Powered by Shimi and Huvi Jacobovits

Learning to Be Seen

Posted March 7, 2026

Key Points

  •  Vulnerability is not emotional exposure for its own sake. It is a deliberate choice to let yourself be known, and that choice is what makes real connection possible.
  •  We cannot selectively numb emotions. When we shut down shame, we also shut down joy and closeness.
  •  Wise vulnerability means choosing where and when to be open. Small experiments in honesty build the courage for larger ones.

Someone asks how you are doing, and you feel the real answer rise in your chest before the polished one leaves your mouth. You are exhausted, or worried about something you cannot name, or carrying a quiet sadness. But the words come out smooth and practiced; “Everything is fine.”

That gap between what you feel and what you say is where disconnection lives. Over time, it widens. And the thing that could close it, the willingness to let yourself be truly known, is often the very thing that feels most dangerous.

What We Get Wrong About Vulnerability

Most people hear “vulnerability” and picture emotional collapse: oversharing at dinner, exposing your deepest fears to someone who did not ask.

However, researcher Brené Brown, who spent over two decades studying connection, defines it very differently. Vulnerability is uncertainty, risk, and emotional openness. It is what you feel on a first day at a new job, when you share an honest struggle with a friend, or when you love someone without knowing if they feel the same.

Brown found that people who experienced the deepest belonging and connection with others shared one trait: they were willing to be seen, imperfections and all. They did not believe they had to earn love by performing competence or receiving feedback from others. They simply believed they were worthy of it.

Why We Hide

The impulse to conceal struggle makes sense. In many communities, there is an unspoken cultural expectation to appear composed. We joke about being tired, but the deeper things stay hidden: the anxietyGlossaryAnxietyA group of mental health conditions characterized by excessive fear, worry, and related behavioral disturbances. Includes generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, and specific phobias. that will not lift, the lonelinessGlossaryLonelinessThe subjective experience of isolation and disconnection from others, which can occur even when surrounded by people. Different from being alone, which is simply a physical state. that exists even in a crowd, the doubts.

On a more personal level, at the root of that hiding is often a fear so quiet we may not identify it: maybe I am not enough. Brown calls this shame, and distinguishes it from guilt in a critical way. Guilt says, “I did something bad.” Shame says, “I am bad.” Guilt can motivate change while shame drives us further into hiding, which is exactly where disconnection deepens.

What makes this especially difficult is that emotions do not work selectively. When we dull shame and anxietyGlossaryAnxietyA group of mental health conditions characterized by excessive fear, worry, and related behavioral disturbances. Includes generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, and specific phobias., we also dull joy and closeness. The same heart that feels deeply hurt is the one capable of feeling deeply loved. When we shut one capacity down, we slowly shut them all down. Hiding, ignoring, or not acknowledging one set of emotions, negatively impacts our ability to feel others such as happiness and love. 

Wise Vulnerability

Vulnerability without discernment is not courage. Brown herself emphasizes that vulnerability is not about sharing everything with everyone. It is about sharing the right things with the right people at the right time.

Ask whether the relationship has earned the weight of what you want to share. Trust is built in small moments, not granted all at once. Notice your motivation: are you sharing to connect, or to test whether someone will reject you? The first builds intimacy. The second sets a trap. And start small. Telling a friend that something hurt, admitting you do not have an answer, or saying “I am having a hard week” are all acts of vulnerability that carry real power.

These small experiments teach your nervous system something important: that openness does not always lead to pain. Each time you take a manageable risk and are met with warmth, your capacity for connection grows.

What This Looks Like

In practice, vulnerability is surprisingly ordinary. It is saying “I need help” instead of pushing through until you collapse. It is telling your spouse “I felt invisible at that dinner” instead of picking a fight about something unrelated. It is admitting you started therapy. It is allowing yourself to be seen without guaranteeing how the other person will respond.

None of this requires dramatic disclosure. All of it requires a willingness to be imperfect out loud, which is harder than it sounds when so much of daily life rewards looking like you have it together. But vulnerability, even when it feels like a formidable step forward, is what allows the possibility of real connection to open up.

And that possibility is worth exploring.

 This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

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