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You Are the Irreplaceable Original

By Viktoria Vidali September 03, 2025 Mindset

“Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.” – Oscar Wilde

At 67, Clare realized that she’d been asking herself the wrong question her entire life.

Fall was settling into Oregon, the morning light filtering through Douglas firs where the first leaves were beginning to turn. The season here held a quiet grace, so different from the dramatic autumn of her youth in Alaska. For an instant she felt again the expansiveness of watching the moving spectacle of the Northern Lights.

Life Transitions Based on Marriage Experience

Five years had passed since the end of her marriage to John – a long relationship that had dissolved slowly when she finally accepted their philosophical incompatibility. He always spoke convincingly of change but expected her to mold herself to his vision of their life.

She had married twice. Her first had ended when she and Tony acknowledged they had committed to each other prematurely. They were too young and inexperienced. Not having yet developed the skill of resilience, he in particular, and she, too, had resented being inconvenienced by having to make adjustments for the marriage.

In her marriages, Clare had believed her partners shared the values she held close and had tried to live by, the ones she had taught her children: honesty, conscientiousness, and flexibility. She believed strongly that personal growth throughout life is essential – that when people stop learning, they become, no matter what their physical age, brittle and old.

Being thoughtful by nature, she didn’t see these endings as failures; no – though there is sadness when couples cannot find common ground – they were necessary signals that she needed to deepen her perception of herself and others.

A Clash of Perceptions

A realization had struck her yesterday afternoon at the coffee shop where she liked to take a book and spend an hour or so journaling. She’d been reading at a corner table when she overheard a mother complaining about her son’s career decision.

“He was pre-med at Stanford, but he threw it all away to become a park ranger,” the woman said, her voice pitched with disapproval. “All that tuition money down the drain.”

Her friend resignedly nodded in agreement: “At least you tried.”

A fierce heat bloomed in Clare’s chest, a protective shield against the mother’s words. Her hands tightened around her cup, and in her mind, she conjured a defiant response.

“What if he’s doing exactly what he wants? What if he’s following his own star, not letting his dream slip away by conforming to your selfish trajectory of his life?”

Being Responsible to Yourself

Sitting here now, a bigger question arose: How much conforming had she herself actually done? We must all adapt to an extent to live together, but that should not require distorting ourselves.

In the quiet aftermath of this questioning, Clare felt a more profound responsibility welling in her. Not the responsibility to loved ones – a dedication she had shown in her life – but the obligation she owed to her own existence. She was the only person in the history of the world who could be Clare Norton. Not an approximation, not a version shaped by external desires, but the irreplaceable original.

The question wasn’t whether she was happy, successful, or admired. The question was simpler and more urgent:

Am I being the Clare only I can be?

Knowing Yourself Helps with Relationships

She thought of her two daughters, each caught in her own wrestling with the tangled knot of modern life. She pictured Dana, 34 now, still seeking approval from her father that would likely never come, her voice strained during their Sunday phone calls. Then she saw Danielle at 28, who’d sent a photo from her latest research station in Sitka – windblown hair, mud-stained boots, a small figure against the vast sky.

Danielle had chosen her own path, but Clare wondered if her daughter was using that independence to avoid the vulnerability of more intimate connection, the way she changed subjects whenever anyone asked about her interests outside work.

Perhaps being herself was the primary way she could truly guide them now.

Are We Brave Enough?

Clare walked to the window, watching a squirrel scurry, gathering stores for the winter ahead, wondering if Ashland would get snow this year.

She would not waste this gift of a singular life.

The question that mattered wasn’t whether she was good enough, but whether she was brave enough. Clare understood that being herself was the one responsibility that belonged to her alone.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

Do you know yourself? What have your learned about yourself that you didn’t know when you were younger? How did you learn it? Do you interact with others based on what you know about yourself now?

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Clair

This story caught my attention because my name is Clair and I am 67.
Great article to get me thinking about who I am and how I really cannot be anyone different.
Love the quote be yourself everyone else is taken :)

Thank you sixty + me for all you do to keep us connected!
Clair 67

Viktoria Vidali

What is synchronicity, Clair! Glad the article caught your attention.✨

Tessa

Oh yes we learn more about ourselves as time goes on. We are brought into this world by our imperfect parents who did their best. My childhood, like many others was a sad one. So I adapted to the world i was in.
Because I had that sad early life I married far too young to a person that I barely liked let alone loved, believing that somehow my life would get better, but oh how wrong i was. Then after many years fell in love with an unsuitable man & that ended up being a total disaster.
As the years rolled on I realised the best person for me was me. I live with someone now, but I know that I still and probably always will have those emotional bruises. It’s who I am. Ive written my story & frequently journal.

Nowadays I know who I am & can be myself finally. I accept other people for who they are also & no longer do I have to conform to many of the worlds negativity.

Every morning I say to myself ” what can I do for you today dear soul?”

Viktoria Vidali

What an important and beautiful question to ask yourself each morning, Tessa.

WishfulThinking

I was being pursued relentlessly, much to young for marriage and was saying no. Then he asked to live together. I knew my parents would be upset as I had a sibling do this only to return home pregnant from a man who cheated on her. I gave in and said yes. He got a wife and house – his goals and I left work to care for two young children. He worked many hours including weekends and cheated on me. Second mistake, I stayed with him, moved out of state for his career pursuits and further education. Thankful for additional children. Due to circumstances I needed support in a very dangerous situation but in his denial, he became verbally and psychologically trauma abusive. I divorced and he pushed me out of the family home into low income apartments. I began slowly recovering and building a life for my then underage child and myself. However, I have been harassed by people in the South for the last 11 years for divorcing out of abuse and used by community run programs – The health issues I previously had worsened, qualifying me for disability as the tight community also wouldn’t hire me. I’m not in the bully club by their choosing but that’s not who I am. In this state, I was then told that I had to take ex-spousal SS which isn’t enough to move out of the unhealthy housing I’m in. The challenge is how I felt 11 years ago but the atmosphere here is not supportive. Any suggestions, housing, location, etc?

Viktoria Vidali

You can accomplish a change if you put your heart and soul into working on a solution. First of all, do you have a home state you would prefer to be in? Do you have family members there who could help you make the move? Is it necessary to stay in a place you don’t enjoy and where people are unkind to you? Perhaps in another state you would be eligible for higher benefits. If you are in low income housing, there are units all over the country available in every state so if you could befriend someone at HUD to help you, a person with compassion, an ally, you can work together so that you’ll be able to lift yourself up into a place that is more welcoming and conducive to healing.

Last edited 7 months ago by Viktoria Vidali
Tessa

Im so sorry this has happened to you WT. Like me you married far too young and we were just kids really weren’t we? Sometimes we really need to look deeply for what is still good in our lives & depending on our mood that can be difficult.
From what I gather you live in the US. Here in Australia it is different, but probably similiar as far as housing goes. There’s a serious lack of any type of housing here & currently one of my adult children is near homeless & has been in this situation more than once. She also has severe physical/mental health issues. It breaks my heart to see her in this situation year after year.
Our children are our greatest gift of all. Im grateful that I was blessed with children at all and that currently I have a roof over my head. Some others dont…Sometimes we need to really look for what’s good in our lives still and keep following the sun ☀️ Sending hugs to you from across the ocean xx

Terri

This speaks to me! Married for 28 years to someone who did not like me but loved what I did for him and the home….after 3 very single years, I have allowed myself to be who I want to be – Just ME! And in doing so, I have recently met someone so special who cares about the Me I am, not the persona of me. Where this relationship will go, I don’t know, but I know I will remain true to me at the same time I am sharing my all with him.I can’t wait to see what is next as I Love who I am!

Viktoria Vidali

An exciting moment in your life, Terri. May thus next adventure be exhilarating!

Maureen

Love this

Margie

In Ibsen’s Dollhouse the husband says to his wife before all else you are a wife and a mother. She said I no longer believe that before else I am a person or at least I have the right to become one.” I am about to start a course and my daughter called saying she needed help with her two little ones as she was having surgery. My husband said we should go. I explained how generous of him it was to offer his help as I would be on an intensive with the start of my course and I needed to focus. I believe my solution will give me time in this new venture of mine and my daughter will have good father daughter time. Years ago I probably wouldn’t have done that but now I’m glad I did.

Viktoria Vidali

You have worked things out nicely so the kids can have grandpa time, your daughter can have dad time, and you can follow through with your commitment!

The Author

Viktoria Vidali is an educator, published writer, and poet. Her love of metaphysics and the natural world inspire her work, as do memories of her 40,000 nautical-mile sailing voyage. She contributes regularly to The Luminous Compass on Substack, and can be contacted at: viktoriavidali@gmail.com.

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