The Gift of Being on the Outside
A reflection on otherness, visibility, and the bridges between what has been and what is possible.

There can be a particular loneliness that comes from never quite fitting into the systems we are born into or invited to stand inside of.
Not because we were unwelcome, but because something in us always knew the spaces did not quite fit us.
We learn early how to hover near the edges.
How to listen more than speak.
How to observe the rhythms of belonging without fully stepping into them.
We become familiar with the feeling of being adjacently included — close enough to witness, distant enough to avoid dissolving into what is expected.
For many of us, this becomes a quiet grief. The sense that everyone else received a manual we somehow missed. That belonging comes easily to others, while we are left translating ourselves again and again, hoping that one day the effort will finally work.
Yet over time, another truth begins to surface.
We are not on the outside because we are lacking.
We are on the outside because we are not quite like the others.
Not Like the Others
People like us (the empaths, HSPs, intuitives, heart led), do not typically fit neatly into inherited systems, family roles, cultural expectations, or collective agreements. Not because we are rebellious for the sake of rebellion, but because our nervous systems, values, or perception cannot contort itself into what has always been done.
We are often the chain breakers.
The quiet questioners.
The ones who sense incongruence long before it is spoken.
We remain in proximity.
We participate.
We contribute.
Yet we do not disappear.
We are not the outsiders who reject accountability or seeks exile through harm. We are the ones who stay close enough to belong, but far enough to see clearly…and that difference matters.
Marked at the Edge
What I’ve experienced is that many of us who live just outside the circle often become easier targets.
Not because we are weak — but because we are visible.
Sometimes without even trying because our very essence just stands out.
There is an old social reflex that activates when someone does not blend in. When you are not reinforcing the shared illusion, not mirroring the dominant tone, not smoothing yourself into sameness, you stand out.
And as many of us know, standing out has long been treated as something that needs correction.
This is where familiar phrases are used.
The black sheep.
You stick out like a sore thumb.
The black sheep is still a sheep, and a thumb is still part of the hand, yet both are treated as “not quite right.”
Even the stories we tell children carry this imprint.
The Ugly Duckling — ridiculed for being different, only later revealed as a swan.
Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer — sidelined for his visibility, welcomed only when his difference becomes useful.
These stories endure because they reflect a collective truth: difference is often punished until it proves its value.
Those of us at the edge are more likely to be misunderstood, projected upon, subtly mocked, or quietly excluded in the very space we are supposed to be a part of. Our otherness makes us convenient vessels for the discomfort others do not want to examine within themselves.
This is not always overt cruelty. Often it arrives as humor disguised as teasing, silence disguised as neutrality, or belonging granted conditionally.
I know that for myself, I started internalizing the message:
If I were less visible, I would be safer.
If I blended in more, this would stop.
It has taken me years to realize that blending in has never been what I was here to do..
The View from the Edge
What I’ve noticed is that being on the outside does something subtle to perception.
We are not absorbed into the collective trance of agreement.
We are not rewarded for mirroring the dominant story.
We are not anesthetized by belonging at all costs.
Instead, we notice patterns.
We see where loyalty requires self-betrayal.
We sense where humor masks harm.
We feel where tradition has outlived its truth.
Those on the inside are often busy maintaining their place within the structure. Those at the edge can see both the beauty and the cost.
This is not superiority, it is simply a vantage point.
Bridges, Not Bystanders
Many of us carry a role we did not consciously choose, but were shaped for… we are the bridges.
Bridges between generations.
Between inherited survival strategies and emerging wisdom.
Between what once worked and what no longer fits.
We get to translate possibility before language exists for it. We feel the tension of standing between worlds — belonging fully to neither, yet carrying insight for both.
Bridges are rarely celebrated while they are needed.
They are often walked across, questioned, or dismissed.
Yet without them, nothing new can pass through.
The Tenderness of Otherness
This does not mean being on the outside is painless.
It can ache to be the one who sees differently.
It can exhaust the nervous system to be quietly scrutinized.
It can create moments of self-doubt when mirrors are scarce.
There are nights when the edge feels cold.
When you wish, just once, to melt into sameness without explanation.
This grief deserves tenderness.
Otherness is not a wound to be erased. It is a sensitivity to incongruence. A refusal — often unconscious — to trade aliveness for acceptance.
A Different Kind of Belonging
Over time, many outsiders stop trying to force entry into spaces that cannot hold them. They build smaller, truer circles. Or they learn to walk alone without interpreting solitude as failure.
They begin to belong to themselves first.
Belonging becomes less about proximity and more about integrity. Less about approval and more about alignment.
The outside stops feeling like exile and starts feeling like choice.
Not because connection is no longer desired — but because self-abandonment is no longer acceptable.
Closing Thoughts
If you have spent much of your life feeling slightly out of place, consider this:
Perhaps you were never meant to blend in.
Perhaps your role was to stand close enough to participate, but far enough to remember what matters.
Perhaps your visibility was not a flaw, but a function.
Bridges do not belong to one side or the other.
They exist so something new can be crossed into.
In a world quietly longing for evolution, the quiet gift of being on the outside is no small thing.
Reflection Prompts
Where in your life have you been trying to blend in for safety, and what might become possible if you allowed yourself to honor your natural visibility instead?
In what ways has being “on the outside” sharpened your perception, values, or integrity — even if it once felt like a wound?
What would it look like to belong to yourself first, before seeking belonging anywhere else?
I’d love to hear what this brought up for you.
Your reflections are part of the medicine, and every voice adds to the remembering of our collective sovereignty.
If this reflection stirred something within you, consider sharing it with someone who’s walking their own path of becoming. The ripples begin when we share the light we’ve found.
If you’re new here, welcome. I started Reflections from the Temple to be a space for those returning to their center — one breath, one truth, one remembrance at a time. Subscribe to receive each new reflection directly in your inbox.



This genuinely feels like you've written about my life John! I had always been the 3rd, 5th or 7th wheel in any friends group. The person everyone shared their stories with but never asked what's happening with me. Wanting to fit in either made me a full giver or just numb not feeling anything.
And then I met other weirdos like me and life transformed. Because simply the realisation that there are others like me ...where I don't have to explain my being to them ...where I don't have to apologise at every turn ...gosh! What a relief! They acted like bridges to bring me to the other side. Inspired me to embrace all parts of myself. Stand in my own power and gifts. Be okay with not being understood by everyone.
Life has radically transformed in the last 4 years. It gives me chills!