Trying again isn’t naive—it’s courage in action.
There’s this story people tell—maybe not out loud, but it hums underneath conversations. It says if you try again after being hurt, you must be foolish. That giving love or trust another shot means you haven’t learned your lesson. That starting over is naive.
But that story is wrong.
Trying again—whether it’s in love, in friendship, in career, in healing—is not about being naive. It’s not about forgetting the pain or pretending everything’s fine. It’s about knowing the risks, remembering the heartache, carrying the lessons… and still choosing to move forward. That’s not foolishness. That’s bravery with your eyes wide open.
Courage isn’t loud or flashy. Sometimes it’s a quiet choice you make at 2 a.m., whispering to yourself that this time might be different. Sometimes it’s signing up for the class, opening your heart, showing up when it would be easier to shut down. Trying again means you haven’t given up on life’s possibility. On the idea that maybe, just maybe, good things are still possible for you.
We’re not meant to live in a shell, even though pain tries to convince us that safety only comes from shrinking back. But healing is about expansion. About staying soft even after the world has tried to harden you. And trying again? That’s softness meeting strength. That’s your spirit refusing to stay stuck.
You’re not naive for trying. You’re courageous. You’re honest. And you’re still in the story—not because you forgot what broke you, but because you believe you’re still worth rebuilding.