The Quiet Emotion That Keeps Women From Rising
By Micaela Passeri
As women, we are taught to be strong, nurturing, driven, and capable. But along the way, we often pick up something else too—guilt.
It can be guilt from past choices. Guilt for not being available to everyone. Guilt for succeeding when others are struggling. Guilt for wanting more.
And while we rarely speak about it, guilt is an emotional block that quietly holds many women back from stepping fully into their power.
What Guilt Sounds Like in a Woman’s Life
It is not always dramatic. In fact, it often sounds incredibly reasonable.
- “I feel bad raising my rates, what if people cannot afford me”
- “I should have done more for that client, that friend, my family”
- “Maybe I do not deserve this success yet”
- “If I take care of myself, I feel like I am letting others down”
Sound familiar? These are not just mindset challenges. They are signs that guilt may be guiding your decisions more than you think.
The Cost of Carrying Guilt
In my work with women around the world—from entrepreneurs and executives to coaches and creatives—I have noticed one truth. When guilt goes unacknowledged, it becomes the silent driver of burnout, hesitation, and emotional exhaustion.
Here is how it shows up
• Saying yes when your entire body is saying no
• Undercharging even when your value is clear
• Avoiding visibility because of fear of judgment or “being too much”
• Feeling uncomfortable celebrating success
Guilt does not always scream. It whispers. And in that whisper, it keeps powerful women playing small.
Guilt Is Not a Requirement for Growth
Let’s set the record straight.
Guilt is not a badge of honor.
It does not make you more caring.
It does not make you a better leader, mother, friend, or partner.
Real growth—personal and professional—comes from emotional freedom, not emotional weight.
You can care deeply about others and still say no.
You can build a thriving business and still take care of yourself.
You can have ambition without apology.
It is time we stop associating guilt with goodness. And start associating self-worth with wholeness.
How to Begin Releasing Guilt
Here are three ways to start shifting out of guilt and into grounded clarity
Choose alignment over approval
Ask yourself, “Does this serve my truth, or am I trying to manage how others see me?”
Notice where guilt is showing up
Pay attention to decisions that feel heavy or hesitant. Ask yourself why.
Practice forgiveness
Not just for others—but for yourself. You are allowed to be human.
Final Words: Your Power Is Not in Perfection
You do not need to prove yourself by overgiving.
You do not need to carry guilt as proof of how much you care.
Your presence, your vision, and your leadership are already powerful. And when you let go of guilt, that power becomes even more grounded and expansive.
You are not here to play small. You are here to lead, to rise, and to shine—fully and freely.