Finding Peace
Why we talk about peace more than we live it
Everyone says they want peace. Inner peace. Quiet. Calm. No drama. No negativity.
We post about it. We repost it. We protect our energy with memes and viral quotes. And yet, so many of us still feel restless.
The same people posting these memes today, in 2026, were posting the same ones back in 2016. So why haven’t they found peace yet?
That question led me to something deeper: how do we find peace without isolating ourselves in the process?
It feels like we’re overdosing on the idea of peace. We search for it, talk about it, post about it, collect books and podcasts about it, and blame everyone else for why we need it, yet rarely do the work required to live it.
We care more about appearing peaceful in our yoga poses and green maccha latte posts, than actually becoming peaceful.
Worse, we’ve learned to weaponize it. “I’m protecting my peace” has become the ultimate conversation-ender—a way to avoid accountability, dodge difficult conversations, and paint ourselves as the “healthy” one while everyone else is toxic. We’ve turned boundaries into walls and called it growth.
Peace isn’t found online, endlessly scrolling your feed. It isn’t in the next vacation you post about, or the perfectly curated photo—your glass of wine in Aruba, the ocean glowing behind you. Those things are beautiful, meaningful experiences. But they’re temporary.
So much of what we now call “self-care” looks a lot like avoidance. We cut people off without explanation and label retreat as healing. We’ve created an entire vocabulary that lets us exit relationships the moment they require effort or get a little tough, and we get to feel “righteous” about it.
But peace isn’t the absence of conflict.
Peace is being okay with things even when they’re not okay—including yourself when you’re wrong.
I think back to what we call the “good old days,” the way our grandparents spoke about theirs. Life before social media. Before constant texting. (Seriously, can we just have a conversation in person anymore?) We spent time together, argued, fought, and then made up almost immediately. That was normal human behavior. Normal connection.
In many ways, we were more at peace then than we are now scrolling Instagram reels, reposting quotes about peace instead of actually living it.
My mom taught me early on that difficult conversations don’t have to be scary, they’re just part of loving people well. She taught me to face them head on instead of running from them. I’m still learning, still working on it, but that foundation has helped me find a kind of peace that doesn’t require isolation or distance. And thankfully, she’s still there for me to call when I need her advice and wisdom.
Real peace doesn’t announce itself. It doesn’t need to post about cutting people off or declare who’s toxic. It just... exists. Quietly doing the work.
Peace for me today looks like this: resting my head at night feeling safe, loved, and grateful. It’s my daughter’s big smile when she sees me waiting at school pickup. It’s quiet time in the morning with my coffee. It’s a long shower without interruption, date night with my husband, watching Hallmark movies with my mom or a long video call with my best friend in Michigan.
There are many versions of peace. But it always comes from within.
Maybe peace isn’t something we’re meant to search for.
Maybe it’s something we’re meant to live—quietly, imperfectly, and every single day... practicing it.
What does peace look like for you?





"Peace is being okay with things even when they’re not okay—including yourself when you’re wrong."
This line - perfect. Thank you for sharing.
I appreciate your post, it ignites a lot of self reflection and I agree there’s peace in conflict! It helps us understand ourselves and others better … and in a way prevents isolation from others.
Im new to substack and focus on parenting insights, would like to connect with you 😃