Friday, April 17, 2026

FOG Part 1 Walking Through the Fog

Walking Through the Fog

Fear. Obligation. Guilt. — And the Courage to Choose Clearly

There is a kind of fog we rarely talk about. Not the one outside our windows.

The one inside our decisions. It doesn’t arrive dramatically. It doesn’t announce itself.

It doesn’t look dangerous. And yet—it quietly shapes our lives.

It is called FOG.  Fear. Obligation. Guilt.

Three small words. Three powerful forces. Three invisible architects of human behavior.

And the truth is— Most of us are living in this fog without even knowing it.


Fear is often the first visitor.

Not the fear of danger. But the fear of disappointment.

Fear of rejection. Fear of conflict. Fear of being misunderstood.

Fear of losing approval. Fear of losing belonging.

So we say yes when our heart is whispering no.

We remain silent when truth is asking to be spoken.

We stay where we have outgrown ourselves.

Not because we are weak. But because we are human.


Then comes obligation.

Obligation sounds noble. Respectable. Responsible. And often—it is.

But sometimes obligation quietly changes shape.

It becomes a script we never agreed to write. A role we never auditioned for.

A life we never consciously chose.

“I must do this.”

“They expect this from me.”

“What will people say?”

And slowly, without noticing, responsibility becomes pressure.

Duty becomes identity. Expectation becomes direction.

And somewhere along the way— choice disappears.


And then comes guilt.

The heaviest of the three.

Guilt has a way of convincing good people that choosing themselves is selfish.

That setting boundaries is hurtful. That rest is laziness. That saying no is betrayal.

So we continue. We adjust. We compromise. We shrink.

Not because we want to. But because we feel we should.

And that is how fog works.

It doesn’t imprison you. It convinces you that you are not allowed to leave.

*     Here is what makes FOG so powerful.

*    It often enters our lives through love. Through family. Through culture. Through responsibility. Through loyalty. Through being “the strong one.” Through being “the good one.” Through being “the dependable one.”

And so we never question it.

Because questioning it feels like questioning our values.

But clarity is not rebellion. Clarity is awareness.

One day something shifts.

Maybe slowly. Maybe suddenly. Maybe through exhaustion. Maybe through loss.

Maybe through growth. Maybe through a quiet question rising inside you:

“Is this really my choice?”

That question changes everything.

Because awareness is the first light inside the fog.


Let me tell you something important.

Fear is not your enemy. Fear is information.

It tells you something matters.

But fear should guide your preparation— not control your direction.

Obligation is not your enemy.

Obligation builds societies, families, relationships, trust.

But obligation should come from values— not from silent pressure.

And guilt?

Guilt is not your enemy either. Guilt protects your conscience.

It reminds you of your humanity.

But guilt should correct your behavior— not punish your existence.


The problem begins when these three stop being signals and start becoming systems.

When fear decides your voice.

When obligation decides your path.

When guilt decides your worth.

That is when fog becomes a life strategy instead of a passing emotion.

And that is when clarity becomes courage.


Clarity does not mean walking away from responsibilities.

Clarity does not mean rejecting people. Clarity does not mean becoming hard.

Clarity means becoming honest. It means asking:

Am I choosing this? Or am I afraid not to?

Am I doing this with love? Or with pressure?

Would I still do this if nobody expected it from me?

These are not easy questions.

But they are powerful ones.

Because every honest answer clears a little more fog.


Something beautiful happens when you begin living with clarity.

You don’t become distant. You become intentional.

You don’t become selfish. You become aligned.

You don’t become rebellious. You become real.

And strangely—

Relationships become healthier. Respect becomes deeper.

Peace becomes quieter.

Because people no longer meet your expectations.

They meet you.


So the next time fear speaks— listen.

But don’t surrender.

The next time obligation calls— respect it.

But examine it.

And the next time guilt appears— acknowledge it.

But don’t let it define you.

Because the goal is not to eliminate fear.

Or escape obligation.

Or silence guilt.

The goal is to walk through them consciously.

With awareness.

With dignity.

With choice.


We cannot always prevent the fog from appearing in our lives.

But we can decide whether we will live inside it—

or walk through it with light in our hands.

And sometimes,

the bravest decision a human being can make is not changing the world outside them—

but choosing clearly inside themselves

Love Juju

(Stay tuned for FOG Part 2 - Learning to step out of FOG.)

 

1 comment:

Dr.Shweta Mittal said...

What a true revelation… beautifully penned💖💖

FOG PART 2 Learning to step out of FOG

Living in the Fog: Fear, Obligation, and Guilt — and the Courage to See Clearly We all walk through  FOG  at some point in life. Not the...