
When the Light Burns Instead of Warms
We love to talk about light like it’s always soft.
Like sunlight filtered through lace or candlelight on a quiet night.
But what happens when the light gets brighter than we bargained for?
What if it doesn’t calm but confronts?
The truth is:
Light isn’t always gentle. Sometimes, it sears.
It cracks foundations and peels back layers. It exposes.
And maybe, just maybe, that’s exactly what we need.
The Glow That Gutted My Comfort Zone

It happened a few years ago, during a quiet morning.
I had a sudden clarity about a friendship that had slowly begun to suffocate my spirit.
It wasn’t dramatic. No fights. Just a slow erosion of joy and authenticity.
She liked the version of me that stayed small—agreeable, soft-spoken, never too deep.
But I had started changing.
I began reading more about energetic boundaries, integrity, and vibrational alignment.
I started speaking up.
My light began to shift. Not into something aggressive but something true.
She didn’t like that.
And when I stood up for myself, gently but clearly, she disappeared.
For a long time, I questioned myself. Was I wrong? Too intense?
But over time, I realized:
The brighter your light, the more you reveal what’s been hiding in the shadows.
Not everyone wants to see, and not everyone can stay.
Light as a Wildfire, Not a Nightlight

We’ve been taught that “spiritual light” is tranquil.
That it should only ever make people feel safe, held, inspired.
But spiritual light is also disruptive.
It can unravel the carefully constructed personas we wear just to get by.
Think of it like wildfire in a dense, overgrown forest.
Yes, it looks destructive.
But what does fire really do?
It clears dead wood.
It makes space for new life.
In nature, that’s how rebirth happens.
And in our lives?
That’s often how truth enters.
Not through soft whispers.
But through a blaze that can no longer be ignored.
You lose the job that gave you security but cost you your soul.
You walk away from a partner who stopped seeing your light.
You finally admit that pretending to be “fine” has kept you from being free.
This is sacred, too.
This is light, too.
Shadow Work Isn’t a Trend—It’s a Turning Point

Right now, “shadow work” is all over social media.
But this isn’t just another self-help hashtag.
It’s the real, raw work of facing what we’ve been avoiding.
When your light expands, it casts shadows.
That’s not failure. That’s physics.
Just as sunlight makes the tallest tree cast the longest shade, your rising awareness can reveal the deepest wounds.
Don’t fear them.
Get curious.
Ask:
- What parts of myself am I afraid to outgrow?
- What relationships are holding on to an old version of me?
- Where have I mistaken comfort for connection?
As Debbie Ford said in The Dark Side of the Light Chasers, “We cannot have the light without the shadow.”
Facing your shadows is what enables your light to deepen.
Let Your Truth Disrupt What No Longer Fits

The next time you feel your light burning away what used to fit—don’t shrink back.
Let it.
Because growth isn’t supposed to feel like perfection.
It feels like discomfort.
It feels like reintroducing yourself to people who thought they knew you.
It can feel like walking barefoot through the ashes of what used to be.
Then realizing you’re still standing.
Spirituality isn’t about bypassing the pain. It’s about honoring the truth in it.
It’s about letting your radiance rise.
Rise not just as a balm, but as a beacon.
Your presence will shake things up.
Some people will leave. Some truths will sting.
But what stays?
Will be real and resonant.
It will be you.
Pulse Practice: Let Your Light Be Messy
Try this tonight:
Light a candle.
Sit in silence.
Ask: “Where am I dimming my truth to keep others comfortable?”
Let the flame remind you: Even the smallest spark can shift a room.
Parting Words: The Bravery of Brightness
You’re not here to glow in ways that please everyone.
You’re here to radiate in ways that free you.
So, does your light feels wild lately?
If it’s burning down old dreams or shining too bright for certain circles, take heart.
That’s not a sign of failure.
That’s a sign of transformation.
Let it burn.
Thank you for reading.
Resources for Deeper Exploration:
- The Dark Side of the Light Chasers by Debbie Ford
- The War of Art by Steven Pressfield
- Podcast: Glennon Doyle – We Can Do Hard Things (Ep: When Women Outgrow People-Pleasing)
- Article: “Why Spiritual Awakening Often Comes with Loss” – Psychology Today
