šļøāļøSacred Softness & Weaponized Detachment
Disclaimer: This is a reflection on spiritual detachment and the need for emotional integration. It includes personal insights and a gentle critique of certain belief systems.

Thereās a version of spirituality that proclaims inner peace is achieved through detachment, and enlightenment is reached through the rejection of all human needs, desires, and comforts.
In this belief system, deeply embracing and accepting suffering is the hero’s journey.
Emotional needs are seen as unnecessary at bestāa clever trap at worst.
The pinnacle of enlightenment, it seems, is needing nothing and no one.
There are certainly measures of merit and wisdom within this perspective, but personal experience has taught me thereās also an unbalancedādare I say toxicāside to it.
Iām not interested in throwing this entire philosophy over my shoulder, nor am I suggesting you should, dear reader. Iām here to name what happens when itās taken too far.
When spiritual rhetoric becomes a weapon instead of a balmāwhat weāre left with is:
A distortion.
A half-truth.
A cage disguised as freedom and clarity.
Lately, while in conversation with someone I love, I found myself wrestling with this perspective. No joy, no praise, no creature comforts, and certainly no painānot from others, not from within. Just pure, silent endurance wrapped in inner peace.
To feel anything? Weakness.
To need anything? Attachment.
To be hurt by anything? Proof your ego is still running the show, and you likely aren’t taking responsibility for your own feelings.
Perhaps I am misunderstanding, but that sounds like hell in a linen robe.
š The Doctrine of Detachment (and Why It Hurts)
When detachment becomes toxic it sounds like this:
- Ego must be eliminated.
- The desire for validation is an unhealthy attachment.
- You shouldnāt need comfort.
- Suffering is just resistance to what is.
- If you feel hurt, itās because youāre not ādoing the work.ā
- I bare no responsibility for the impact of my words or actions because you chose how you feel.
In my opinion, this is not enlightenment.
This is weaponized detachmentāand Iām not sipping that brew anymore.
I believe in egoānot the kind that is endlessly needy and exalts itself above all others, but the kind that expresses healthy self-esteem and self-awareness.
The kind that says, āI matter. I deserve to take up space. My gifts are worth celebrating.ā
I believe compliments and validation are sacred.
Theyāre not ego-strokingātheyāre emotional nutrition.
They say: āI see you. What you created touched me. Thank you for sharing your gifts with me.ā
I believe it is okayāholy, evenāto want warmth, connection, to be understood, to be cherished.
Itās not weakness to be affected by someoneās cruelty.
Itās not spiritual failure to cry when youāre hurt.
I believe suffering is a natural response to trauma. Suggesting that suffering is your own damn fault may be true to an extent, but it also completely invalidates any measure of healthy emotional processing of grief, fear, or anger. This only leads to suppression and guilt for having an emotional response in the first place. Suffering is a call for care, not dismissal.
We are interconnected beings who affect each other emotionallyāand that matters. We meet the Devine in one another through our emotions, not despite them. True love listens, offers empathy, and takes responsibility for how words and actions impact someone else. Spiritual love that makes no room for felt experience isn’t loveā it’s philosophy.
š§ When āWisdomā Is Just a Wall
What Iāve learned recently (through clenched teeth and a wounded heart) is this:
- Not all spiritual language is born from love.
- Some ātruthsā are really just spiritual ego and walls disguised as wisdom.
- And my softnessāmy need for tenderness, my openness to receiveāwill be seen as a threat in systems that only values self-erasure.
Iāve sat across from someone who told me that compliments are suspect. That maybe my friends only praise my writing because they know I need it.
As if needing encouragement is a shameful flaw.
Perhaps it wasn’t meant in the manner in which I took it, but what I heard was:
āThe compliments you receive aren’t realāthey are performance. Your connections arenāt honest. Allow me to check your ego and sever your attachment to praise. You’re more enlightened now. You’re welcome. ”
But hereās the thing: I do need encouragement.
Not because Iām weakā
But because Iām a human being who creates from the depths of my soul. I dare to be seen. The encouragement of others feeds my soul on my journey.
It’s certainly possible that all that was intended from this seemingly disempowering comment is that I have good friends’ who understand what I need and respond accordingly.
For the sake of my soul, I choose to believe the positive narrative was the intended one.
š„ Crushing the Ego Isnāt Growth. Itās Grief.
This version of spirituality that shames emotion and glorifies emotional detachment doesnāt just miss the pointāit wounds the soul.
It teaches people to see hurt as failure.
To fear love unless itās perfectly detached.
To reject praise unless itās dished out in microscopic doses, and wrapped in self-deprecation.
No wonder intimacy suffers. No wonder connection feels threatening.
No wonder joy is treated like a dangerous indulgence instead of a sacred inheritance.
I donāt desire detachment as a path to escape suffering. I want to weep bittersweet tears when a song touches a still healing part of my soul. I want to feel deeply proud of myself when someone tells me my work means something to them, knowing I have used the gifts I was given. I want to express my grief when Iāve been unfairly blamed by someone I love.
I donāt want to transcend my humanity.
I want to inhabit it fully.
š® So What Am I Learning?
This experience has taught my soul some things I didnāt expect:
- Some people are repelled by my vulnerability because they do not have the capacity to hold it, and they cannot understand it or control it.
- Contrast is a teacher: I live in my softness and crave depth. But I inhabit a world that treats sensitivity as inadequacy and liability. There is extreme bravery and resilience in my desire to remain soft in a world that praises external power as strength.
- Love without emotional safety is not loveāitās a performance of peace, and Iām done auditioning.
- My need for tenderness doesnāt make me brokenāit makes me whole.
- Joy, validation, comfort, art, and softness are not crutchesātheyāre the ceremony of aliveness.
š«Disappearing Is Not Divine
I will not crush my ego to prove Iām enlightened.
I will not harden my heart just to survive someone elseās discomfort with vulnerability.
I will not erase my desire for compassion and tenderness.
I will not self-abandon or practice self-erasure in an effort to eliminate my humanity and elevate my spirituality.
My ego is not always the enemy. My desires and attachments are not always the problem.
A balanced ego propels self-discovery, self-awareness, self-esteem, humility, compassion, and resilience.
Balanced desires and attachments allow us to co-create with joy, form deep, meaningful connections, and facilitate the motivation needed to pursue our higher calling.
I am spiritual.
I am sensitive.
I am a human with emotional needs and desires.
I cry when I am hurting. I rejoice and give deep thanks when I am praised, acknowledged, and truly seen.
I am integrating my humanity with my spiritual identity, and it’s the most important work I have ever done.
I believeādeep in my matcha-sipping, art-making, soul-loving bonesā
True love doesnāt punish softness. It protects it.
True spirituality doesnāt erase the self. It reveres it.