Authentic Voice
Reclaiming Your Power
Someone once told me I was âtoo much.â Truthfully, Iâve heard variations of that all my life.
Pushing through the pressure to agree, stay quiet, or ânot make things difficult,â I earned labels like sassy, too bold, opinionated, even weirdâall for simply having questions and convictions.
In high school, I was âweirdâ for asking a teacher why Columbus was credited with âdiscoveringâ a land where millions already lived. Later, in a nonprofit board meeting, I quoted our mission statement while we debated closing a program that served people experiencing povertyâand was told they âdidnât needâ to hear it. At home, I was expected to laugh along when an uncle teased a nephew for ârunning like a girl.â
Over time, the message was clear:
Too vocal.
Too questioning.
Too passionate about what made other people uncomfortable.
So I did what so many of us doâ
I turned down the volume on myself.
Made myself smaller.
Softer.
More palatable.
And slowly, I disappeared.
The Quiet Moment I Reclaimed My Authentic Voice
The shift wasnât dramatic. It was quiet.
I was rereading an unpublished newsletter column Iâd written years earlierâbefore I learned to shrinkâand I barely recognized the voice. It was alive. Unfiltered. Unapologetically itself.
My CEO liked that column so much that he published a version under his name, using my ideas without attribution and taking over my column for that month. Iâd tucked the original into a forgotten file. Revisiting it all those years later sparked something in me. I respected that writer. I missed her.
It wasnât the only moment of restoration, but it straightened my spine and loosened my tongue.
That voice knew things.
Researched and reexamined her conclusions.
Believed in her abilities and original ideas.
Wrote and spoke from her values.
And I realized: being âtoo muchâ was never the problem.
The problem was a power structure that preferred I stay quietâor at least hidden, trotted out when my visibility served those in charge.
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What âToo Muchâ Really Means About Your Authentic Voice
Hereâs what I know now about authentic voice as an employee, an educator, and a writer:
â When youâre told youâre âtoo much,â youâre often brushing against someoneâs comfortâor someoneâs control.
â Your wild voiceâthe unedited oneâis where your deepest wisdom lives.
â The world doesnât need one more dimmed-down, agreeable version of your best self.
Authenticity isnât about being loud for the sake of noise. It doesnât mean you never listen. It means you refuse to edit your truth to keep others comfortable. It means being fierce with empathyâspeaking what matters while staying fully human.
This journey toward reclaiming my own authentic voice is what ultimately shaped my upcoming memoir. Itâs complete now, and soon Iâll begin the search for the right agent and publisher to bring it into the world. Itâs a vulnerable, exhilarating part of the writing life, and Iâm grateful to share that process openly with those walking their own path toward courage and truth.
Your authentic voice?
The one youâve been told is âtoo muchâ?
Thatâs exactly the voice someone needs to hear todayâif you are safe to share it.
Is your workplace, home, or community safe enough to hear the truth youâre carrying?
Tell Me
When were you first told you were âtoo muchââand what part of your authentic voice did you silence because of it?
Journaling Prompts to Help You Reclaim Your Authentic Voice
If this essay stirred something in you, here are a few gentle prompts to help you listen for the parts of your voice that were muted, minimized, or misunderstood. Use them without pressureâjust follow what rises.
1. The Moment You Dimmed Your Light
Write about a time you made yourself smaller to avoid conflict, judgment, or discomfort.
What did you hold back? What stayed unsaid? How did it feel in your body?
2. The Voice You Miss
Describe a version of yourself who spoke freelyâbefore shrinking became a habit.
What was she able to say? What did she believe? What part of her do you want back?
3. A Truth Youâre Ready to Tell
Whatâs one thing you knowâdeeplyâthat deserves to be spoken aloud?
Where might you begin safely? With whom?
4. A Promise to Yourself
Finish this sentence:
âGoing forward, I will no longer shrink whenâŚâ   Â