Oriah, in the chapter "Beauty", writes, โFinding and acknowledging the truth is not always easy.โ Later she adds, โIt is easy to fool ourselves into believing the most exciting story.โ Those lines stopped me for a moment, not because they were new, but because they named something Iโve watched play out in real time, in my own life and in the lives of people I love. It reminded me of something a woman, fifteen or more years my senior, once said to me: โSheโs just making up a story she can believe.โ You know that moment when someone names what youโve been circling around, and your whole body says, Well of course. Thatโs it. I was talking about my mother, how she would tell people things about a situation without ever asking me what was true. These werenโt small misunderstandings. They were stories designed to carefully craft perspective. Stories that shaped how others saw me, and how they saw her. What I realized, though, was that her stories werenโt random. They supported what she wanted people to believe about her. Her goodness, her sacrifice, her certainty. Whether they reflected reality didnโt seem to matter. The story was doing a job for her. It was protecting something she needed to feel. And thatโs the part that landed hardest: We all do this, in our own ways. We reach for the version of events that helps us feel safe, or right, or justified. We cling to the narrative that makes our choices make sense. We tell the story we can bear. But real truth asks something different of us. It asks us to pause. To look again. To notice where our stories are stitched together with longing, fear, or old wounds. And to ask, gently: Is this what actually happened? Or is this what I need to believe? Itโs not easy work. But it is liberating work. Because when we stop confusing the story with the truth, we make room for something more honest, more spacious, and more healing to emerge. Do you have faith in truths' ability to find you?