Valentine’s Day arrived in the way it usually does in our home, quietly and without much ceremony. My husband and I have never been big on gifts or grand gestures, which is why I was genuinely surprised when he handed me a small box.
Inside was a new necklace chain.
The one he gave me nearly 20 years ago had broken, and I hadn’t even mentioned needing a replacement. The gesture was simple, thoughtful, and deeply kind. And almost instantly, I felt a familiar internal shift: I hadn’t gotten him anything.
It was one of those small but revealing moments where old patterns like to make an appearance. There was a time when my mind would have rushed straight into self-criticism — replaying the situation, questioning my thoughtfulness, subtly turning a loving exchange into a mental ledger of what I should have done differently.
But this time, something else happened.
I noticed the reflex without being fully pulled into it. I could feel the story beginning to form, yet I didn’t follow it. Instead, I stayed present. I allowed myself to receive the gesture for what it was — an expression of care, not a transaction requiring immediate balance.
No spiraling.
No over-explaining.
No quiet self-blame.
Just a genuine thank you.
That moment stayed with me, not because it was dramatic, but because it reflected something we talk about often in resilience work: the space between reaction and response. The ability to notice my Protective Patterns without automatically handing them the steering wheel.
Learning to receive is still very much a work in progress for me. There is a familiar discomfort that can surface when kindness or appreciation is directed my way — an instinct to deflect, minimize, or quietly fade into the background.
Which is why I’m beginning to understand that receiving — without guilt, without shrinking, without turning appreciation into pressure — is its own quiet form of resilience.
And sometimes growth looks exactly like a small, ordinary moment met with just a little more awareness and a little more self-compassion than before.
What might it look like to practice connection not only by giving, supporting, or showing up for others — but by allowing yourself to receive?
~ Kristie and the Dovetail Team