Gurleen Sandhu Life Coaching
  • Blog
  • Coaching
  • Podcast
  • About me
Book Now
  • Permission: Learning to Make Choices

    Sometimes, the greatest freedom we can find is the freedom to choose our own path, even when the road ahead is uncertain.

    ⏱Reading time: ~5 minutes

    seven white closed doors

    Watching from the Window

    I used to watch from my bedroom window as my friends stayed out late, their laughter echoing through the warm night air. Meanwhile, I sat inside, curfewed and careful, bound by rules I didn’t choose.
    Growing up as a girl in a South Asian household, my world was shaped by restrictions: no staying out late, no sleeveless tops, no saying no to chores — and no decision, big or small, without permission.

    It wasn’t until much later that I realized this story wasn’t just about the rules I lived under — it was about the choices I made within them.

    Living Under Watch

    My life felt like it was constantly under surveillance.
    It wasn’t until I moved out that I experienced what it truly meant to breathe — to live freely.

    But this is not a story about blame.
    This is a story about choices — mine.

    I could have chosen rebellion, could have pushed back against everything they stood for.
    Or, I could choose to stay, to listen, and to find my own way within the life they created for me.
    I chose the latter.

    Carrying the Weight of Obedience

    But obedience didn’t mean I didn’t feel the weight of it.
    By the time I was 19, resentment had quietly built up inside me.
    I followed the rules, but inwardly, I felt caged — watching everyone around me move through life with a freedom I longed for, while I stayed rooted in a life that felt much smaller than my dreams.

    Tasting Freedom for the First Time

    When I finally left for university, it felt like I could breathe for the first time.
    No curfews.
    No permission slips for living my own life.
    I could go wherever I wanted, wear whatever I wanted, and — most importantly — I could begin choosing for myself.

    Freedom was beautiful.
    But it was also unfamiliar — like learning to walk again after being still for too long.

    Realizing I Could Trust Myself

    person holding white daisy flower

    For a while, I lived in contrast:
    At home, I shrank myself to fit the restrictions.
    At university, I stretched into the spaces freedom allowed.

    And I realized something important —
    I was not someone who misused freedom.

    Even when no one was watching, I made good choices for myself.
    That realization built a new kind of confidence in me — a quiet knowing that freedom would not break me; it would shape me.

    Looking Back with Compassion

    In that space of growth, I began to reflect on the anger I had carried toward my parents.
    I saw how many adults around me still held onto resentment from their childhoods, dragging it through their entire lives.
    I didn’t want to do the same.

    So I backtracked.
    I asked myself:

    • Were my parents trying to restrict me — or protect me?
    • Were they acting from fear — or from love?
    • Were they simply doing the best they could with what they knew?

    Watching my older brother’s struggles with substance abuse had terrified them.
    Moving to a new country as immigrants, losing the familiar culture they had once known — all of it had left them grasping for ways to protect their children in an unfamiliar world.

    Their love looked like rules, like walls — but it was love nonetheless.

    Healing Our Relationship

    As I softened my perspective, I saw them soften too.
    I stopped putting them on a pedestal.
    I began seeing them simply as human beings — flawed, doing their best, sometimes failing, but always trying.

    Slowly, our relationship began to heal.

    Where I Stand Today

    seashore

    Now, in my 30s, as I reflect back, I realize just how far I have come.
    Today, I make my own decisions with confidence.
    I have traveled to the places I once only dreamed of — even taken a solo trip that once would have seemed impossible.
    And perhaps most importantly, I have healed not just my relationship with my parents, but also my relationship with myself.
    Healing is an ongoing journey — one I am willing to continue walking, with patience and openness.

    If I hadn’t chosen healing, I would still be waiting for someone else to give me permission to live.
    I would have carried that unhealed version of myself into every friendship, every partnership, every dream — unknowingly asking others to validate what I needed to claim for myself.

    Today, I notice the old patterns sometimes — the urge to seek permission — but I also see how far I have come.
    I see how much lighter my relationship with my parents feels.
    I see them clearly now, not just as “parents,” but as human beings who did the best they could with what they knew.

    And more than anything, I feel grateful — for the journey, for the growth, and for the freedom I finally found within myself.


    Choosing Healing Over Holding On

    Sometimes it feels like we don’t have choices — especially when we’re young and life seems decided for us.
    But I truly believe we always have a choice.
    Maybe not in our childhood, when the world around us shapes so much of who we are.
    But in adulthood, the power shifts back into our hands.

    We cannot change what happened to us.
    We cannot rewrite the past.
    But we can choose how we carry it.
    We can choose to heal, to grow, and to move beyond the stories that once defined us.

    Choosing healing is not always easy — it takes patience, courage, and compassion for ourselves and others.
    But it is the kind of choice that frees us.
    It’s the choice that opens the door to a life we build on our own terms — with love, with strength, and with hope.

    In the end, healing is the greatest permission we can ever give ourselves.

    Gurleen Sandhu

    April 28, 2025
    Blog
    Emotional Wellness, inner healing, mindfulness, personal growth, self-awareness, Transforming Your Story
  • Letting Go of the Narrative: Healing Beyond the Story

    We all have stories we tell about ourselves. Where we came from. What shaped us. Who hurt us. Who we had to become to survive.

    ⏱ Reading time: ~ 5 minutes

    monochrome photo of couple holding hands

    If someone asked for the story of our life, we start in childhood and build from there—layer by layer, memory by memory. These stories feel true. They explain who we are. But what if the version we’ve been telling ourselves isn’t the whole truth? What if it’s only our version?

    The Story I Held Onto

    When I was 10 years old, I remember playing with my older brother, who was 15 at the time. We were chasing each other around the house, laughing, full of energy. I was running as fast as I could because I didn’t want to be caught, I did not want to lose. At one point, we both paused to catch our breath. I looked back and saw him start moving again, so I took off running. Just a few wild, flying steps later, I ran straight into a wall. I cut the skin near my right eyebrow and had to get stitches. I was furious. I blamed my brother for everything—the pain, the injury, the scar. For years, that was the version of the story I carried with me.

    But when I brought it up to him years later, he told a different version. He remembered the pause too, but said he never started running again. I just looked back, assumed he was coming, and ran. The wall came out of nowhere and I ran into it on my own.

    When Memory Becomes Identity

    Memory is a strange thing. We remember events through our own lens, shaped by emotion, interpretation, and time. And the more we repeat a story to ourselves, the more it becomes the truth… even if it’s just our truth.

    That’s the power of stories, we don’t just tell them, we live inside them. Each time we replay a memory in our minds, or retell what happened to someone else, we reinforce the narrative. It becomes more solid, more believable, more real.

    Our minds don’t always store the full picture. Instead, the subconscious holds onto the emotional snapshot—the exact moment that hurt, scared, or shocked us—and the feelings we had in that instant. Over time, those feelings get ingrained into our identity. We stop seeing it as something that happened and start seeing it as something we are. Without realizing it, we begin to shape our personality, our reactions, even our self-worth around that single moment.

    When we’re young, we don’t have the tools to question this. Therefore, the pattern runs on autopilot. But as adults, it becomes our responsibility to pause, reflect, and process these stories. To feel the emotions we once buried. To understand what really happened—and what we made it mean.

    Because yes, what happened was real. And yes, how we felt in that moment was real. But that doesn’t mean the story we built around it still needs to define who we are today.

    🌱 How to Start Reshaping a Story

    Reshaping a story isn’t about rewriting the past. It’s about reclaiming your power in the present. Here’s how to begin:

    1

    Name the story you’ve been carrying.
    What’s a belief or memory you find yourself repeating?

    Think prompt:
    What’s a moment or belief that feels like it still defines me?

    2

    Acknowledge how it made you feel.
    Give space to the emotion—not to relive the pain, but to release it.

    Think prompt:
    When I think about that moment, what emotions still live in my body?

    3

    Explore the meaning you created.
    What belief about yourself or the world came from that story?

    Think prompt:
    What did I come to believe about myself because of this?

    4

    Choose to let go of how it defined you.

    Maybe that story once made you feel small, unworthy, unsafe, or unseen. Maybe it taught you to protect yourself in ways that no longer serve who you are today. Now is the time to loosen your grip. To recognize that while that moment shaped you, it doesn’t have to define you anymore.

    Think prompt:

    In what ways have I let this story define who I am? What parts of that definition am I ready to release?

    Healing starts when we challenge the story we tell ourselves. Some ask, why should we even do that? Because the stories we carry shape how we see ourselves, how we show up in relationships, and how we navigate the world. If we never pause to examine those stories, we risk living from a version of ourselves that’s outdated, incomplete, or no longer true.

    We question the narrative because we long to build a healthier relationship with ourselves—to feel more at ease in our own skin, to invite more harmony and compassion into our lives, and to reconnect with who we truly are beneath the layers of old meaning and memory. When we do this, we don’t erase the past—we simply choose to meet it with curiosity and tenderness. And in doing so, we give ourselves the power to write a new story—one rooted in awareness, healing, and truth.

    Gurleen Sandhu

    April 8, 2025
    Blog
    Emotional Healing, Healing Beyond Story, Letting Go of Narrative, Letting Go of the Past, Overcoming Limiting Beliefs, personal growth, Rewriting Your Life, self-awareness, Spiritual Healing, Transforming Your Story
  • Embrace Your Emotions: The Key to True Resilience

    What if we stopped labeling emotions as good or bad—and started honoring every feeling as part of being human?

    ⏱ Reading time: ~ 2 minutes

    closeup photo of woman s eyes

    Embracing the Full Spectrum of Emotions: Why Every Feeling Matters

    Humans experience a vast and beautiful range of emotions. But from an early age, many of us are taught to ignore or suppress certain ones.

    Society often labels emotions like sadness, anger, and fear as “negative,” while praising only the “positive” ones—happiness, joy, and excitement. We hear things like:

    • “Don’t cry.”
    • “Don’t be upset.”
    • “Stay strong.”

    The message is often clear: quickly return to smiling, find a reason to laugh, and just push through.

    But here’s something you might not know—humans can experience around 27 distinct emotions. So why are we encouraged to suppress so many of them? Why are only a few embraced?


    💭 The Fear of Feeling Too Much

    One reason could be fear. We’re afraid that if we truly let ourselves feel grief, sadness, or anger, we might get stuck there—that we’ll spiral and never find our way back.

    But when we constantly push these feelings aside, we risk losing touch with ourselves. We may lean too heavily on logic, or worse, numb ourselves entirely. And while being rational has its place, true well-being comes from balance.

    When we allow ourselves to feel, we open the door to deeper relationships, inner peace, and real connection—with ourselves and others.


    🌿 What If We Were Taught to Feel?

    What if, instead of being told to ignore our emotions, we were taught to understand and manage them?

    Imagine learning how to:

    • Hold space for your sadness without fear
    • Acknowledge frustration without guilt
    • Sit with grief and still feel gratitude

    Balance isn’t always 50/50. Some days, it’s 60/40. Others, it might be 80/20. What matters is the freedom to feel it all, without shame or judgment.


    🛠 Tools to Help You Feel It All

    There are so many supportive tools that can help us navigate our emotions:

    • Mindfulness
    • Journaling
    • Therapy or Coaching
    • Breathwork and Meditation

    These practices help us regulate, reflect, and reconnect with ourselves. Over time, we begin to trust that we can handle the full emotional ride of life—not just the easy parts.


    🌟 You Deserve to Feel Fully Alive

    When we learn to embrace our emotional world, we move beyond simply surviving.

    We begin thriving—living with depth, honesty, and heart.

    Every emotion is part of your story. Each one brings a message, a lesson, or a moment of connection. Let them in. Give them space. Let them teach you.

    Because when we welcome the full spectrum of what it means to be human, we don’t just live—we come alive.

    Gurleen Sandhu

    November 26, 2024
    Blog
    embracing emotions, emotional intelligence, emotional regulation, emotional resilience, emotional well-being, feeling your feelings, full range of emotions, healing through emotions, how to process emotions, inner healing, mental health awareness, mental health blog, mindfulness and emotions, personal growth, self-awareness

Let’s stay connected.

Join a community of readers exploring life’s transitions with intention.

Get thoughtful blog posts that support your growth — mind, body, and soul.

Continue reading

© Copyright 2025. All rights reserved.

  • Instagram
  • Spotify

Privacy Policy