By Noah Buchanan, Associate Professional Clinical Counselor and founder of the Transcend Stigma Project
The myth of “normal” explorers how society creates narrow expectations for what it means to be acceptable, successful, healthy, or human. This piece challenges the idea that normal is fixed or universal and instead invites readers to consider how culture, drama, identity, disability, family systems, and social norms shape the way people experience themselves and others. At its core this article is about moving away from judgment and towards curiosity. Rather than asking whether someone is normal it asks what has shaped them, what they have survived, what support they need, and what environments allow them to thrive. It reminds readers that difference is not automatically deficiency and that the goal of healing is not to become normal, but to become more Fully ourselves.
From an early age, many of us are taught that there is a “right” way to be. The right way to learn, communicate, breathe, love, work, and to succeed.
What are these expectations come from family, schools, workplaces, culture, religion, or even the mental health system, the message often sounds the same. If you are struggling, different, emotional, quiet, loud, sensitive, disabled, queer, neurodivergent, or simply unlike those around you, it could begin to feel as though something about you is fundamentally wrong. But what if “normal” Is less of an objective reality and more of a social agreement?
What if normal changes depending on where you live, When you were born, the culture you grew up in, and the values of the people around you? The more we examined the idea of normal, the more it begins to unravel.
Normal is a Moving Target
Concepts of family, gender, relationships, disability, mental health, and identity have all shifted overtime. But one generation considers acceptable, another may question entirely. If normal constantly changes, perhaps it was never a fixed destination to begin with. Instead, normal often reflects the dominant values of a particular place and time.
The Cost of Chasing Normal
Difference is Not Deficiency
Context Matters
Perhaps the Better Question
Moving Beyond Normal

About the Author
Noah Buchanan is an Associate Professional Clinical Counselor and founder of the Transcend Stigma Project. Their work focuses on supporting trans and gender-diverse individuals through affirming, stigma-informed care. Noah brings both clinical insight and lived-informed perspective to conversations around identity, mental health, and systemic barriers. View Noah’s profile on TeleWellness Hub