Our longing for community and purpose is so powerful that it can
drive us to join groups, relationships, or systems of belief that, to
our diminished or divided self, give the false impression of belonging.
But places of false belonging grant us conditional membership, requiring
us to cut parts of ourselves off in order to fit in. While false
belonging can be useful and instructive for a time, the soul becomes
restless when it reaches a glass ceiling, a restriction that prevents us
from advancing. We may shrink back from this limitation for a time, but
as we grow into our truth, the invisible boundary closes in on us and
our devotion to the groupmind weakens. Your rebellion is a sign of
health. It is the way of nature to shatter and reconstitute. Anything or
anyone who denies your impulse to grow must either be revolutionised or
relinquished.
―
Toko-pa Turner,
Belonging: Remembering Ourselves Home
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