Unbothered & Aligned: Owning Your Spiritual Gifts in a Skeptical World
There comes a point in your spiritual journey where your confidence gets tested — not by your abilities, but by other people’s opinions.
And if you’re navigating spirituality as a millennial, you already know the vibe. Everything is questioned, analysed, and debated. People want proof, logic, receipts. And when your gifts don’t fit into a neat, explainable box, it can feel like you’re constantly being challenged.
At first, it’s subtle. Someone makes a joke. Someone side-eyes you when you mention tarot or intuition. Someone asks you to “prove it.” And even if you brush it off, there’s a part of you that wonders… wait, am I doing too much? Is this even real?
That’s where insecurity can creep in.
But here’s the truth you have to anchor into: not everyone is meant to understand your gifts — and their scepticism does not invalidate your experience.
Confidence in your spiritual abilities isn’t about being the loudest in the room or arguing with everyone who disagrees with you. It’s not about trying to convert skeptics or over-explaining yourself so people feel comfortable.
Real confidence is quiet. It’s grounded. It’s built on your lived experiences — those moments where your intuition was right, where your readings resonated, where you felt something before it even happened. You don’t need to prove that to anyone.
One of the biggest traps is feeling like you have to perform your spirituality, especially online. Posting constantly, explaining every detail, trying to validate your gifts through other people’s reactions. And while sharing can be beautiful, it becomes draining when it’s rooted in needing approval.
You are not here to perform. You are here to be.
The more you stay connected to your own energy — your intuition, your alignment, your inner knowing — the less outside noise will shake you.
That doesn’t mean criticism won’t affect you at all. You’re human. Some comments will hit. Some doubts will surface. But confidence isn’t about never doubting yourself. It’s about not letting those doubts define you.
It’s also about learning discernment.
Not all criticism is negative. Some feedback can help you grow, refine your approach, and stay grounded in integrity. But there’s a difference between constructive insight and projection. Not everyone questioning you is doing it from a place of understanding — many are speaking from their own limitations. And that’s not yours to carry.
At the end of the day, your spiritual path is deeply personal. Not everyone will believe in what you do. Not everyone will understand how you see or feel energy. And honestly? They’re not supposed to.
Your job isn’t to convince people. Your job is to stay aligned. Stay rooted in your truth. Keep developing your gifts. Protect your energy. And move with the kind of quiet confidence that doesn’t need validation to exist.
I didn’t learn this overnight. It took close to 30 years.
Because the people who are meant to find you? They won’t question your authenticity — they’ll feel it, without second thought or concern.