Little Missy Ego didn’t just bristle. It howled . It summoned every slight from third grade, every overlooked email, every time she was “almost” chosen. In defense, Missy Stone did what the ego does best: she inflated. She became louder, sharper, colder. She interrupted. She name-dropped. She laughed a little too hard at her own joke while scanning the room for approval.
In the shallow, well-lit gallery of the self, there lived a tiny figure named Missy Stone . She was not a person, but a presence—a quiet hum beneath the skin, a flicker in the chest when a stranger scrolled past your photo without liking it.
Her niece, age four, was stacking blocks. Every time the tower fell, the girl giggled and said, “Again!” No shame. No “I’m a failure.” No comparison to her brother’s taller tower.
Missy Stone had a pet. She called it
The world did not end. But inside Missy Stone, something cracked.
Missy Stone realized: Little Missy Ego is not my protector. It is my prison.
“You are not a stone. You are water. And water doesn’t need to be praised to flow.”
So the next time you feel that familiar pinch in your chest—that twitch of defensiveness, that hunger for a trophy—pause. Smile. And say softly to the little missy inside:
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