Living at the Edges

A figure holding a lantern walks a twilight forest path lined with glowing lights, navigating the edges between darkness and illumination under starlit trees.

Some people do not pass through crisis.

They build their lives around it.

Not intentionally. Not dramatically. It just happens. The nervous system learns early that things change fast, safety is conditional, and calm is temporary. So it stays alert. Ready. Slightly ahead of the moment.

From the outside, this can look like intensity. Big emotions. Strong attachments. All-or-nothing choices. A tendency to live at the edges rather than settling into the middle.

From the inside, it feels practical.

The middle can feel thin. Like standing still without bracing. Like waiting for something to drop. Extremes make more sense because they are familiar. They are legible. They feel honest.

This is usually where people start wondering what is wrong with them.

Why rest feels uncomfortable.

Why stillness feels empty.

Why “normal” life feels oddly unreal.

So the work begins. Regulate. Stabilize. Calm down. Find balance. Move toward the middle.

And sometimes that helps.

Sometimes it doesn’t.

Because not every system was built for quiet. Some were shaped in environments where attention mattered more than ease. Where staying alert kept things from falling apart. Those systems are not broken. They are adapted.

The trouble starts when adaptation gets mistaken for pathology.

Living at the edges gets labeled as avoidance, dysregulation, or resistance. Intensity becomes something to fix instead of something to understand. The goal quietly shifts toward becoming easier, softer, more moderate.

But that goal often misses the point.

Another pattern tends to show up here.

The world gets smaller.

Not dramatically. Just selectively. Fewer people. Fewer needs. Less reliance. Independence starts to feel like safety. Keeping things contained feels like control.

It can look healthy on the surface. Boundaries. Self-sufficiency. Not needing much.

But often, it is simply exposure management. Fewer connections mean fewer ruptures. Fewer misunderstandings. Fewer moments that require repair when the system is already stretched thin.

So connection narrows. Not because people are unnecessary, but because wide connection asks for tolerance. For friction. For staying present when things are imperfect.

And then there is the question that tends to sit underneath all of this.

Will this ever feel okay.

For some people, the honest answer is complicated.

Not everything resolves. Some experiences leave permanent imprints. They reorganize how a person moves through the world. Something stays alert. Something stays tender. Something never fully rests.

That does not mean a meaningful life is out of reach.

It means the metric has to change.

Health is not always about returning to the middle. Sometimes it is about learning how to live at the edges with more awareness, more choice, and less self-judgment.

Not quieter.

Not smaller.

Just less driven by reflex.

The work is not erasing what shaped you.

It is learning how to live with it without letting it decide everything.

Embracing Shadows, Illuminating Hope,
Chelsey Fjeldheim, LCSW
Empowering Souls on the Path of Healing

Copyright © 2025 Chelsey Fjeldheim, Courage Speaks Counseling

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