19/01/2026
The "Other" We Desire Is Often the Person We Could Become
The great psychotherapist Esther Perel once said something striking:
"When we lock eyes with someone across a room, it’s rarely about leaving the person we’re with. It’s about the person we imagine we could become in the presence of that other."
That landed for me.
Because so often our desires, whether for people, careers, houses or Ferraris, aren’t really about the thing itself. They’re about the self we imagine we could become because of it.
No one truly wants just the car.
They want status, confidence, validation, escape, admiration.
The car is merely the portal.
No one truly wants the affair.
They want aliveness, possibility, eroticism, youth, boldness.
The other person is simply the mirror.
And dissatisfaction isn’t always a rejection of what we have.
Sometimes it’s simply a longing for a version of ourselves we haven’t met yet.
Here’s the twist:
What if we didn’t need the external object to access the internal state?
What if the confidence, the status, the aliveness, the freedom,
were available now, without switching partners, buying the car, or starting over?
This is why modalities like hypnotherapy are so powerful.
Not because they change our circumstances,
but because they expand our identity from the inside out.
And when we feel abundant, confident, desirable, capable,
two things happen:
We stop needing external upgrades to validate our worth.
We begin to enjoy what we already have.
Perhaps happiness isn’t about acquiring a new life,
but about becoming the person who can actually inhabit the current one.
And from that place, anything we choose next is a bonus, not a rescue.