Un-Becoming What Isn’t You, Becoming Yourself
Maybe the journey isn't so much about becoming anything. Maybe it's about un-becoming everything that isn't really you. — Paulo Coelho
—What lingers after this line?
One-minute reflection
Where does this idea show up in your life right now?
A Journey of Subtraction, Not Addition
Paulo Coelho’s line reframes personal growth as an act of subtraction. Instead of imagining the self as a project that must be upgraded with new traits, titles, or achievements, he suggests the deeper task is removing what is false, borrowed, or performed. In this view, the “journey” is less a ladder to climb than a clearing to make. That shift matters because it changes what counts as progress. Rather than asking, “What should I become?” the quote invites a quieter question: “What have I been carrying that isn’t truly mine?” From there, growth begins to look like honesty—peeling away layers that once felt necessary but no longer fit.
The Masks We Learn to Wear
To understand what must be un-become, it helps to notice how masks form in the first place. Many of us learn early that approval comes with conditions—be easier, be tougher, be impressive, be agreeable—and we adapt accordingly. Over time, these adaptations can harden into an identity that feels real simply because it’s familiar. Yet Coelho’s point is that familiarity is not the same as authenticity. The “not really you” parts may include roles you never chose, beliefs inherited without examination, or a personality built around avoiding rejection. Once seen clearly, these masks start to look less like who you are and more like what you used to need.
Un-Becoming as Inner Honesty
From there, un-becoming becomes a practice of inner honesty: noticing where your choices are driven by fear, comparison, or performance. The quote implies that a truer self is already present, but it can be obscured by layers of expectation. Removing those layers is not dramatic reinvention; it is alignment. This is why the process can feel both relieving and unsettling. When you stop acting out a story that once kept you safe, you may momentarily feel emptier—until you realize that the space you created is exactly where your real preferences, boundaries, and desires can finally be heard.
Echoes in Philosophy and Spiritual Traditions
Coelho’s idea has strong echoes in older traditions that treat the self as something revealed rather than constructed. In Michelangelo’s famous remark about sculpture—often paraphrased as releasing the figure “already in the stone”—the artist’s work is removal, not addition. Similarly, Taoist thought in the Tao Te Ching (c. 4th century BC) often emphasizes returning to simplicity, suggesting that wisdom is found by dropping excess rather than accumulating more. Even modern psychology gestures in this direction: Carl Rogers’ person-centered therapy argues that growth involves moving away from “conditions of worth” toward a more congruent self (Rogers, 1951). Across these lenses, un-becoming is not self-erasure but self-retrieval.
The Discomfort of Letting Go
However, shedding what isn’t you can be painful because identities—authentic or not—offer structure. You might have built a reputation around being the reliable one, the achiever, the caretaker, or the rebel, and letting go can feel like betraying your past. Moreover, others may resist your change because your old role made their world predictable. This is where the quote’s gentleness is important: “maybe” signals patience. Un-becoming isn’t a single decision; it’s repeated moments of choosing truth over habit. As those choices accumulate, the fear of losing yourself flips into a clearer realization: you’re finally meeting yourself.
What Authenticity Looks Like in Practice
In everyday life, un-becoming may look small: saying no without over-explaining, admitting what you actually want, or ending a pattern of people-pleasing that you once called kindness. It can also look like revisiting assumptions—about success, love, masculinity, femininity, spirituality, or status—and asking whether they reflect conviction or conditioning. Over time, what emerges is not a perfected identity but a more truthful one. Coelho’s journey doesn’t promise a shiny new persona; it promises a quieter, sturdier freedom—the kind that comes when your life requires less acting, and your choices start sounding like your own voice.