“You’ve Got This” Is Sometimes the Cruelest Thing You Can Say
There comes a point in prolonged suffering where “You’ve got this” stops sounding encouraging and starts sounding dismissive. Not because the person saying it is evil. Usually they mean well. Usually they care. But when someone has been carrying the weight of survival for months — or years — those three words can land like another brick on an already collapsing spine. Especially with looming hospitalization for a condition. “You’ve got this.” Do they? Because from where they’re standing, they barely have themselves. People say “You’ve got this” because it’s clean. Efficient. Optimistic. It lets them exit the conversation quickly while still feeling supportive. It’s the motivational poster version of compassion. Spray-painted sunshine over a structural crack. What nobody talks about is how exhausting it becomes to constantly be viewed as “strong.” The woman juggling cancer treatments, a TBI, paperwork, exhaustion, bills, appointments, fear, grief, work obligations, and the p...