The Incomplete Script

Reflections on burnout, disillusionment, and questioning the stories we were told

A publication of first-person essays naming what work feels like — without hero framing. These are lived reflections, not advice.

Empty office conference table with notebook, papers, and laptop in a subdued modern workplace

When I Realized I Was Over‑Explaining Everything

When I Realized I Was Over‑Explaining Everything

It wasn’t clarity anymore — it was justification.

I used to think thoroughness was a strength — an asset that helped me present arguments, interpret documents, and build trust with clients. But there came a point when thoroughness slipped into over‑explanation, even in simple daily interactions outside work.

Explaining became defending — even when nothing was at stake.

I wasn’t clarifying — I was over‑justifying.

When Thoroughness Felt Automatic

In the early years of practice, explanations were rooted in purpose — to ensure understanding, to support decisions, to clarify ambiguity. The intent was connection, not defense.

But after years of dissecting language, context, and intent — as I explored in “When Every Conversation Started to Feel Like a Cross‑Examination” — my words began to carry the weight of qualification even when the stakes were conversational rather than legal.

I wasn’t just answering — I was anticipating objections.

Over‑explaining was a habit I had stopped noticing.

When Simple Became Complicated

I noticed the pattern most in settings where clarity wasn’t necessary — at dinner, over text messages, in casual emails. A simple statement became a paragraph. A brief “okay” turned into context, caveats, and justification. I wasn’t communicating so much as layering defenses.

This felt familiar to the way I once began to measure my worth in hours rather than outcomes, as I wrote about in “When I Started Measuring My Worth in Hours Logged”. Both patterns became imprinted in places they didn’t need to be.

Simplicity became a puzzle to solve.

My language was teaching me its own habit.

When I Finally Noticed It

The realization came not in a dramatic moment but as a slow recognition. I looked back at a message I sent — far longer and more detailed than necessary — and wondered why I hadn’t just said what I meant. It reminded me of the way conversations themselves began to feel like interrogation, not exchange.

That recognition echoed the pattern from “When I Started Sounding Like a Lawyer Even at Home” — where the professional voice followed me into personal spaces, reshaping how I spoke and how I showed up.

Explaining had become a reflex, not a choice.

My words weren’t free — they were rehearsed.

Did others notice this too?

Not always. Often the comments I received were positive about thoroughness — but the pattern felt heavy to me.

Did I try to change it?

Awareness was the first step. Sometimes I now catch the impulse before it completes itself.

Does it still happen?

Occasionally. But noticing it gives me room to pause.

I wasn’t explaining less — I was just noticing why.

Simply observing that pattern felt like a quiet shift.

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