You Need An Internal Witness
Why self-recognition matters before anyone else sees it.
“Trauma reacts; intention responds. The intensity of your reaction reveals how much of the past you’re holding on to.”
👽 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 focused on emotional well-being, nervous system health, and helping people build lives that feel more honest, steady, and aligned.
One of the things I keep coming back to in my own life is how easy it is to overlook quiet progress just because it doesn’t look dramatic from the outside.
Some of the most meaningful change happens internally first.
This piece is a reminder not to miss it while it’s happening.
🚨🔊My New Annual Spring Vibes playlist - 2026 edition is now out on Spotify along with my podcast called NP Fellow Collective!
You Need An Internal Witness
Some of the most important progress in your life will happen before anyone else can see it.
Before there is proof.
Before there are results.
Before anyone tells you they notice a difference.
Sometimes the change is quiet.
You pause before reacting instead of escalating.
You speak more honestly in a conversation that used to make you disappear.
You stay with a hard feeling instead of rushing to fix it.
You show up to your own life with a little more steadiness than you did six months ago.
No one claps for these moments and no one hands you a certificate for becoming more regulated, more honest, or more grounded.
And if you don’t know how to recognize them yourself, it is very easy to keep living as if nothing is changing.
That’s the problem.
Not because outside recognition doesn’t matter; it does.
Being seen by other people can be deeply healing. It can calm the nervous system, ease shame, and help us feel more real in our own lives.
However, external recognition cannot replace an internal witness.
At some point, if you want a steadier relationship with yourself, you need the ability to say:
I see what this took.
I see how I handled that differently.
I see what is changing, even if it still feels incomplete.
That is self-recognition.
And it matters more than most people realize.
Recognition Isn’t Only External
When people talk about recognition, they often mean being seen by someone else.
Being understood.
Being acknowledged.
Being appreciated.
Being chosen.
Those experiences matter. We are relational beings, and there is something deeply regulating about being met by another person in a way that feels accurate and kind.
However, there is another form of recognition that matters just as much:
The ability to recognize yourself.
Not in a performative way.
Not in a “say five affirmations in the mirror” way.
Not by pretending everything is okay or insisting you feel confident when you don’t.
I mean something much quieter and more honest than that.
The ability to stay in contact with your own experience long enough to acknowledge what is true.
To notice effort.
To notice growth.
To notice what something cost you.
To notice how you are changing, even when the change is still unfolding.
Self-recognition isn’t self-congratulation.
It’s accurate witnessing.
Why So Many People Struggle With It
Most people weren’t taught how to do this.
They were taught how to notice what was wrong.
What was missing.
What needed improvement.
What still wasn’t enough.
What could be better next time.
Many of us became very skilled at monitoring ourselves for deficiency.
We know how to catch mistakes.
We know how to anticipate criticism.
We know how to move the goalpost before we’ve even reached it.
What we don’t always know how to do is pause long enough to register:
That was hard, and I handled it better than I used to.
I’m not where I want to be yet, but I’m not where I was either.
I showed up today in a way that matters.
Without that pause, progress becomes hard to feel.
And when progress becomes hard to feel, you keep living as if the only thing that counts is what is still missing.
The Brain Is Biased Toward What’s Wrong
Part of this is psychological and part of it is neurological.
The brain isn’t designed to keep a balanced record of your growth. It’s designed to detect problems, discrepancies, and potential threats.
It scans for what still needs attention.
What remains unresolved.
What could go wrong.
What isn’t safe yet.
That bias makes sense from a survival perspective.
→ If your brain notices the problem, it can try to solve it.
→ If it spots the threat, it can try to protect you.
The issue is that if this bias goes unchecked, it can train you to build an identity around what is still lacking rather than what is already changing.
You become highly practiced at seeing your flaws and under-practiced at seeing your reality.
Self-recognition helps correct for that.
Not by denying pain, not by ignoring what still needs work, and not by forcing positivity, but by widening your attention enough to include evidence of growth, steadiness, and effort too.
That’s a very different kind of self-awareness.
What An Internal Witness Actually Does
An internal witness is the part of you that can observe your life with honesty and care.
It notices without distorting.
It acknowledges without exaggerating.
It stays present without turning every hard moment into a verdict on your worth.
It sounds like:
I can see that I’m overwhelmed right now, and I’m still handling this with more care than I used to.
That conversation didn’t go perfectly, but I did not abandon myself in it.
This still feels uncomfortable, but discomfort is not the same thing as failure.
I’m learning how to hold more than I could hold before.
An internal witness doesn’t require you to be finished.
It doesn’t require the outcome to be polished.
It doesn’t wait until the transformation is complete before it decides your effort counts.
It knows how to recognize the process while it is still in motion.
That matters because so much of adult life happens in unfinished form.
You are rarely done.
Rarely fully healed.
Rarely at the final version of anything.
If you only know how to acknowledge yourself once the work is complete, you will spend most of your life overlooking your own becoming.
Self-Recognition Is A Form of Stability
When you cannot recognize yourself, you become overly dependent on outside confirmation.
→ A compliment can steady you for a moment.
→ A good outcome can calm you for a day.
Someone else’s approval can help you feel real for a little while, but the effect is temporary because it isn’t anchored inside you.
You’re still outsourcing the job of witnessing your own life.
That creates fragility.
Your confidence rises and falls with feedback.
Your sense of progress depends on whether someone notices.
Your worth feels negotiable because it has not been fully metabolized internally.
Self-recognition changes that.
Not because it makes you invincible, but because it gives you a place to stand.
It allows you to say:
I know what this took.
I know what I am learning.
I know how I am changing.
I don’t need to wait until the evidence is obvious to know that something real is happening here.
That isn’t arrogance.
It’s steadiness.
A Different Way To Practice Recognition
If this feels unfamiliar, start smaller than you think.
At the end of the day, ask yourself:
What did I handle differently today?
Where did I stay present instead of disappearing?
What effort am I overlooking because it did not produce an immediate result?
What is becoming easier, steadier, or more honest than it used to be?
You aren’t looking for something dramatic.
→ You’re learning to notice yourself accurately.
That is the skill and like any skill, it strengthens with repetition.
The more often you pause to witness what is true, the less likely you are to live inside a distorted version of yourself.
Journaling Prompts
What progress in my life is currently hard to see because it has not become visible to other people yet?
Where have I been measuring myself only by outcomes instead of by honesty, steadiness, or effort?
What have I handled differently in the last six months that I have not fully acknowledged?
What would it look like to witness myself more accurately this week?
Where am I still waiting for outside confirmation before allowing something to count?
Final Thoughts
You don’t need to become someone who is endlessly impressed with himself or herself.
You don ‘t need to narrate your life like every moment is inspiring.
You don’t need to pretend everything is meaningful just because it is difficult.
However, you do need a way to stay in honest contact with your own effort, growth, and reality because some of the most important changes in your life will happen before anyone else knows they are happening.
And if you only feel real when someone else confirms your progress, your sense of self will always be more fragile than it needs to be.
Part of becoming steady is learning to witness yourself before the applause.
Before the proof and before the outside world catches up.
You need an internal witness not because you should never want to be seen by other people, but because you deserve to be seen by yourself, too.
Thank you for reading this article.
Until next Sunday,
—Jessica
Your 2am friend who actually gets it
“Maturity is when you don’t need to hear all the gossip or know a bunch of secrets. You support your inner peace by letting the right information come to you instead of chasing after the craving of knowing everyone’s business.” —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.










This is so true. We don’t often give ourselves enough credit for the small changes we’re making. Thanks for sharing Jess!
What a powerful piece Jess, self-recognition is soooooooo important and vital to our well-being!