“I am who I am” – is it truly authentic or a safe place …?
Authenticity Beneath the Layers
What does it truly mean to be authentic? Beyond the words ‘I am who I am,’ it sounds strong. Clear. Almost final. And I question how and when these words are being used?
‘I am who I am‘
The phrase “I am who I am” can reflect self-awareness and inner reflection. But when does it become a defensive expression that limits growth?
And yet, when we pause with this sentence, a deeper question quietly can arise:
Who is the one saying this? Is it really you — or the many voices in your ears, over and over again?
The Identity We Learned to Wear
Each of us grows within systems — families, cultures, religion, unspoken rules — where expectations and beliefs quietly shape and refine us as we move through the world.
Our upbringing and environment can support our true nature to emerge — or it can teach us to hide parts of ourselves to survive, to be safe, to protect wounds and pain, and search to belong.
The behaviors we develop are not random. They are learned responses — ways to adapt and to be accepted. These adaptations are no right or wrong. They are intelligent. They once supported us, protected us, and helped us find our place in the world.
And yet, over time, something subtle happens.
What was a response becomes an identity.
What was protection becomes a story.
What was learned becomes belief.
Slowly, often without noticing, we can lose contact with the one we are beneath all of this. And then we say: “I am who I am.”
But who is speaking?
Familiar Voices or Living Essence?
Is it the essence of you — or the voices of past situations, old wounds, learned roles, and inherited expectations? We respond to life through memory, through moments where we were hurt, through moments where protection felt necessary. These voices repeat themselves until they sound like the truth.
What we often call authentic may simply be what feels familiar.
Authenticity Is Uncovered, Not Created
Authenticity is not something we create or perform. It is something we uncover.
When layers begin to fall away, fear often appears.
The fear of being fragile.
Of being fully visible.
Of being seen — or misunderstood.
There is no fear when the I AM truly lives the true being.
Without our familiar layers, there can be a feeling of exposure. Of vulnerability. Of having nothing left to defend.
But what is there to defend? When the I AM truly lives the true being. When we have the courage to take one layer after another off, our vulnerability becomes a strength. The true you can expand. And how can we protect the true I AM?
As the layers soften and the true self begins to expand, a quiet, gentle question arises: Who is the I am in me that longs to be seen and to shine? It is not the many layers or whispering voices that define us. It is the unique you — and when it is truly seen, the world catches the gentle reflection of this essence.
The Body Remembers the Way
The body understands this process before the mind does.
Breath, sensation, and tension do not pretend. When the nervous system feels safe, the body naturally lets go of what it no longer needs to be held.
It emerges when effort softens, when holding relaxes, when we stop trying to be someone. In those moments, we do not ask who we are.
We simply ARE.
It is a process of continuously listening to your authentic YOU.
And maybe that is the quiet truth beneath it all:
When something real in us takes place, it does not stay contained.
It softens how we meet ourselves.
It changes how we meet others.
It brings more light — not by effort, but by presence.
Authenticity is not a statement. It is a gentle, ongoing willingness to let what is real in you be seen — and to trust that this light belongs in the world.
Written by Apollonia Holzer
Personal Transformation Coach and Body Practitioner
Healing your younger self is a powerful way to reconnect with forgotten parts of yourself and move toward greater wholeness.
What Happens When the Younger Self Shows Up
Sometimes, the reaction feels bigger than the moment.
Is it a tone of voice? A delayed response? A look that lingers just a second too long?
Before we go further, what do we mean by the “younger self”?
It’s the part of us that carries the feelings, beliefs, and bodily experiences from earlier stages of life—often childhood. It’s not a separate person, but a way to notice the memories, sensations, and patterns that still influence us today. This part of us reacts as if the past is happening now, holding strategies we once developed to survive—freeze, flight, fight, or fawn.
Suddenly, something inside tightens. The body responds. The breath becomes shallow. Words disappear—or spill out too fast. The present moment blurs, and we are no longer just here. Something shifts inside us, and often, the younger self steps forward. We find ourselves transported to a different time, into a memory, without fully knowing what is happening—yet a lived experience enters the present moment.
The younger self often appears unexpectedly, without explanation. Something in our current experience touches a past sensation. Our nervous system, which has recorded every moment of our history, remembers what danger feels like. And when the present carries even the faintest echo of past unsafety, the body responds as if the original threat is happening again.
What Happens in Those Moments
Patterns and beliefs can become reinforced, and stored feelings in our tissues and autonomic nervous system may surface. We can feel exposed and open to being hurt over and over again by our environment, even when it has changed, because the wound in us was never healed. And who protects this part of us when the growing-up part is not there? The wounded younger self in the growing-up body is often unaware of the passage of time or shifts in circumstances. It responds as if past events are still unfolding, carrying needs and wounds that were never fully met. Growing up occurs not only in the physical body but also in the mental, emotional, and energetic body. As we become aware of these patterns, we can meet them with care and presence, bringing conscious choice to both body and mind as life unfolds in the present.
It is not because:
- We are weak
- We are broken
It is because the body remembers what the mind has moved past.
The Younger Self Lives in the Present Tense
The younger self does not know time the way the adult mind does. It cannot distinguish between then and now. When activated, it responds as if the original situation is unfolding again.
- If it once learned that speaking led to punishment, it may go silent now.
- If it learned that closeness meant danger, it may pull away—even from love.
- If it learned that being seen was unsafe, it may shrink, freeze, or disappear.
In those moments, the younger self is simply trying to survive. Survival strategies that once created safety in an unsafe space can now limit our experience, taking over our present moment.
What Happens When It Does Not Feel Safe
When the younger self does not feel safe, the nervous system takes over. Logic and reasoning step aside, narrowing the choices we perceive in the moment. The body moves into protection, and the vagus nerve shifts into fight, flight, freeze, or fawn:
- Fight may look like defensiveness, anger, or sudden certainty.
- Flight may look like a distraction, overthinking, or the urge to leave.
- Freeze may look like numbness, confusion, or feeling stuck and unable to respond.
- Fawn may look like people-pleasing, over-agreeing, or abandoning one’s own needs.
Often, the hardest part is noticing these reactions within ourselves.
Meeting the Younger Self in the Now
Healing does not require revisiting every detail of the past. Often, it begins by:
- Allowing to feel what is there
- Giving space for what is there
- Naming the feeling without judgment
- Asking, What do I need?
Integration, Not Elimination
It is not to get rid of the younger self, but to heal the wounded part of it. To be kind and have compassion—and over time, we will respond instead of react.
The present moment then becomes what it actually is—not a reenactment of the past, but a space where choice, connection, and grounding are possible.
When the younger self feels safe enough, it does not disappear.
It awakens qualities of innocence, curiosity, trust, aliveness, and enthusiasm, helping us experience more inner peace, understanding, acceptance, compassion, and joy.
The systemic family constellation work and transformational coaching offer ways to meet the wounded younger self and support its healing, bringing awareness of what it needed when it was helpless.
Look out for upcoming workshops.