You Are Not My Assignment

There’s a short passage that circulates constantly online. It usually appears under photos of mountains or sunsets and gets treated as a gentle encouragement toward better boundaries.
It isn’t gentle.
“I do my thing and you do your thing.
I am not in this world to live up to your expectations,
And you are not in this world to live up to mine…
and if by chance we find each other, it’s beautiful.
If not, it can’t be helped.”— Fritz Perls
The quote sounds like individualism, but it’s actually about relationship. More specifically, it’s about consent.
Perls was not arguing that people shouldn’t care about one another. He was saying something far more unsettling: connection only has meaning when it is freely chosen. A relationship built on obligation may function, but it is not encounter. It is compliance.
Many of us were formed inside religious environments where belonging depended, quietly but unmistakably, on meeting expectations. No one would have described it that way. The language was love, discipleship, unity, faithfulness. Yet the emotional structure was clear: harmony required alignment.
We learned to manage reactions.
We learned to anticipate disappointment.
We learned to become who the community needed us to be.
Over time, a subtle shift occurred. Instead of meeting one another, we began managing one another.
Perls’ insight challenges this entire structure. If I require you to confirm my beliefs, stabilize my certainty, or protect my understanding of God, I am no longer relating to you as a person. I am relating to you as a function.
You become reassurance.
Or agreement.
Or threat.
This is why the line “I am not in this world to live up to your expectations” can feel less like freedom and more like loss. It removes a role we may have quietly relied upon — not just for others, but for ourselves. We are no longer someone’s proof, project, or responsibility.
Interestingly, the Gospels repeatedly show Jesus refusing roles that others urgently tried to assign him. Crowds wanted spectacle. Authorities wanted compliance. Followers wanted certainty. Each time, he declined to become what they needed him to be. Not out of indifference, but out of integrity. Relationship, in those stories, is invitation, not control. People are free to follow and free to leave.
That freedom is unsettling because it reveals something uncomfortable: many of our spiritual conflicts are not about truth at all. They are about expectation. When someone changes, questions, or steps away, what we often experience as theological crisis is actually relational disruption. The person has stopped performing the part we depended on.
The final line of the quote is the hardest:
“If not, it can’t be helped.”
It does not mean relationships are disposable. It means they cannot be forced into authenticity. Sometimes two people cannot meet honestly without one of them disappearing into a role. Staying may preserve proximity, but it destroys encounter.
Real connection requires two selves, not one self and one expectation.
What Perls describes is not detachment. It is the condition necessary for love to exist at all. Only when neither person is an assignment can they finally become a neighbor.
And when that happens, it really is beautiful — precisely because no one had to be managed into staying.
What Perls describes is not detachment. It is the condition necessary for love to exist at all. Only when neither person is an assignment can they finally become a neighbor.
And when that happens, it really is beautiful — precisely because no one had to be managed into staying.
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