Little Thing 335: What Worked, What Stayed

March 27, 2026

 

I was talking to my sibling about change, about awareness, and about how hard it is to step out of the system we grew up in. As I get older, I’m starting to see that everyone is operating within some kind of system. Some work, some don’t. But regardless, we stay in them, we repeat them, we build our lives around them. The good thing is, I can see mine. The harder part is figuring out how to rewire something that is so deeply embedded in me. How do you upgrade a system that feels like your default setting? 


For example, I grew up in a family that values independence. We don’t ask for help, we don’t lean and we endure what we need to endure, alone. There’s almost a quiet pride in it, like surviving alone is something to be respected. My mom raised four of us, and when I look back, I don’t remember a larger support system around her, no visible village. She carried it mostly on her own and it worked. But because it worked, it became the model and now it lives in us.


So one of my default response whenever I have a situation is: “Let me figure this out. Alone.” The interesting thing is, I now have enough distance from myself to see this pattern as it’s happening. I can almost step outside of myself and observe it, like a third person. I analyze it. And what I’m starting to realize is this: Just because I can do things alone, doesn’t mean I should. I should be able to ask for support when I need it, kan.


But here’s where I get stuck. How do you rewire yourself to rely on something you don’t fully trust? How do you build a new system when your old one is the only thing that has ever proven reliable? I’ve read about neuroplasticity, about CBT. I do believe that humans can upgrade. Maybe not completely change, but upgrade.

Somehow, I keep repeating the same patterns and the hardest part is, I’m aware of it. It would be easier if I were in denial. Easier if I didn’t see it, didn’t question it, didn’t try to shift it, but I do. And that awareness doesn’t automatically translate into change. It just means I can see myself looping, in real time.


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This doesn’t just apply to me.

It can relate to anything you might be struggling with in your life, especially the patterns you find yourself repeating over time. It could show up in your behaviour, in how you respond to situations, or even in the way you choose your words. If you’re willing to pay attention, you can begin to examine your belief system more closely. You can start to see what sits underneath it, question whether it still serves you, and decide if it is something you want to upgrade.


I’m not just talking about hyper-independence. It could be something else entirely. It could be staying in a victim mentality, being stuck in a fixed mindset, or believing that your worth is tied to how much you make. The form may look different, but the underlying structure is often the same.


I wonder if you can see it too, the system you’ve been operating in.




2 comments on "Little Thing 335: What Worked, What Stayed"
  1. many do see and aware of this loop but most of them don't even think about change. as you said, because it worked, it became the model. about the rewire and build a new system, my only advice is to start somewhere, be consistent, open for adjustment and never be too critical. in neuroplasticity and cognitive behavioural therapy, it took yearssss for you to see the result. along the way, you will stumble and back to your old self but that's okay. do the necessary adjustment. anyway, i applied it to help with my temper and it worked so far. has the bad temper disappear permanently? nope. still have with my kids occasionally but i do the necessary adjustment so i know how to control it. and i don't over-critical with my self because i can see that i am improving actually, after so many years. 4 years to be exact since i have my firstborn. hope this helps. :)

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    1. Thank you, tu lah, but then kadang2 I'm just disappointed with my own preference to go into the default mode. Every effort to change is intentional, that requires a lot of energy, a lot of mental awareness, then most of the time, we are just too tired and prefer to choose the easiest and most familiar way out. Kan.

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