
A Valentine’s Week Reflection
Valentine’s Day tends to focus on romantic love- who we’re with, who we hope to meet, or how we celebrate the people closest to us. But over the years, I’ve come to believe that one of the most important love decisions we ever make has less to do with romance and more to do with something we rarely stop to evaluate:
The rooms we choose to stay in.
Not just physical rooms, but the environments we spend our time inside… friendships, workplaces, partnerships, conversations, communities. Because every room carries an emotional climate, and whether we realize it or not, it shapes how we think, how we show up, and how much energy we carry home at the end of the day.
Many of us have learned to stay in rooms that don’t quite fit us anymore. Rooms where we feel slightly tense. Slightly smaller. Slightly more guarded than we want to be. Rooms where we second-guess what we say, replay conversations afterward, or hesitate before sharing ideas because we’re not sure how they’ll land.
Sometimes nothing is “wrong” on the surface. The job is good. The relationship looks fine. The group is pleasant enough. And yet, something in our body feels tight. We leave interactions more drained than when we entered. We find ourselves overthinking, over-explaining, or quietly editing who we are.
Maybe it’s the mahjong group where the conversation leaves you feeling heavier instead of lighter.
The book club where you rarely feel comfortable sharing your real thoughts.
The group chat that quietly spikes your anxiety every time your phone lights up.
The networking circle where you feel like you have to perform instead of simply be.
Even the workout class, volunteer committee, or social circle that once energized you but now feels misaligned with who you’re becoming.
That’s not weakness. That’s information for you.
Because the wrong rooms always come with a cost – and the cost is your energy, your confidence, maybe even your sense of who you are.
When you are in environments that don’t feel psychologically safe, your nervous system works harder. You monitor how you’re perceived. You measure your words. You stay slightly braced. Even if you don’t consciously notice it, your system is expending energy simply trying to feel safe and secure. Over time, that invisible effort becomes fatigue, frustration, and sometimes even self-doubt.
The right rooms feel different.
They don’t necessarily mean easy rooms. Growth still happens there. Honest conversations still happen there. Expectations can still be high. But in the right rooms, you are not constantly managing whether you belong. Your ideas are welcomed. Your voice feels steady. You don’t spend the entire time scanning the environment to see how you’re being received. You can focus your energy on contributing, creating, connecting– instead of protecting yourself.
That difference changes everything.
Valentine’s Day is a reminder to think about love, but love is not only romantic. Love is also the decision to place yourself in environments that allow you to expand instead of shrink. It is choosing friendships where support is mutual, workplaces where growth is encouraged, partnerships where you can be honest without fear, and conversations that leave you feeling clearer rather than depleted.
One of the most powerful self-care practices I teach my clients is something simple: an energy audit. Not of tasks, but of rooms. Which spaces leave you feeling calm? Which conversations make you feel more like yourself? Which environments consistently drain you? Where are you over-giving, over-performing, or over-adapting just to stay comfortable?
Awareness creates choice. And choice creates change.
Sometimes the shift is external – moving toward different opportunities, redefining boundaries, spending less time in spaces that don’t feel aligned. Sometimes the shift is internal – deciding that you no longer need to prove your worth in rooms that never truly see it. Either way, the moment you start paying attention to the energy cost of the rooms you stay in, you begin to reclaim a surprising amount of clarity and strength.
This Valentine’s week, alongside celebrating the people you love, I invite you to ask a different question:
Where do I feel most like myself?
Where do I feel safe enough to speak honestly, dream bigger, and relax my shoulders instead of holding them tight? Which rooms allow my energy to grow rather than slowly draining it? Where can I truly be more of my authentic self? And how can I spend more time there?
Because one of the most meaningful forms of self-respect is not proving that you can survive every room. It’s choosing, whenever possible, to build a life that places you in the ones that allow you to breathe, contribute, and belong – fully, not just partially.
And that might be one of the most powerful acts of love you practice this year.
Tell me in the comments below if you can relate to realizing you may be in the wrong room, to feeling the quiet pull that it might be time to leave, or to mustering the courage to step out of a space that no longer fits and trust that a better one is waiting.
And if you’re looking for the perfect self-love gift for you, The Reset & Thrive Retreat is that magnificent gift that will keep on giving.
