I just dropped off a riderâher name is Mariel.
When I picked her up, she got into the car and said she was headed downtown. I casually mentioned that I live downtown, near the Walt Disney Concert Hall. She smiled, said, âThatâs fire,â and then, just like that, she put on her headphones.
And I got angry. Yeah, Iâm admitting it. That stupid, bubbling rage started to rise. Why? Because Iâm insecure.
My mind started spinning: How could she put on her headphones like I donât matter? Isnât that rude? I caught myself thinking she should be giving me attention, talking to meâacknowledging me. I mean, wasnât I the one driving her, providing a service, doing her a favor? But then it hit me. No, I wasnât doing her a favor. I was doing my job.
Mariel didnât do a damn thing to hurt me. She wasnât out to snub me or make me feel small. She wasnât dismissing me at all. You know what she was doing? She was putting herself first, unapologetically. She just wanted to rock out to her music, enjoy the ride her way. She did what we all should be doingâtaking care of herself without worrying about how it looked to others.
It was a gut check moment for me. I felt exposedâmy need for validation, my desire to be seen and acknowledged, all laid bare in a single interaction. But why? Why did I care so much that this stranger wasnât engaging with me?
The truth is, it wasnât really about Mariel at all. It was about me, about this bottomless well of neediness that I hadnât fully acknowledged before. Iâve been feeding off other peopleâs attention like a vampire, needing their smiles, their laughter, their words to feel okay about myself. And Mariel, without saying a word, held up a mirror and made me see it.
Marielâs Magic: The Art of Not Giving a Damn
Mariel didnât give a damn about what I thought, or at least didnât seem like she did, and thatâs exactly what made her so powerful. She was living her truth, moment by moment. Maybe sheâd had a long day and just needed to zone out. Maybe she was lost in some existential daydream, pondering the meaning of life, or maybe she was just tired and wanted to listen to her favorite playlist. Whatever the reason, she didnât owe me anything beyond the basic courtesy of âhelloâ and âgoodbye.â And why should she?
Too often, Iâve found myself stuck in a loop of trying to please everyone around me. Iâm like a shapeshifter, bending myself into whatever form I think someone else wants me to be. I tell myself Iâm being kind, considerate, attentive. But in reality, itâs just fearâa desperate attempt to be liked, to be needed, to be seen. But Mariel? She wasnât playing that game. She was the antidote to the people-pleasing poison Iâd been sipping on for years.
Mariel was a masterclass in boundaries, and I was the desperate student trying to graduate to her level. She wasnât being rude or dismissive. She was being herselfâno masks, no filters. And I envied her for that. I envied her for not feeling like she needed to make small talk or placate me with some half-assed conversation. She was just doing her, and I was left to deal with my own insecurities.
A Lesson in Self-Respect
Hereâs what I learned from Mariel: Putting yourself first isnât selfishâitâs necessary. Itâs about knowing your limits and respecting your own needs enough to honor them. Itâs about having the guts to say, âThis is what I need right now, and Iâm not going to compromise it just to make you feel better.â Itâs about being honest, not just with others but with yourself.
And the truth is, I havenât been honest with myself. Iâve been bending over backwards to be the ânice guy,â the âgood listener,â the âfriendly driver,â all the while secretly resenting the people who didnât reciprocate.
Itâs a game Iâve been playing for so long, I didnât even realize I was playing it. But Mariel made me see it. She shone a light on the dark corners of my neediness, my fear of rejection, my deep-seated belief that Iâm not enough unless Iâm being validated by someone else.
Mariel didnât need my validation. And she sure as hell didnât need to validate me. She was in her own world, taking care of herself, and in doing so, she showed me the way. She showed me that itâs okay to say, âThis is what I need right now, and Iâm going to take it, unapologetically.â She showed me that true self-respect doesnât come from getting others to see your worth. It comes from seeing your own worth and not compromising it for anyone.
Unapologetic Self-Care: The Mariel Method
So, hereâs to you, Mariel. Thank you for the lesson I didnât know I needed. You taught me that self-care isnât just bubble baths and meditation. Itâs also having the courage to say, âNo, Iâm not engaging right now because I need this time for me.â You showed me that itâs okay to be a little self-centered, a little guarded with your energy. And that itâs not my jobâor anyone elseâsâto take care of someone elseâs feelings at the expense of my own.
Weâre all so caught up in this idea that we have to be everything to everyone, that we have to be likable, agreeable, pleasant. But what if we just⊠stopped? What if we took a page out of Marielâs book and decided to live on our own terms, without explanation, without apology? What if we gave ourselves the freedom to just be?
Mariel didnât do anything extraordinary. She didnât cure cancer or climb Mount Everest. She didnât give some inspirational TED Talk. All she did was put on her headphones and tune out the world. But in that simple act, she gave me a gift. She gave me permission to stop trying so hard to be everything for everyone. To stop performing. To just exist.
The Real Heroâs Journey
I think, in a way, weâre all looking for permission to be ourselves. Weâre all waiting for someone to say, âItâs okay. You donât have to be perfect. You donât have to be everything for everyone. You just have to be you.â
But the truth is, that permission has to come from within. We have to be our own gatekeepers, our own liberators. And thatâs what Mariel showed me. She wasnât looking for anyoneâs approval. She wasnât waiting for anyone to give her permission. She just took it.
And thatâs what I want to do. I want to take that permission and run with it. I want to live unapologetically. I want to put myself first, not in a selfish way, but in a way that honors my own needs and boundaries. I want to stop needing everyone to like me, to validate me, to make me feel worthy. Because the truth is, I am worthy. Just as I am. Without the masks, without the performances, without the need for anyone elseâs approval.
The Takeaway
So, hereâs to you, Mariel. You, with your headphones and your unapologetic self-care. You, who probably didnât even know you were teaching me something profound. Thank you for showing me what it means to put yourself first, to live authentically, to honor your needs in a world that demands we give, give, give until thereâs nothing left. Thanks for reminding me that itâs okay to take up space, to put ourselves first, to just be.

About Akira McDonough-Sieben
Through his writings, Akira shares personal insights and reflections, drawing from moments of clarity as well as the challenges that arise on the path to spiritual growth. He believes that awakening is not about reaching a final state of enlightenment, but about continually opening to the truth of who we are, and learning to live in alignment with the universal flow. Blog: http://nakedbranch.com