I don't know who I am anymore - every version of me is performed. Here's my situation: [describe the different versions you show different people, what feels real, what feels fake, and the exhaustion]. Identify my masks: who am I at work vs. with family vs. with friends vs. with partners vs. alone? Create my mask inventory (list every version with specific traits). Then ask the hard question: which one is real? Or are they all real parts of me? Or is none of them actually me? Decode the fragmentation: when did I start performing? What made it unsafe to be fully myself? Who taught me different parts of me were acceptable to different people? Map the split: professional me (competent, together), social me (fun, easy), family me (role-playing child/sibling), intimate me (whoever they want), and alone me (the one I'm afraid to be in public). Analyze the cost: exhaustion from switching, inability to be fully known anywhere, confusion about who I actually am, relationships based on performance not presence, and the grief of never being fully yourself anywhere. Recognize the trap: if no one knows all of me, no one actually knows me; if I'm different everywhere, I'm authentic nowhere. Create the integration plan: the self-excavation (underneath all the masks, who am I?), the value clarification (what actually matters to me when I remove others' opinions?), the authentic reveal experiment (showing more real me in safe spaces), the mask reduction (dropping one performance at a time), the reactions weathering (some people will reject the real me - can I survive it?), and the wholeness practice (being more consistent across contexts). Include: the version of me I'm most afraid to be publicly, what I'd lose if I was fully myself everywhere, and whether I want to be loved for who I am or liked for who I pretend to be.