The “just be yourself” advice has been dispensed before every job interview and first date since the dawn of small talk. It’s well-meaning, almost universally given, and according to psychologists, barely useful as stated.
The research backs the underlying intention. According to psychologist Stephen Joseph, Ph.D., writing in Psychology Today, people who live more authentically are measurably happier and more satisfied with their lives. Where the phrase fails is in the execution. “Just be yourself” is too vague a directive to communicate what living authentically actually requires.
For starters, Joseph points out that the voices most people perform for aren’t always in the room. They’re internal, echoes of parents, teachers, and authority figures absorbed so long ago that most people have stopped recognizing them as external at all. Those voices have become indistinguishable from their own thoughts. That’s where the real work starts.
The Problem With Telling People to ‘Just Be Yourself’
A lot of people assume authenticity means radical transparency, that being yourself requires saying whatever’s on your mind at all times. Joseph pushes back on that. Authenticity is an inside job first. It’s about being honest with yourself about what you’re feeling and thinking, and then deciding what to do with that. Knowing when to keep your mouth shut is part of it, too.
That reframe also changes the destination. Joseph argues that authenticity isn’t about preserving who you already are. It’s about becoming who you could be, which requires the uncomfortable work of unlearning all the conditions you’ve absorbed over a lifetime about who you’re supposed to be. Most of those were never really examined to begin with.
Most people move through their days on autopilot, running on those old internal voices without stopping to question them. Joseph offers four questions to ask yourself:
Do you feel free to make your own choices? Do you feel free to express your views and opinions? Do you feel you can be yourself on a day-to-day basis? Do you feel completely honest with yourself?
That last one is where most people get caught. It’s the easiest to answer quickly and the hardest to answer accurately.
Authentic living can be built, but it’s assembled in small moments and individual decisions, across a lifetime. There’s no single arrival point.
The post Why ‘Just Be Yourself’ Is Terrible Advice, According to Psychology appeared first on VICE.




