If you are a builder: of community, of narrative, of space for those marginalized by the mainstream, there comes a moment when the weight of other people’s opinions becomes too heavy to carry. For those of us, like myself, who write from the intersection of advocacy, culture, and psychological truth, the compulsion to care too much about belonging, acceptance, and criticism stands in direct opposition to true empowerment and impact.
Here’s why caring less is: strategic, radical, and backed by both science and wisdom traditions.
Emotional energy is finite; Protect your focus
Research on finite willpower and decision fatigue proves our psychological energy is limited per day. Every moment you spend ruminating about others’ judgments, you’re siphoning energy away from the work and relationships that actually matter. Stoic philosopher Epictetus bluntly advised, “It’s not what happens to you, but how you react to it that matters.” Investing less in external noise frees you to do the deep, necessary work—for yourself and your community.
Other people’s opinions are mostly out of your control
Cognitive-behavioral psychology is unambiguous: Most anxieties over other people’s perceptions are projections built from uncertainty and past experience, not fact. Stoicism, echoed by Marcus Aurelius, instructs us to master our response to externals. You can’t control someone else’s expectations, or biases; you can only control your actions and values. Radical clarity starts when you redirect attention away from approval-seeking and toward honest self-accountability.
Perfectionism and people-pleasing destroys creativity
Neuroscience shows that chronic social vigilance (the hyper-awareness of others’ approval) triggers the brain’s threat response, shrinking creative risk-taking and innovative thought. As a strategic storyteller and community educator, I have seen the greatest insights emerge when I stopped editing myself for imaginary critics and wrote, and lived, unapologetically.
You can’t lead or heal while operating from fear
Whether building curriculum for equity leaders, or co-creating mental health initiatives, I have learned this: You can’t: disrupt, advocate, or empower while worrying about stepping on toes. As Audre Lorde taught us, our silence will not protect us. If you truly serve marginalized leaders and communities, your clarity depends on sometimes making people uncomfortable and standing firm in your values.
Greatness demands discomfort, and that’s healthy
Scientific studies confirm that resilience is built through stress and adversity, not avoidance. Philosophers from Seneca to Viktor Frankl remind us that a meaningful life is not an easy one. The more you practice defending your boundaries and values (even when faced with pushback) the stronger your sense of self and mission becomes.
The world trains us, especially as Afro/Indo Caribbean and racialized thinkers, to shrink our dreams and dilute our voices to fit someone else’s palatable frame. True equity-centered work demands cultural fluency, emotional intelligence, and a fierce rejection of inherited guilt. Stoic composure, psychological self-awareness, and radical honesty are revolutionary tools.
If you want to build, lead, and move people to change what needs changing, stop caring so much. That’s when your clarity, your impact, and your joy begin.
References:
Willpower depletion and attention: Baumeister & Tierney, Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength.
Cognitive distortions: Beck, Cognitive Therapy and the Emotional Disorders.
Stoicism: Epictetus, Discourses; Marcus Aurelius, Meditations.
Resilience: Southwick & Charney, Resilience: The Science of Mastering Life’s Greatest Challenges.