Stop Expecting You From Everyone Else
There comes a moment in life when you realize that not everyone loves the way you do, cares the way you do, or carries the same emotional depth that you naturally offer to others. That realization can feel disappointing at first, but in reality, it is one of the most important lessons in emotional maturity.
Many people move through life believing that others think like them, value loyalty like them, or would show up for people the same way they would. We assume our kindness is common because it feels natural to us. But people are shaped by different experiences, values, priorities, and emotional capacities. Not everyone is built from the same emotional fabric.
That is where expectations begin to hurt us.
When you constantly expect people to respond with the same level of care, understanding, and sincerity that you give, you unknowingly create a reflection of yourself in your mind. Instead of seeing people for who they truly are, you begin seeing them as extensions of yourself. And when reality does not match that expectation, disappointment follows.
But the lesson is not to become cold, distant, or less kind.
The lesson is awareness.
True emotional intelligence is recognizing that your nature is your own. Your willingness to stay, support, check on people, and make sure they are okay is a reflection of your character — not a standard that everyone else naturally lives by. Some people simply do not operate from the same emotional depth, and understanding that can save you from unnecessary hurt and frustration.
Being a kind person does not mean everyone will treat you kindly. Being loyal does not guarantee loyalty in return. And being emotionally available does not mean others will know how to show up for you in the same way. That difference is not always malicious; sometimes, it is simply human nature.
The problem begins when we continue expecting ourselves from people who were never built like us.
Growth comes when we stop trying to force similarity and start accepting individuality. When we learn to understand people instead of trying to remake them into reflections of our own values, we protect our peace while still holding onto our goodness.
You do not need to harden your heart to survive the world. You simply need to stop assuming every heart carries the same language as yours.
Not everyone will mirror your soul, your morals, or your intentions — and that is okay.
The moment you understand this, relationships become clearer, expectations become healthier, and your kindness becomes something you give consciously rather than something you sacrifice blindly.
Because emotional maturity is not learning how to care less.
It is learning where your care truly belongs.
Gunjan Shrivastav
Counselling Psychologist