Radical Honesty

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Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
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Radical honesty, a form of authenticity that begins inside you, is a warm recognition that you gently apply to your conscious life. This view of radical honesty is not about telling everyone what you think. Instead, it is the root from which self-awareness grows. Thoughts and emotions that were once discarded or ignored are now embraced. Where you once felt the urge to run away, you now challenge yourself to face whatever is there. More than anything, any lie that you formerly told yourself is examined so that the truth may come forward. The key to radical honesty is that this is not about you and other people, but about how you relate to yourself in all situations, whether you are alone or with others.

Radical honesty is not about punishing yourself or harsh self-talk. Rather, it is about calmly being in constant contact with your truth. Practicing this balance is critical. In the beginning, radical honesty may feel hard to manage, but it is truly a long-term project. If you want to see great results, you need to wholeheartedly commit to the process, especially when it gets difficult, so you can reject the temptation to fall back into unconsciously motivated behavior.

If you continue to tread down the path of lies, fear and its two primary manifestations—anxiety and anger—will continue to grow. First, you fear truth and then you lie to be rid of your fear, unwittingly falling into a loop where you actually continue empowering your fear because every lie breeds further anxiety. The only way to put an end to the burning fire of fear is by thoroughly extinguishing it with truth. Dishonesty is the fear of truth.

Dishonesty with yourself creates distance. The more lies you build up over time, the more you become a stranger to yourself. When you cannot accept your own truth, you are moving in the opposite direction of self-awareness. When lies suffuse your mind, life becomes opaque and the right actions you need to take to ease your inner tension become difficult to decipher. The lies you tell yourself will also manifest as a lack of depth in your relationships. A deep connection with another being is not possible if you are deeply disconnected from yourself.

As you practice radical honesty, this distance decreases and your mind starts to become calmer. Telling yourself the truth is the beginning of inner harmony. This harmony immediately makes your relationships more vibrant. In examining your past and uncovering the truth that you previously re- fused to own, you actually make the power of your honesty stronger. This higher degree of presence allows your self- awareness to flourish. Eventually, your radical honesty matures to the point where it becomes non-negotiable—you carry it wherever you go and in every situation it becomes an asset that informs your decisions.

Where you once coaxed yourself into thinking nothing was wrong, you now admit to yourself that turbulence or hurt was actually there. Where you once forced yourself into thinking you liked something, you admit that you did find it disagreeable. Where you once denied old pain, you admit that there is a wound within you that needs tending.

Seed Questions for Reflection

How do you relate to the notion that radical honesty is a practice of staying in "constant contact with your truth" as opposed to telling everyone what you think? Can you share a personal story of a time when you stopped running from something difficult within yourself and instead chose to face it, and what shifted when you did? What helps you distinguish between what you tell yourself and the truth underneath?

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3 Past Reflections
JP
May 22, 2026
According to my understanding there are two faces of honesty. One honesty is with myself and the other is honesty with others. If I am not honest with myself how can I be honest with others? I find it is relatively easy to be honest with myself. It is relativly difficult for me to be honest with others. There is a fear lurking behind not telling the radical truth. In relationships the fear is about hurting people close to me will abondon me. I go through internal and external fear cycles which will drain my enrgy. When I was a child it was relatively easy for me to tell the truth. As I was going through adolesence it became realtively more difficult for me to behave truthfully. I was going through fear cycles. The fear was of abondoment. As I was growing up I came to realize that the people who love me unconditionally will not abondon me. They will be with me, they will compassionately empathize with me. Slowly and gradually I came to realize that true love liberates me from my self-... View full comment
For me there are two different ways to think about radical honesty. First is to tell the complete truth about facts of my life rather than fabricating stories about myself. Second is to be completely honest about what I am experiencing which is my truth. Radical honesty is present when it is present. I can be radically honest at one time or with one person and not at another time or with another person. Early in life I was guarded, not saying what I was experiencing, not saying my truth, which as Yung Pueblo wrote makes deep connection with another impossible. To have deep connection, I needed to become open and honest as to what I was experiencing, which was difficult for me to do. Now it is easy for me to distinguish between what is my truth and what is not. The satisfaction I experience in being honest about my truth helps me do it. To lose one's truth either by ignoring it or denying it is to lose oneself and lost close relationship.
ST
May 21, 2026
Hmmmm
I am having a challenge relating to most of this article. It seems obvious to me that I need to pay attention to my thoughts and emotions and sensory experience before responding to others or situations and that self awareness will prevent me from being incongruous which I guess is what the author is referring to as being untruthful.
I occasionally react in an out of balance way when something triggers some deeper part of my shadow
That I have not dug down to perhaps due to some fear of w
The work it would take to really change long held patterns.