Protect Your Peace
I used to think peace was something that happened to you. That if you worked hard enough, if you got the right people around you, if you finally achieved that next goal — peace would just arrive. Like a reward for doing everything right.
I was wrong.
Peace isn't something you find. It's something you fight for. Every single day.
The People Who Bring Chaos
You know them. You've got at least one in your life right now.
The person who turns a normal conversation into a drama. The person who can't let a quiet day stay quiet. The person who creates problems out of thin air and then drags you into solving them.
They're not doing it because they're bad people. Most of the time, they're doing it because chaos is all they know. Calm feels uncomfortable to them. Silence feels threatening. So they fill it — with noise, with conflict, with anything that keeps the energy chaotic.
And if you're not careful, their chaos becomes your chaos.
The Cost of Participation
Here's what I've learned. Every single time you engage with someone else's drama, you pay for it. Not with money — with something far more valuable. Your energy. Your focus. Your mental clarity.
I've had seasons in my life where I was surrounded by chaos. Not because my own life was chaotic, but because I kept letting other people's chaos bleed into my space. I'd answer the phone calls. I'd get involved in the arguments. I'd try to fix problems that weren't mine to fix.
And at the end of it, I was exhausted. Not from my own work, but from carrying everybody else's weight.
The Power of Distance
You don't owe anyone access to your peace. Read that again.
I don't care how long you've known someone. I don't care what history you have. If someone consistently brings turbulence into your life, you have every right — and every reason — to create distance.
That doesn't mean you hate them. It doesn't mean you wish them harm. It means you value yourself enough to protect what matters.
And what matters is your peace of mind. Your ability to think clearly. Your capacity to show up for the things and the people that actually deserve your energy.
Boundaries Aren't Selfish
People will call you selfish for setting boundaries. They'll say you've changed. They'll say you think you're better than everyone else.
Let them.
Because the alternative is spending your life as an emotional sponge, absorbing everyone else's problems and wondering why you're always drained. That's not generosity. That's self-destruction.
Setting boundaries is one of the most important things you can do for yourself and, counterintuitively, for the people around you. Because when you protect your peace, you show up better. You think more clearly. You make better decisions. You become a better partner, a better parent, a better friend.
Not despite the boundaries. Because of them.
Choose What You Allow
You can't control what other people do. But you can control what you allow into your space.
Not everything needs your attention. Not every argument needs your input. Not every person needs access to your inner world.
Step away from the chaos. Guard your peace. And watch what happens when you do.
To your success.
Tahar
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Read the full story of my journey in my book, Fail Your Way to Success.