Is Competence Your Safe Place?

Feb 07, 2026 12:01 pm


Lesson 2: When Competence Becomes a Refuge

Before we go further, let me be clear:

There is nothing wrong with being capable.

It is an admirable trait. What I want us to examine is - are you using it as a shield?


Relax your defences for a bit and hear me out please.


Competence kept many people safe.

It created predictability where there was none.

It reduced risk.

It brought praise, relief, or at least less trouble.


For some, competence was not a preference.

It was protection.


When environments are unstable—emotionally, relationally, or physically—the system learns to organize around control. Not domination, but reliability.

You become the one who notices.

The one who anticipates.

The one who manages what others cannot.


Over time, this becomes more than behavior.

It becomes identity.


And identity is hard to set down

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imageHow Competence Works in the Nervous System

Competence often looks calm from the outside.

But internally, it can function like vigilance.

The system stays slightly ahead of danger by:

  • staying useful
  • staying prepared
  • staying needed


This is not anxiety in the dramatic sense.

It’s a low, continuous alertness.


You may recognize it as:

  • difficulty resting without guilt
  • saying yes before checking your body
  • feeling responsible for outcomes you don’t control
  • being praised for strength while feeling quietly depleted


None of this means you are broken.

It means your system learned a reliable way to survive.



The Hidden Cost of Living as the Refuge

imageWhen competence becomes the primary refuge, something subtle happens.

Choice narrows.

Decisions are made based on:

  • what will keep things steady
  • what will avoid disappointment or conflict
  • what will reduce disruption

Over time, the question “What do I want?” becomes harder to hear.

Not because you don’t have wants—

but because wanting without a plan once felt unsafe.

This is often where people feel stuck:

  • not confused
  • not incapable
  • but strangely absent from their own lives

Soul Repair does not ask you to give up competence.

It asks whether competence still needs to be your shelter.



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A Gentle Distinction

Notice the difference between these two states:

Competence as skill

vs.

Competence as survival


One is flexible.


The other is compulsory.


In this work, we are not trying to dismantle your strengths.

We are separating skill from safety.


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Reflection (Optional, Take Your Time)

You may want to sit with one or two of these—not all.

  • Where in your life do you feel most competent?
  • Where does competence feel light, and where does it feel heavy?
  • If competence were no longer required for safety, what might soften?



There is no action required from these questions.

They are meant to widen awareness, not create pressure.



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Practice: Letting Competence Rest (3–5 minutes)

If it feels okay, try this once.

  1. Sit comfortably and place one hand on a part of your body that feels neutral or steady.
  2. Silently say: “I don’t need to manage this moment.”
  3. Notice if any part of your body resists that statement.
  4. Without correcting it, simply notice.


If nothing happens, that’s fine.

If something shifts—even slightly—let it.


This practice is not about release.

It’s about permission.

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Closing This Lesson

Competence will not disappear because you noticed it.

But noticing begins to change the relationship.

In Soul Repair, awareness is not used to fix yourself.

It’s used to return choice.


In the next lesson, we’ll explore how stability becomes internal—rather than something you supply to everyone else.


For now, let competence be exactly what it is:

something that helped you survive.


And let that be honored.


Dr Sandra Hamilton

Cultivating Quiet Confidence and Power

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