
Grace for the Learning, Not Just the Arriving
There’s a version of you— maybe several —still sitting in the past.
They didn’t know what you know now.
They were guessing, trying, surviving.
They may have said the wrong thing, missed the signs, stayed too long, or walked away too soon.
And sometimes, when we reflect on those versions of ourselves, shame creeps in.
The “I should’ve known better.”
The “Why didn’t I leave then?”
The “How could I have let that happen?”
But here’s a truth you may need to hear today:
You didn’t know yet.
And learning is allowed to be messy.
You didn’t know how to set boundaries…
Because maybe no one taught you what a healthy boundary looked like.
You didn’t know how to handle conflict without shutting down or blowing up…
Because emotional regulation might not have been modeled for you.
You didn’t know how to choose safe people…
Because maybe your earliest relationships didn’t teach you what safety felt like.
And here’s the part that holds a complicated kind of grace:
Sometimes, your parents or caregivers did try their best.
But even their “best” came with gaps.
Maybe they loved you deeply, but didn’t know how to validate feelings.
Maybe they were present, but not emotionally available.
Maybe they raised you how they were raised, without ever being taught better.
That doesn’t mean your pain isn’t real.
And it doesn’t make you a bad person for needing more than what you got.
We love to think of healing as a moment.
An “Aha!”
A clean line in the sand.
But more often, it’s a slow unfolding.
The awareness comes, and then the practice.
The first time we do something different, and then the hundredth.
You may not be proud of who you were back then…
But maybe you can be proud of who you’re becoming now.
Next time you feel the cringe— the regret, the heaviness, the shame —pause.
Picture that younger version of you. Maybe they’re 16. Maybe 28. Maybe last week.
Look at them.
They were just trying.
And say this:
“You didn’t know yet.
But you’re safe now.
I’ve got you.”
Speak to them with the same compassion you’d give a friend or a child learning something new. Because that’s all they were doing — learning.
Growth without grace turns into perfectionism.
Healing without compassion turns into punishment.
You’re not here to beat yourself into being better.
You’re here to understand your patterns, choose differently, and keep going.
So if you’re still carrying guilt from a former version of you,
Let this be the permission slip to lay it down.
You’re allowed to change.
You’re allowed to forgive yourself.
You’re allowed to grow in public, in private, in progress.
You are not behind.
You are not broken.
You are not defined by what you didn’t know before.
You are becoming braver, softer, wiser, stronger, and more of who you were always meant to be.
So honor your healing.
Hug your younger self.
Offer grace to the people who tried, even if they missed the mark.
And walk forward with gentleness. Not because you were perfect, but because you were learning.
And that’s enough.
Begin your journey towards a happier and more fulfilling life today.
This is a supervised private practice. It is owned and managed by a master’s-level, non-independent licensee under Board-approved clinical supervision pursuant to A.A.C. R4-6-211. The Board approved clinical supervisor of this practice is:
Name: Rachel Sommerfield, LPC, MC, ADHD-CP
Phone: (520)509-5371
Email: [email protected]
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