
The version where they stayed.
The version where life unfolded the way you thought it would.
Part of you knows what happened is real and another part keeps negotiating with a version of reality that no longer exists.
If you’ve ever done that...you’re human because when life changes in ways we didn’t choose, the mind naturally reaches for another ending.
One where nothing had to be lost.
One where everything still makes sense.
One where the pain never arrived.
The problem isn’t that we do this.
The problem is how long we stay there because while the mind is busy arguing with reality...life is still asking us to live it.
The Hidden Cost Of Resistance
When something painful happens, our first instinct is often to resist it.
This shouldn’t be happening.
This isn’t fair.
This wasn’t supposed to turn out this way.
Those thoughts are deeply human.
They aren’t weakness.
They’re the mind’s attempt to make sense of something that feels impossible to accept; however, over time, that struggle begins to create a second layer of suffering.
→ The pain comes from what happened.
→ The suffering grows from our fight against the fact that it happened.
There’s a difference.
One is grief.
The other is the exhausting work of trying to change a reality that has already arrived.
Acceptance Isn’t Giving Up
Acceptance is one of the most misunderstood concepts in mental health.
Many people hear the word and assume it means approval.
That if we accept something...we must like it and agree with it.
Stop grieving, stop hoping, and stop trying to make things better.
Acceptance asks for none of those things.
Acceptance simply says:
This is what is true right now.
It doesn’t ask you to enjoy it, it doesn’t ask you to stop crying, and it doesn’t ask you to pretend the loss doesn’t matter.
It asks you to stop spending your energy arguing with reality...so you can begin responding to it.
Acceptance doesn’t ask you to stop wishing things were different.
It asks you to stop pretending they are.
That’s a profound difference.
Why Our Minds Hold On
Our brains are built to predict what comes next.
Predictability creates safety.
When life changes unexpectedly, that prediction is broken.
The mind naturally tries to restore the old reality.
It replays conversations.
Searches for explanations.
Imagines different outcomes.
Not because you’re weak, but because certainty feels safer than change.
However, when we stay emotionally attached to the life we thought we were going to have...we become less available for the life that is actually here.
Acceptance allows the nervous system to shift from resistance toward adaptation.
Instead of asking:
“Why did this happen?”
We slowly become able to ask:
“Given that this has happened...what matters now?”
That question doesn’t erase grief, but it creates movement.
Acceptance Creates Agency
One of the greatest paradoxes of emotional health is that acceptance often increases our ability to create change.
When we stop denying reality...we can finally work with it.
We can make decisions.
Ask for help.
Set boundaries.
Grieve honestly.
Take the next step.
Acceptance isn’t passive.
Acceptance is the foundation of wise action because we cannot respond well to a reality we are still refusing to acknowledge.
A Different Way To Meet Change
The next time life doesn’t unfold the way you hoped...notice the conversation happening inside your mind.
Is it saying:
“This shouldn’t be happening.”
Or can it gently shift toward:
“I don’t like this...and this is where I am.”
That small shift changes more than it seems.
→ One keeps you negotiating with the past.
→ The other allows you to begin living in the present.
Acceptance doesn’t erase pain.
It creates space around it and sometimes...that space is where healing quietly begins.
Journaling Prompts
What reality am I still arguing with?
What would acceptance look like without giving up hope?
Where am I spending energy wishing things were different instead of responding to what is true?
What is one next step I can take from where I am today?
How might acceptance create more peace in this season of my life?
Final Thoughts
Everything changes.
Relationships.
Health.
Dreams.
Plans.
Seasons.
Feelings and emotions.
Even the person you are today will not be the person you are a year from now.
We cannot stop life from changing, but we can choose how we meet it.
→ Acceptance isn’t surrendering your future.
→ Acceptance is acknowledging your present with enough honesty to move through it wisely.
Sometimes the strongest thing we can say isn’t:
“This is what I wanted.”
It’s:
“This is what is true.”
Thank you for reading this article.
Until next Sunday,
—Jessica
Your 2am friend who actually gets it
“Feel it all. Whatever may come up even if the present hurts and even is the past is roaring. Heroes don’t run away. Healing isn’t won easily. Feel wisely without letting what’s temporary control you. Acceptance makes real freedom possible.” —Yung Pueblo
🪩 A Gentle Invitation
If this article resonated with you, you may appreciate my new product called Weekly Skill, a paid NP Fellow series focused on one real, grounded internal skill each week regarding attention, impulse control, emotional regulation, presence, and learning how to work with your nervous system instead of against it.
No pressure. Just an invitation.🤝
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MEDICAL DISCLAIMER
This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to provide medical advice or to take the place of such advice or treatment from a personal physician. All readers/viewers of this content are advised to consult their doctors or qualified health professionals regarding specific health questions. All viewers of this content, especially those taking prescription or over-the-counter medications, should consult their physicians before beginning any nutrition, supplement or lifestyle program.









