Post #8: “When She Says ‘I Don’t Fit In’ — Helping Her Belong Without Losing Herself”
- Daughters of India
- Jun 2
- 3 min read
From the series: Raising Her Right – A Mother’s Journey Through the Pre-Teen Years
“I Don’t Fit In” — And the Ache That Comes With It
It might begin quietly. She’s scrolling more, talking less. The group chat goes silent for her, but not for others. She hesitates before school, saying things like:
“They’re just… not my kind of people.”
“They didn’t invite me again.”
“I don’t fit in.”
As a mother, those words sting. You want to swoop in, solve the problem, call someone. But deep down, you know this is part of the growing. It’s part of the unbecoming and becoming that girls must walk through — especially in 2025, where identity is shaped not just in classrooms and corridors, but in curated profiles, blurred selfies, and social feeds that constantly say, “Be more like her.”
But here’s the truth: fitting in isn’t the goal. Belonging is.
And she doesn’t need to change who she is to find it.
1. Fitting In vs. Belonging — The 2025 Reality
Let’s be honest: today’s girls live in a world that tells them belonging is earned — by looking right, speaking right, editing right.
But we know better.
Fitting in says: “Shrink, adapt, perform.”
Belonging says: “Come as you are, stay as you grow.”
In 2025, with identity constantly under digital scrutiny — AI beauty filters, online friend hierarchies, cancel culture, and screenshot gossip — the pressure to conform is louder than ever.
We have to teach our girls that authenticity isn’t a flaw — it’s their compass.
2. What to Say When She Feels Left Out
When she says she doesn’t fit in, don’t rush to correct her. Don’t say, “Of course you do!” or “They’re just jealous.” Those may feel comforting to us — but to her, they feel like dismissals.
Instead, try:
“That must feel really lonely. Want to tell me more?”
“I see how hard you’re trying to be yourself. That’s brave.”
“You don’t have to be like them. You have to be like you — and that’s more than enough.”
The goal isn’t to rescue her. It’s to walk beside her as she finds her people — and protects her peace in the meantime.
3. Help Her Choose Environments, Not Just Friendships
Let her explore spaces where difference is welcomed, not just tolerated. Clubs, online communities, creative classes, volunteering opportunities — anywhere that values what she brings, not just how well she blends.
Ask her:
“Where do you feel most relaxed?”
“Who do you feel like you can exhale around?”
“When do you feel most like yourself?”
These aren’t just social questions — they’re self-worth builders.
4. Model Belonging at Home
Home should never be the place she has to audition for love.
Let her disagree respectfully. Let her be messy. Let her question. Let her change her mind. Show her that who she is — not who she performs as — is always welcome.
And if she ever says, “I don’t know who I am,” tell her gently:
“You don’t have to know yet. You just have to keep listening. I’ll be here while you figure it out.”
💬 From One Mother to Another
She will walk into rooms where no one claps.
She will exist in spaces where she’s too quiet, too loud, too different, too much.
But she will find her place.
And until then, be her place.
Because belonging starts not in the world — but in the mirror, and in the heart of a mother who says:
“You are enough, even when they don’t see it.”
🔗 Next in the Series:
Post #9: “Why She’s So Hard on Herself — And How to Teach Her Self-Compassion”
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