
Betta Go With the Flow- Or Else
There is a cycle I’ve lived in for far too long—one I’m only now learning to name, as I watch my boys sail away from me deep into the sea of indoctrination. The one who says ouch or asks for what is not readily available and offered, shall be branded and banished. Get on board or beware.
A system in which -directly expressing a difficult feeling, a misstep, or a moment of hurt is treated as a (high-level) violation. In this economy, the cause of discomfort is never the offense—saying it out loud is.
The moment you state, “That hurt me or made me uncomfortable,” everything shifts.
Defensiveness. Arguments. Blame. Silence. Withdrawal.
The original upset/need/limit/harm is of zero interest. He who illuminates it IS the problem. Once you choose to openly speak of difficult feelings, you will be collectively labelled and treated as delusional OR invisible.
Experts have a lot of names for this: the Invalidation Cycle, the Accountability Avoidance Loop, the Eggshell Pattern, the Double Bind of Repair.
In this cycle, difficult moments aren’t treated as part of being human.
But as evidence that the person naming them is dramatic, unstable, or “starting something.”
Imperfection isn’t allowed —it must be denied, hidden, or deflected. The requirement is that you “Let it go(without mention)” “Go with the flow(even if the flow discounts you, especially if it does. Know your place.)” “Keep the peace(status quo) (even and especially when the status quo diminishes or disregards you)”
And what is lost is the most basic truth: there is not sustainable healthy connection without repair.
And repair is impossible in a system where acknowledgment is forbidden.
When the moment itself cannot be named, every relationship becomes stuck in a loop of avoidance.
Everyone tiptoes.
Everyone manages optics.
No one heals.
And eventually, the person who needs to address the issue is cast as the one who “can’t let it go,”
I’m learning that this isn’t just a communication style—it is a devastating cycle which shapes families, relationships, and identities.
It teaches fear and judgment of openness.
It punishes vulnerability.
It breeds silence and distance.
The cycle maintains disconnection in the very effort to avoid discomfort and messiness. “Belonging(not being cast out)” is more highly valued than actual connection.
Jesuit Priest, Tom Weston says it best in his Rules For Being a GrownUp:
- You must not have anything wrong with you, or anything different about you.
- If you have something wrong or different about you, you really need to correct it. You need to be able to pass under all circumstances.
- If you can’t correct it, or change it in any way, you should just pretend that you have. It’s not a problem anymore. Good news!
- If you can’t even pretend not to have corrected the situation, you should just not show up, because it’s very painful for the rest of us to see you in your current condition.
- If you’re going to insist on showing up, you should at least have the decency to be ashamed.
And that’s what every single one of us is against.








