I was shaking after 4 hours without an answer to my text
A personal exploration of insecure attachment reactions when a partner doesn’t respond, and an invitation to Radical Honesty practice.
2025-08-07Exploring why we hesitate to speak our truth and how practicing honesty in safe spaces can rebuild connection.
If you ask people whether they want to live honestly, most will say yes.
But if you watch what actually happens when the moment comes - when the truth sits at the edge of the tongue - it often dies there. Not because the person is weak. Not because they’re fake. But because telling the truth, without knowing how it will be received, feels like stepping off a cliff with no one catching you.
The fear isn’t honesty. It’s the absence of response that follows. It’s saying, “I’m not okay,” and hearing, “Oh. Well. Anyway…” It’s saying, “I need more from this relationship,” and seeing someone freeze - or leave - or act like you never said anything.
We’ve all had moments where our honesty cost us comfort. But what most people never recover from is when it costs them connection.
According to social neuroscience, the human brain is wired to equate social rejection with physical pain. That’s not poetic. That’s a literal overlap in neural circuits. When you tell the truth - especially a vulnerable one - and it lands with silence or judgment, your nervous system records it as threat. That’s why most people “filter” or “edit” instead of lying outright. It’s a subtle negotiation between wanting to be seen and wanting to stay safe. It’s not cowardice. It’s math.
The connection we’re trying to preserve by hiding… is the very thing we lose when we stop being ourselves. You can’t be deeply loved if you’re not deeply known. And you can’t be known if you’re always calculating what part of yourself is acceptable. It’s a quiet kind of suffering - to be in relationships, workplaces, even families, and realize that the real you hasn’t actually been invited.
It’s not “Just speak your truth.” That advice often leads to people blurting out things they think are true but in reality it is just opinions, projections and mind garbage, that the receiver predictably reacts negatively too, with the speaker feeling burned.
The real solution is this: Practice honesty in places where you’re not alone in it. Where truth-telling isn’t treated as confrontation. Where people won’t flinch or try to fix you. Where honesty is not a performance - but a practice.
By Jesper Jurcenoks
A personal exploration of insecure attachment reactions when a partner doesn’t respond, and an invitation to Radical Honesty practice.
2025-08-07A personal reflection on facing the two-choice dilemma at the brink of divorce and choosing growth over escape.
2025-08-07A personal account of how using a quick mobile game for anxiety relief spiraled into addictive behavior and the strategies used to reclaim balance.
2025-07-16Exploring Orestes’ myth as a metaphor for moral injury and the internal torment of impossible decisions.
2025-07-15The myth of Orpheus and Eurydice highlights the pivotal moment when trust falters and love is lost forever.
2025-07-12The myth of Echo shows how mirroring others and losing your own voice can leave you faded - and how codependency can turn you into an echo in your own life.
2025-07-09Jesper Jurcenoks guides you through self-inquiry and compassionate consent before offering sensitive feedback with Radical Honesty.
2025-07-06A modern retelling of Narcissus’s myth shows how waiting for validation in digital mirrors leaves us empty and disconnected.
2025-06-29Albert Camus reframes the myth of Sisyphus to illustrate how modern distractions deplete our emotional energy, turning everyday struggles into endless cycles.
2025-06-26Jesper Jurcenoks reflects on 1.5 years of transformation inside the Radical Honesty Institute - and shares the personal dream he's building through Radical Sincerity.
2025-05-01A personal narrative about embracing radical honesty, reconnecting with family, and finding truth amidst loss and regret.
2025-02-25