identity

Beyond Labels: Remembering Who We Are Without Losing Who We’ve Been

 Not long ago, I watched a coaching interview where the coach asked a woman a question that left her visibly uncomfortable.
He said, “Who are you?”
Without hesitation, she answered:
“I’m a mom. A wife. A daughter. A nurse. I’m Anna. I’m 46 years old.”
The coach gently interrupted her and said:
“No, those are just labels. That’s not who you really are. Who are you behind all of that?”

The woman fell silent. Her face turned red. She looked lost and embarrassed. 
And I felt that moment deep in my body.
Because I’ve been that woman. Because I am a mother, a wife, a daughter, a friend, a cook. I’ve carried those labels proudly. I’ve worked hard for them. I’ve loved inside them.
So when someone says, “That’s not who you are,” part of me wants to whisper:
“Then who was I all this time?”

There’s a growing trend in the self-development and spiritual world that urges us to go beyond labels, to strip away the roles, and discover our true identity.
And while I understand the intention behind it, I also think it brings confusion about what “true identity” really means.

I’ve studied it. I’ve explored it. I believe in the deeper self, the one untouched by trauma, age, or story. 
But here’s what I’ve come to realize: we don’t discover who we are by abandoning who we’ve been. We discover it by expanding beyond it.
Sometimes, asking someone to drop all their labels, especially when those labels are deeply tied to love and service, doesn’t lead to liberation. 
It leads to disorientation. It can even feel like erasure. Like saying, “Being a mother, wife, or nurse isn’t real or important. The real you is something else.”

That might be true in the realm of pure consciousness, yes. But here on Earth, where we tuck in children, care for aging parents, make dinner, build businesses, and cry with our sisters, our labels hold meaning. Our identities are not cages. They are expressions. They are holy too.

Even Jesus chose to walk the Earth in human identity, known as the son of Mary and Joseph, to show us that the divine can live within the ordinary. He didn’t deny his humanity; he entered it fully to reveal that love can transform even the simplest life into something holy. He didn’t say, “I’m just pure light.” He said, “I’m the son of man.” He entered identity so he could transcend it with love, not shame.

And so I believe:
You can be a mother and a mystery.
You can be a wife and a wild soul.
You can be a nurse and a vessel of divine love.

Your roles are not the limit of who you are, but they are not lies either. They’re just not the whole story.
So how do we remember who we are? Not by rejecting our human names, ages, and roles, but by getting quiet enough to feel what’s still present when we’re not performing any of them.
By asking: who am I when no one needs me to be anything? 
Who am I when I’m not giving, fixing, explaining, or achieving?
Maybe we don’t answer that question with words right away. 
Maybe we feel into it slowly, softly.

Like this:
I am stillness.
I am awareness.
I am the one who sees.
I am breath, presence, light.
I am the love that lives beneath every label.

But those aren’t new spiritual labels to replace the old ones. They are reminders of what’s always been here. Even when we forgot. Even when we were busy being everything for everyone else.
So maybe the question isn’t just, “Who are you?” 
Maybe it’s, “Who are you becoming now that you know you’re more than just your roles?” 
Who are you when the doing stops and your being begins? What part of you stays the same in every season, in every label, in every silence?
Let that question be an invitation, not an interrogation. 
Let it honor all you’ve carried before asking you to lay anything down. 
Let it be a doorway, not a demand.

Because the woman who says, “I am a mom, a wife, a healer,” is not wrong. 
She’s just remembering that she is also the space behind those words, the light beneath the names, the soul behind the smile.
You don’t have to lose who you’ve been to remember who you are.
Your labels are not cages; they are expressions of the love you came here to live.

Xoxo 
Urszula



Thank you for visiting!

 
I've always felt there must be more to life than just going to school, working, cooking, and cleaning. 
Growing up, this was my mother’s routine, and for a long time, I thought it was mine to follow as well. I believed life was predetermined—shaped by social status and the expectations of those around us. Our family didn’t hold any special status, and I struggled with feelings of inadequacy. I thought of myself as ugly, too short, too heavy—frankly, I didn't like myself much at all.

But as I grew older, I began to feel a growing discomfort. I knew deep down that I wanted something different from life, something more. It took me years to understand that we are often shaped by others' expectations—parents, teachers, society—and that we can lose our true identity when we conform to someone else's vision of who we should be. I fell into that trap, and it led to poor decisions and a deep yearning for love, attention, and happiness. But no matter how hard I searched, I couldn’t find it outside of myself.

Growing up in Eastern Europe had a profound effect on my belief system. I didn’t feel like I had a voice, and when my family immigrated to Canada, that feeling intensified. I didn’t speak English, and the frustration of not being able to express myself made me feel even more lost and isolated. I struggled to belong, feeling like I didn’t fit in anywhere, and that emotional rollercoaster was slowly breaking me down. I had no idea who I was or what my purpose was on this planet.

To make matters worse, as I entered menopause, my health started to deteriorate. I felt sore, exhausted, uncomfortable, and trapped in a body that wasn’t listening to me. I was desperate for relief. Does any of this sound familiar?

For years, I struggled to reconnect with my true self, but I never gave up. I knew in my heart that the key to peace, happiness, and health was finding and following my own path. After countless books, webinars, and guidance from holistic teachers and coaches, I finally realized something powerful: I could rewrite my own story. I wasn’t stuck with the old programming I had absorbed—I could change the narrative.

Was it easy? Absolutely not. But the journey was worth every step. Rebuilding myself from the inside out, letting go of limiting beliefs, and embracing my body—just as it is—allowed me to finally live a life of joy and fulfillment. I’m still a work in progress, but that’s part of the beauty of life: it’s always evolving.
Through self-care, self-love, and total acceptance of who I am, I gained the confidence and courage to live a life of true freedom. Now, I am the author of my own fairy tale, fully owning my story and loving myself along the way. It’s the bravest thing I’ve ever done.

If you’re looking for inspiration or simply someone to share your journey with, let’s connect! I would love to hear your story, answer your questions, or just chat. Feel free to message me on social media or email me anytime—I’d love to hear from you!

xoxo

Urszula

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