The Price of Being Real

April 2, 2025

There’s a quiet courage in choosing to be real in a world that rewards performance. We live among masks—some carefully crafted, others unconsciously worn. As Doe Zantamata said, it’s hard to tell who wants to be a good person and who simply wants to be seen as one. But there’s a subtle clue: the relentless pursuit of perfection.

Perfection isn’t the goal of someone who is real—it’s often the shield of someone afraid. Fear of not being enough. Fear of rejection. Fear of being exposed. And sadly, many cultures feed this fear by celebrating appearances over substance.

Being authentic comes at a cost. You will not be universally liked. You’ll be misunderstood. You’ll trigger discomfort in others who still wear their masks. But that discomfort is a sign that your presence is real.

I think the journey to authenticity takes time—it’s rarely found in youth, and even less in environments that reward silence over truth. But once you taste the freedom of not needing to be accepted to belong to yourself, there’s no going back.

People want to be real. But they also want to be liked. And often, those two things can’t exist at the same time. As Pawan Nair put it, “Real energy doesn’t operate in obligation.”

The world doesn’t need more perfect people—it needs more real ones.

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