They say the truth will set you free. But what if you never say it?
What if you learned, long ago, that love is earned by silence? What if you were rewarded, not for honesty, but for obedience?
And so, you smile when you’re breaking. You nod when you disagree. You say “it’s fine” when it’s anything but.
The world calls it kindness. But your body knows better.
The Spiritual Cost of Pleasing Everyone
There’s a moment most of us can recall: We wanted to say something. Something honest. But we hesitated. What if they misunderstand? What if they pull away?
So we swallowed the truth. Again. And again. And again.
Each unspoken truth becomes a weight. And the body carries what the mind won’t.
In GNM (German New Medicine), the throat often becomes the battleground for these inner wars. Conflicts tied to self-expression, the inability to speak one’s truth, or the fear of not being heard can manifest as chronic throat issues: recurring sore throats, tension, thyroid imbalances, even voice loss.
Not as punishment. But as a signal. A whisper that says: “There is something in you that longs to be heard.”
Truth is Not Violence
Many of us fear that speaking up will make us unkind. But there’s a difference between truth and attack. You can be honest and still be gentle. You can disagree without disconnecting.
And more than that: You can learn to hear your own voice before you worry about who else does.
A Soft Return to Yourself
The journey back to your voice doesn’t begin with shouting. It begins with listening.
When you notice that familiar tightness in your throat… Pause. Breathe. Ask gently: “What am I not saying?”
Let that question sit. Let it echo. And let it guide you back to the truth that’s been waiting.
You are not here to be agreeable. You are here to be whole.
And the world doesn’t need your perfection. It needs your presence.
Start there.
Steve Avan


