Remember that friend who always had to justify every decision they made? The one who’d send paragraph-long texts explaining why they couldn’t make it to dinner, or who’d launch into detailed defenses whenever someone questioned their choices?
Yeah, that was me five years ago.
These days? I’ve mostly stopped. Not because I’ve become some kind of antisocial hermit, but because somewhere along the way, I learned that constantly explaining yourself is exhausting, not to mention usually pointless.
If you’ve reached this same place, where you no longer feel compelled to justify your every move, you’ve probably learned these lessons too. And I’m guessing, like me, you learned them the hard way.
1. Your time is more valuable than their approval
I used to spend hours crafting the perfect response to explain why I was leaving a networking event early or why I wasn’t interested in someone’s “amazing opportunity.”
Then I co-founded my second startup at twenty-eight. While my first venture had done well, this one failed spectacularly within eighteen months, burning through investor money faster than you could say “runway.”
But here’s what that failure taught me: time spent explaining yourself to people who won’t understand anyway is time you’ll never get back.
During those eighteen months, I wasted countless hours in meetings explaining our vision to people who were never going to get it. Meanwhile, our competitors were actually building things.
Now when someone doesn’t understand why I’m making a certain choice, I just smile and say, “It works for me.” Three words. Done.
2. Most people aren’t really listening anyway
Ever notice how when you’re explaining yourself, the other person is usually just waiting for their turn to talk? They’re not processing your reasons—they’re formulating their counterargument.
I discovered this during a particularly rough patch when everyone had opinions about my career choices. My parents kept asking when I’d get a “real job with benefits” while I was pouring everything into my startup.
I’d explain the potential, the vision, the opportunity. But they weren’t listening to understand; they were listening to respond.
Once you realize most people have already made up their minds about you and your choices, explaining yourself becomes a pretty futile exercise.
3. The right people don’t need explanations
Here’s something that took me way too long to figure out: the people who truly matter in your life don’t need you to constantly justify yourself to them.
I had a relationship in my late twenties with someone who called me out on my tendency to treat everything like a problem to be optimized.
At first, I’d launch into these long explanations about efficiency and productivity. But she’d just look at me and say, “I get it. You don’t need to convince me.”
That’s when it clicked. The right people, whether friends, partners, or colleagues, trust your judgment even when they don’t fully understand your choices. They don’t need a PowerPoint presentation on why you’re doing what you’re doing.
4. Boundaries don’t require justification
“No” is a complete sentence. I know you’ve heard this before, but have you actually tried it?
I used to think every “no” needed a supporting thesis. Can’t make it to that event? Here’s my schedule for the next three weeks. Don’t want to invest in your cousin’s MLM scheme? Let me explain my entire financial philosophy.
Now when I set a boundary, I just set it. No dissertation required.
You don’t owe anyone an explanation for protecting your time and energy.
5. Your energy is better spent on action
Think about all the mental energy you burn explaining your diet choices at dinner parties, your career moves to extended family, or your lifestyle to judgmental acquaintances.
What if you redirected that energy into actually living your life?
After my second startup failed, I noticed something interesting. The people who were killing it in their fields weren’t the ones constantly explaining their strategies; they were too busy executing them. While I was defending my decisions in coffee meetings, they were making moves.
6. People project their own fears onto you
Why do people demand explanations from you in the first place? Nine times out of ten, it’s because your choices trigger something in them.
When someone questions why you’re taking a risk they’d never take, they’re really asking themselves why they’re not brave enough to do the same. When they need you to justify your unconventional path, they’re seeking validation for their conventional one.
Understanding this completely changed how I respond to people’s need for explanations. Their discomfort with my choices isn’t my problem to solve.
7. You can’t control what people think anyway
I’ve had people completely misunderstand my intentions even after hour-long explanations. I’ve also had people totally get me with zero context.
The difference? It had nothing to do with how well I explained myself.
People will create narratives about you based on their own experiences, biases, and current mood. You could deliver the most eloquent explanation of your life choices, and they’ll still walk away thinking whatever they were already inclined to think.
So why bother?
8. Real confidence doesn’t need external validation
Finally, here’s the big one: when you truly believe in what you’re doing, you don’t need anyone else to sign off on it.
I’ve ended friendships with people who only reached out when they wanted introductions or advice. Old me would have written novels explaining why these relationships were one-sided. New me? I just stopped responding.
The need to explain yourself often comes from a place of insecurity. You’re seeking permission, validation, or absolution. But when you’re genuinely confident in your choices, even the messy, imperfect ones, you don’t need anyone else’s stamp of approval.
The bottom line
Stopping the constant need to explain yourself isn’t about becoming cold or disconnected. It’s about recognizing that your life is yours to live, and you don’t need to turn every decision into a TED talk.
Sure, there are times when explanations are necessary, like to your partner about major life decisions, to your team about strategic pivots, to yourself when you’re working through something complex.
But for the everyday choices, the personal boundaries, the life paths that diverge from the norm? Save your breath.
The people who matter don’t need explanations, and the people who demand them probably won’t understand anyway.
These days, when someone questions my choices, I’ve learned to pause and ask myself: Do I owe this person an explanation? Almost always, the answer is no.
And that realization? It’s freedom.










