discernment: noun: disยทโcernยทโment di-หsษrn-mษnt
1: the quality of being able to comprehend what is obscure : skill in discerning. He displayed a lack of discernment in selecting suitable job candidates.
2: an act of perceiving or discerning something. theย discernmentย to know true friends.
3: stresses the power to distinguish and select what is true or appropriate or excellent.
I used to believe that respect was the cornerstone of healthy interactionโsomething we owe one another by default. But over time, Iโve learned to look closer, to question whatโs really being asked when someone demands โrespect.โ Discernment has taught me that not all appeals to respect are rooted in mutual regard. Some are cloaked demands for obedience. And thatโs when that shift happens. You realize that some are hiding behind the altruism of needed respect, but really, itโs about authority. Itโs not about listeningโitโs about submitting. Once you see this, you can never unsee it again, it changes your very core and how you respond.
Discernment is a double-edged awakening. On one side, it invites clarity; on the other, it exposes what youโve long tried to bury. When you start to see things as they areโnot as you were told they should beโit can shake your foundation. You notice the manipulation behind a smile, the subtle coercion in a โkindโ word, the conditional love in what once felt like home. And suddenly, youโre face to face with old wounds: betrayal, abandonment, shame, the pain of having trusted what wasnโt trustworthy.
But hereโs the paradoxโthose same moments of piercing clarity are where your deepest gifts emerge. The capacity to see through illusion is not just painfulโitโs powerful. It births intuition. It builds inner strength. Discernment teaches you how to protect your energy, how to hold boundaries with grace, and how to lead with integrity rather than fear. You begin to see patterns not just in others, but in yourself. And from that place, you can choose differently.
Discernment doesnโt numb youโit refines you. It makes the pain honest. And in that honesty, your truest self has space to rise. Just be prepared for the changes that will follow.
Discernment has always been a gift, but itโs also been my hardest teacher. The more I trusted it, the clearer I sawโand the more uncomfortable I became in spaces where people werenโt ready to see. I began asking questions where others remained silent. I pushed back when everyone else seemed content to accept things as they were. And thatโs when I realized: discernment creates disruption. It shifts the balance in a room, changes the dynamics in relationships, and sometimes, it feels like Iโm unsettling the very air people breathe.
In the beginning, I wasnโt sure why people distanced themselves or acted like I was the problem. But it became clearer over timeโpeople donโt like to be questioned, especially by someone they canโt easily dismiss. Itโs like my ability to see through things made them feel exposed, and that was uncomfortable. What I was doing wasnโt just asking questionsโit was forcing them to think differently, and not everyone is prepared for that. Not everyone is willing to examine their own beliefs or actions, especially when doing so might mean confronting something painful.
And so, I became the person who pushed the boundaries of comfort, who made people rethink their assumptions. And in doing so, I started to lose people. They didnโt want to walk through the disruption with meโthey just wanted things to stay the same, easy, unquestioned. They didnโt want to see what I saw. Iโve been called stubborn, difficult, โtoo intense.โ But as painful as it is sometimes to stand alone, I know now that this disruption is necessary. Without it, I wouldnโt grow. Without it, I wouldnโt be living my truth.
xx gail
5 responses to โBeing a Disruptor and Choosing Discernment!โ
The best line, โYou switch from supply to threat.โ
From one distruptor to anotherโฆgreat read.
Love this!
Great post!
Great post!