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Monday, 8 December 2025

Self-Regulation, Niceness, and the Quiet Work of Becoming

The responses to my recent post, “The Older Me”, have stayed with me. Some were direct, some indirect. Some were kind, some were uncomfortable. All of them, in one way or another, held up a mirror. And I have learned that how we respond to mirrors often says more about where we are than what we see in them.

One recurring thread in the comments was the question of who I am becoming. Not in the dramatic sense, but in the quieter moral one. Am I softer or harder? Kinder or merely nicer? More self-aware or simply more self-protective?

That is where self-regulation comes in.

Self-regulation is not silence. It is not suppression. It is the discipline of choosing response over reaction. It is the pause between emotion and expression, where values have a chance to speak. It is the decision to act in alignment with who you are trying to become, not merely how you feel in the moment.

Niceness and kindness are often confused, but they play very different roles.

Niceness is usually reactive. It wants peace at all costs. It avoids discomfort, disagreement, and tension. It smooths things over, sometimes at the expense of truth. Niceness can look generous, but it often comes from fear. Fear of being misunderstood. Fear of being disliked. Fear of being alone.

Kindness, on the other hand, is a regulated emotion. It is intentional. Kindness does not exist to be approved of. It exists to do good. Sometimes kindness comforts. Sometimes it confronts. Sometimes it says yes. Sometimes it draws a clear boundary and says no. Kindness is willing to be misunderstood if integrity is at stake.

The truth, if I am honest with myself, is simpler and less flattering. I am learning to regulate. I am learning that not every emotion deserves a public voice. That not every provocation requires a reply. That maturity is often invisible work.

There was a time when being nice felt like virtue. Now I am discovering that niceness without self-regulation can quietly erode the self. You give and give until resentment replaces generosity. You smile while shrinking. You avoid conflict until truth has nowhere left to stand.

Kindness demands more. It demands self-knowledge. It demands the courage to disappoint. It requires taking responsibility for one’s inner life so that one does not outsource emotional regulation to others.

The comments on my last post were not judgments I need to overcome. They are signals. They reflect where I am seen, and they challenge me to be honest about where I actually am. Growth rarely announces itself loudly. More often, it manifests as fewer explanations, calmer responses, and a deeper commitment to acting rightly, even when it costs comfort.

If the older me is quieter, it is because I am listening more closely.
If the older me is firmer, it is because boundaries have become part of kindness.
If the older me seems less eager to please, it is because self-regulation has taught me that being whole matters more than being liked.

Nugget: This is not a finished story. It is a regulated one. And for now, that is enough.

 

2 comments:

  1. Insightful!
    I just understood that kindness is about being a good person, instead of trying to appear as a good person, which is niceness even at the expense of one's emotions and integrity 😌

    Now niceness is often about pleasing others and maintaining surface-level harmony, while kindness comes from genuine empathy, compassion, and integrity, even if it means being honest or setting boundaries, leading to deeper, more authentic connections. Kindness is internal and action-oriented.

    It's just more than a reflection.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Dear Ella
      Thanks for always stopping by. Kindness is indeed internal and action-oriented

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