self-improvement is supposed to be empowering, right? you start waking up earlier, eating better, setting boundaries, reading books with titles like Atomic Habits or The Mountain Is You. you tell yourself you’re entering your becoming era, the one where everything finally starts falling into place.
but what no one talks about is the space in between. the quiet distance that forms when you start growing but haven’t quite arrived. the way self-improvement, despite being good for you, can feel incredibly isolating. because when you decide to change, you don’t just leave behind bad habits—you leave behind parts of yourself, and sometimes, people, too.
1. you start outgrowing people before you find new ones
no one tells you that self-improvement comes with social side effects. you begin making different choices—maybe you stop saying yes to plans that drain you, maybe you no longer enjoy conversations that used to excite you. suddenly, certain friendships start feeling off, like you’re speaking a language they no longer understand.
but the hardest part is outgrowing something doesn’t mean you immediately grow into something new. there’s an awkward in-between where your old world no longer fits, but the new one hasn’t arrived yet. and in that waiting period, loneliness settles in like an old, familiar ache.
what to do instead: give yourself time. finding your people—the ones who match this version of you—takes patience. in the meantime, focus on deepening your relationship with yourself.
2. self-discipline is a solo act
there’s no applause for self-improvement. no one sees you choosing to wake up early instead of snoozing your alarm. no one claps when you cook instead of ordering takeout, when you go to the gym even though you don’t feel like it, when you sit with discomfort instead of numbing it.
growth is quiet. and when no one is there to acknowledge it, it can feel like no one even notices it’s happening.
what to do instead: track your own progress. write things down, take note of the little wins, remind yourself that just because something isn’t being witnessed doesn’t mean it’s not real.
3. your old self was comfortable, even if it wasn’t happy
as much as you want to move forward, there’s an undeniable pull to what’s familiar. old habits, even the toxic ones, feel like home in a way new ones don’t.
you know logically that staying out late every weekend wasn’t serving you. or that procrastinating, doom-scrolling, or saying yes to things you didn’t want to do wasn’t making you happy. but in the moment, those things felt easy. and now…everything requires effort.
what to do instead: be kind to yourself. missing the old you doesn’t mean you’re regressing—it just means you’re human. allow yourself to grieve the comfort of what once was, even as you move toward what’s better.
4. not everyone will support the new version of you
growth is confronting—not just for you, but for the people around you. when you start changing, some people won’t get it. they’ll tease you for your new habits, roll their eyes at your “self-care” routines, act like you’re being dramatic for wanting more.
sometimes, it’s not even intentional. it’s just that your growth reminds them of everything they’re not doing. and rather than admit that, they make you feel like the problem.
what to do instead: don’t take it personally. the people who truly care about you will respect your growth, even if they don’t understand it. and the ones who don’t? well, their absence might be a gift in disguise.
5. growth forces you to sit with yourself—without distractions
before self-improvement, it was easy to fill every empty moment with noise. scrolling, binge-watching, saying yes to plans you didn’t even like just to avoid being alone.
but when you start prioritizing your well-being, you suddenly have to be with yourself. and that’s not always fun. the silence can feel suffocating. you start noticing thoughts you used to suppress, feelings you used to ignore.
what to do instead: don’t run from the solitude. use it. get to know yourself in ways you never did before. take yourself on solo dates, journal, meditate, sit in a coffee shop alone. learn to enjoy your own company.
6. you start seeing life differently—and it’s hard to unsee
when you begin working on yourself, you start noticing things you never did before. how much negativity exists in casual conversations. how many people stay stuck in cycles because it’s easier than changing. how so much of life is dictated by autopilot, by comfort, by fear of doing something different.
once you see it, you can’t unsee it. and that can feel incredibly isolating—like you’re awake in a world that’s still half-asleep.
what to do instead: find people who do see what you see. read books that challenge your perspective, listen to podcasts that make you feel less alone. the world is full of people on the same path—you just have to find them.
7. improvement takes time, and the waiting is lonely
self-improvement isn’t a 30-day challenge. it’s not a quick-fix. it’s weeks, months, years of doing the work before you start seeing the results. and in that in-between, it’s easy to feel discouraged.
because growth is slow. and in the process, it can feel like everyone else is moving faster than you. like they’re out there living, while you’re stuck in this weird in-between of undoing, rebuilding, becoming.
what to do instead: trust the process. just because things aren’t happening as fast as you want doesn’t mean they aren’t happening at all. keep going.
8. the right people will find you
the loneliness of self-improvement isn’t permanent. yes, some people will drift away. yes, you’ll spend time alone. but as you grow, you naturally attract people who align with the version of you that you’re becoming.
your conversations will change. your connections will deepen. one day, you’ll look around and realize that you’re surrounded by people who truly see you, who match your energy, who understand the journey because they’re on it too.
but until then…keep going. the loneliness isn’t a sign you’re doing something wrong. it’s proof you’re doing something right.
I’ve been stuck in a functional freeze for months and it’s been exhausting. There’s so much I want to do and some days I just feel like I can’t. I’m so ready to return to living and not just existing. This was truly helpful. I can feel how much progress I’ve made just going through each of these points and it inspires me to begin my way back.
“Growth is quiet” - so beautiful and true. Also, until it isn’t. Letting people in is an important part of the process, as we aren’t meant to do it alone. And yes I agree, that in-between space while we figure out who we want to share our vulnerabilities with, can feel isolating. I love your writing btw.