Have You Ever Felt Like You Were Still Looking for Yourself?

Most people assume that self-discovery is something you finish when you are young. You try things, figure out who you are, land somewhere, and move forward.

But a lot of us are still in the middle of that story well into adulthood. Still figuring out what is real about us versus what we performed or adopted or survived into.

“Finding Me” is a song about what it feels like when God is the one who does the finding.

The Identity Question We All Carry

There is a question that runs underneath so much of what we do and feel and seek. It surfaces in different forms: Am I lovable? Do I belong? Is there something real and good at the center of who I am?

For a lot of us, the answers we received early in life were incomplete or damaging. We built identities out of what we could do, what we achieved, how we appeared, or who approved of us. And those identities are exhausting to maintain because they are never quite secure.

The spiritual journey, for me, has been the slow process of setting those down and picking up something true.

“Finding Me” is about that process. The moment when who God says you are starts to feel more real than what everyone else said. Or what you feared about yourself.

The Feeling: Relief and Recognition

This song carries two feelings at once, and they are both necessary.

The first is relief. The kind that comes when you stop performing and realize you are still standing. That who you are underneath the effort is not disqualified. That you are, actually, beloved.

The second is recognition. That quiet sense of “yes, that is me.” Not the curated version. The real one. The one that God made on purpose, before the world had a chance to talk you out of it.

There is something about being truly known by God that allows you to know yourself. Not perfectly. Not without growth. But truthfully.

What Scripture Speaks to This Song

Psalm 139:13-14 “For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well.”

Before anyone else had an opinion about you, God had already made something intentional. You were not thrown together. You were knit.

2 Corinthians 5:17 “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here!”

Finding yourself in Christ is finding a new self. Not a fake self. Not a performance. A new creation with a real identity rooted in the resurrection.

Galatians 2:20 “I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.”

The “me” that is found in Christ is not the ego-self I was building. It is the self that lives by faith, held by the One who loved me enough to die for me.

Romans 8:15-16 “The Spirit you received does not make you slaves, so that you live in fear again; rather, the Spirit you received brought about your adoption to sonship. And by him we cry, ‘Abba, Father.’ The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God’s children.”

Children. Not employees. Not strangers. Children with a Father who knows our name.

What Finding Yourself in God Actually Looks Like

It does not happen all at once. That is the honest truth. It is a long walk of choosing to believe what God says over what fear says. Of receiving grace repeatedly until it starts to feel like home.

But there are moments, sometimes in a song, sometimes in a verse, sometimes in a conversation that catches you off guard, where something in you goes quiet and says: that is true. That is me.

I wrote “Finding Me” for those moments.

Listen Now

“Finding Me” is track four on “Chosen by Grace,” available now on all streaming platforms. Visit themelaniegrace.com for listening links.

Coming next: “With My Hands Lifted High,” a song about surrender and what it takes to really let go.


Follow Melanie Grace at themelaniegrace.com for devotional content, song stories, and new music.

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