“Vulnerability is the only path through the wall that separates us from each other.” ~Brené Brown

Every time I share something deeply personal—an article, a post, a piece of my story somewhere or to someone—there is a part of me that lights up with energy. I feel a sense of urgency, a pull to share now. A belief that some humans will need to hear it, relate, and feel less alone. And often, it helps me make sense of my own experiences, too. Even if I’m not always conscious of it, there is a higher reason guiding me.

Storytelling is healing—for the writer, the storyteller, and the reader. Raw, human-truth experiences hold power.

And yet… after pressing “publish” or opening my heart to a friend or loved one, something familiar arrives post-sharing.

A wave. An intensity. Tightness in my chest. A sinking feeling in my belly. Second-guessing.

Did I say too much? Did I overshare? Was that courageous—or careless? Will I still be loved and accepted now that I’ve been seen like this?

I remember the first time I shared something deeply raw in a public post. I wrote about a moment from a yoga retreat when our group was hiking through the Australian rainforest and came upon a little creek that shimmered as if it had been waiting for us. The water was clear, fresh, and utterly inviting. None of us had brought swimsuits—swimming hadn’t been part of the plan.

That didn’t stop some of the women. Feeling free, embodied, and deeply connected, they stripped down and swam naked in the creek. I stood there in quiet awe of their boldness and courage.

I hesitated, caught between wanting to join and the voice of my conditioning: my body wasn’t perfect, not thin enough, too post-motherhood, and I hadn’t shaved in a while…

Eventually, I let go and partly undressed. I stepped into the stream, letting the water embrace me. In that moment, I felt a liberation I hadn’t known I needed. My skin feeling the soothing, cooling effect of the fresh spring on my being. My body—with its newfound curves, softness, and life—was a miracle, a vessel for experience, not a source of shame. I felt so alive.

I hit “publish” on the story with excitement. Immediately post-publishing, the wave arrived: a ball in my stomach, a knot in my solar plexus. Shame. Embarrassment. Did I reveal too much? Was I a women’s coach talking about naked bodies while struggling with insecurities of my own? What would my clients think?

Yet the response was beautiful. Women wrote back, saying the story resonated. Some remembered that magical day. Others recognized their own struggles with body image. Some felt inspired. That first act of vulnerability—raw, imperfect, human—planted seeds far beyond my own awareness.

This experience taught me something essential: the intensity we feel after sharing doesn’t mean we’ve done something wrong. It means we’ve touched something true.

Now, I share more and more of myself: my perceived failures, hopes, insecurities, and the wisdom I’ve gained from experience. I continue to push the edges of my comfort zone, lately sharing very personal matters such as my ADHD diagnosis and, more recently, my strong views on patriarchy and current societal issues.

Each time I step into a space outside my comfort zone, I feel it again: the nervous system’s response, raw and real. But each time, the intensity is a little milder, and I meet it with more patience, compassion, and understanding.

Vulnerable sharing is still an act of truth, trust, and connection.

The Vulnerability Hangover No One Talks About

What I’ve learned is that this emotional aftermath is incredibly common. Some people call it a vulnerability hangover—the emotional comedown that follows openness.

When we share something real, we step out from behind our protection. We let ourselves be seen. And once the moment passes, the nervous system asks a very old question:

“Am I safe now?”

That question can show up as sadness, anxiety, shame, regret, fear of rejection, or the urge to pull back and hide. It doesn’t mean the sharing was wrong. It means we are human—and wired for belonging.

Oversharing vs. Conscious Sharing

For a long time, I thought this wave meant I’d overshared. Now I see it differently.

Oversharing isn’t about how much you reveal. It’s about how and why you reveal it. Oversharing often happens when:

  • We share to regulate our emotions instead of first holding ourselves.
  • The wound is still bleeding, not gently forming a scar.
  • We seek reassurance, validation, or relief from others.
  • We share without considering the container or the relationship.
  • We feel depleted, ashamed, or fragmented afterward.

Oversharing isn’t a failure—it’s a signal that a part of us needed more support before being seen.

Conscious sharing, on the other hand:

  • Comes from self-connection rather than a need for emotional regulation.
  • Happens with intention and choice.
  • Respects timing, boundaries, and context.
  • Leaves us tender but still intact.
  • Feels aligned, even if uncomfortable.

Both can feel emotional. Only one honors us.

The Questions That Changed How I Share

Before sharing now—whether in writing or conversation—I pause and ask myself those simple questions:

“Am I sharing from wholeness, or am I asking to be held?”

There is no judgment in the answer. Both are deeply human.

If I’m asking to be held, I know the sharing might be better suited for a private, resourced space—therapy, close friendship, journaling, or simply sitting with myself.

If I’m sharing from wholeness—even a tender wholeness—I trust it more.

“Who needs to hear this, and what truly needs to be said?”

This question invites me to step out of making it about me and into service of the message—the deeper intention and mission of the story.

If the honest answer is that I’m speaking to one specific person I’m upset with, then I know a private conversation would be more aligned.

But if the answer is that this is for women who are living with self-doubt or navigating a similar experience in silence and loneliness, then I trust the story. I trust that it carries wisdom, that it can be healing, and that it is meant to be shared.

When the After-Feeling Still Comes

Even conscious, aligned vulnerability can leave you feeling raw afterward. Feeling exposed does not mean you overshared. It often means you touched something true.

For sensitive, empathic people—those who feel deeply and care deeply—vulnerability activates the nervous system. And the nervous system doesn’t speak in logic—it speaks in sensation.

That’s why how we care for ourselves after sharing matters as much as the sharing itself.

How I Nurture Myself After Vulnerability

I’ve learned not to rush past the aftermath—to meet it with gentleness. An inner river of love.

Here’s what helps me after I’ve shared something vulnerable post:

1. Mark the completion

I consciously close the moment—closing my laptop, placing my phone face down, washing my hands.
I say quietly, “What needed to be shared has been shared.”

2. Come back into my body

A hand on my heart. A deep inhale. A longer exhale. A gentle stretch.

No analysis—just presence. I imagine the intensity of the sensation I feel being wrapped by an inner river of love as I breathe in and out.

3. Witness my courage

Instead of replaying the story, I acknowledge the act:

“That was brave.”

“I didn’t abandon myself.”

“I chose to stand up for myself.”

4. Reclaim my boundaries

I imagine my energy returning to me and repeat the following:

“What’s mine, I keep. What’s not mine, I release.”

5. Ground in the ordinary

A warm tea. A shower. A walk. Something simple and human. Life continues. I am safe.

The Deeper Truth I’ve Come to Trust

For a long time, especially women, we were taught to call truth-telling “oversharing.” Not because it was wrong but because it made others uncomfortable.

The goal is not to be less honest.

We don’t need to soften our stories, hide our feelings, or edit our truth to make others comfortable. Honesty is not the problem—it is the path to connection, healing, and self-understanding.

The goal is to be more loyal to ourselves.

Being loyal means sharing from alignment, caring for our own boundaries, and tending to ourselves afterward.

It means knowing the difference between an open wound that needs more internal support before being shared and a scar that can be safely held in the hands of others.

When we are loyal to ourselves, vulnerability becomes a gift—both to us and to those who receive our story—because we remain intact, grounded, and whole, even as we are deeply seen.

Some stories heal us privately.

Some heal collectively.

Some are seeds planted quietly, without us ever seeing how they grow.

And sometimes, the intensity after sharing is simply the nervous system learning that it is possible to be seen—and still be safe.

A Mantra I Return To

When the doubt creeps in, I repeat:

“I share from wholeness, not hunger.”

“I trust the part of me that chose to speak.”

And I let that be enough.

About Dorothee Marossero

Dorothee is a conscious, compassionate empowerment coach who is redefining what women were conditioned to believe success, beauty, and life ought to be. Dorothee supports women who are struggling with a harsh inner critic, a sense of misalignment, and lack of clarity in their life, to reconnect to their inner-powers and rediscover self-love, presence, and joy. Download her FREE booklet: "Nurturing Harmony: A Guide To Thriving As A Highly Sensitive Being." here IG: @dorotheemarossero

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