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Radical Self Trust (Part 2 of the How To Heal series)
Episode 16227th February 2025 • Become A Calm Mama • Darlynn Childress
00:00:00 00:36:20

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This is part two in my How to Heal series. Today, we’re talking about radical self trust and how to build more confidence and trust in yourself. 

You’ll Learn:

  • How past emotional wounds show up in the present
  • Why building radical self trust is so important for healing and creating positive change
  • How to be your own grown up
  • 3 strategies for building radical self trust

When I think about trust, I believe the entry point is when you have an experience of feeling really safe with somebody. So, let me ask you…

Is there anyone in your life that you feel completely safe with? That you can say or admit anything to (even the shameful, embarrassing, negative things), and you trust that they can handle your vulnerability with unconditional love?

In this episode, I’m going to help you become that person for yourself. So even when the hard stuff comes up, you know that your love for yourself will never change.

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How to Heal is a 6-part journey for healing from emotional pain, figuring out what’s not working in your life so that you can make small changes to be less reactive, feel happier, and show up as the Calm Mama I know you want to be. 

 

What Are You Healing From?

In this context, I'm talking about healing from emotional pain - going back and looking at moments in the past when your core emotional or physical needs were not met. 

Understanding these core emotional needs is also super helpful as a parent. These are tools to help you heal your past and parent your child in the present so that they don’t have the same wounds to heal from.

The core emotional needs are really questions we’re trying to answer:

  • Am I safe? This is a big one for kids. Babies and young children are incredibly vulnerable, and they know that they are not able to take care of themselves. They need adults to keep them safe.
  • Am I loved unconditionally? When we tell our kids that we don’t like something they’re doing or the way they’re behaving, they often take that to mean that they are bad. They can’t separate themselves from their behavior. It’s up to the adults in their life to let them know that they are unconditionally loved and accepted. 

When you experience moments where you feel unsafe or unloved, core wounds can form, and they show up later in our behaviors. 

There were definitely times in my own life when I did not feel safe. I experienced abandonment when my dad left our family. I experienced sexual abuse as a child. My mother had depression and undiagnosed ADHD, so she was not always available for me and sometimes chose men that were not safe for me. 

I started to decide that the world is not safe. When I looked around, I saw that adults were unreliable. They hurt you. They leave.

Later in life, this core wound showed up as hypervigilance, constantly scanning for hazards, being controlling, looking to see if I fit in, and lots of insecurity and anxiety.

If you have felt that you aren’t loved unconditionally, you might notice that wound come up as people pleasing, pushing others away, over-performing, perfectionism, or over-planning. 

We develop these coping strategies, often even in childhood, to help us deal with the pain and discomfort. As a parent, when these old wounds are aggravated by life circumstances or your kid’s behavior, you might find that you react really intensely. 

Overreaction is a good indication that you have something to heal from. Something is triggering you, and you might want to change your reaction. 

This is the WHY of healing. You see that you are reacting in ways that create pain for yourself or others. Your past emotional wounds are affecting the way you respond to current circumstances. 

 

Reparenting

In many ways, healing is a form of reparenting. I think of this as being the parent for yourself that you need right now. We all want our parent to say to us, “You’re safe and you’re loved. I’ve got you, and I’m here.”

I want you to do this for yourself. Tell yourself, “Hey, girl. There is no danger here. I’m right here. You’re safe, and I love you. There’s nothing you could do that would make me love you less.”

In order to admit that you’re struggling and ask for help, you first have to feel safe and loved. That’s what we’re working on here.

What unmet emotional need could be driving this behavior that you want to change?

 

Radical Self Trust

If you want to change something in your life, you have to teach yourself that you're safe. 

Building this trust is a conversation between you and you. You have to be willing to look at your own behavior and get curious about where it is coming from. If you want the shift, you have to go through the junk and be honest about it all - and know that you’re safe with yourself to do that.

Here are some statements to support your self trust:

 

  • I am safe with me. 
  • I unconditionally love and accept myself. 
  • I trust that my love for myself is unconditional.

 

To build radical trust, you cultivate a really deep relationship with yourself. I also like to make promises to myself. Things like…

I promise I won’t be mean to me.

If for some reason I hurt myself, I trust that I’m going to forgive myself. 

I also love to trust that I can handle the future. The grown up that you’re looking for to show you the way is YOU. She unconditionally loves you, and you are safe with her. She can handle things, and you get to trust her. 

If I deeply believe that I can handle anything and solve any problem that comes my way (except for death, and death is none of my business), I’m ready. What do you know about yourself so deeply that it makes you feel safe?

For me, it’s often as simple as “I know how to drive, and I have a credit card, so I can get out of any scrap that I put myself into.”

Maybe for you, it’s “I know I’m an adult because I know how to fold a fitted sheet.” You know how to do LOTS of things. Remind yourself of that and build the confidence that you can trust yourself because you can take care of things. 

 

Strategies for Self Trust

Take in inventory of resilience. Make a list of times when you’ve been resilient. A list of things that you have overcome. If you want to trust yourself today, look to your past for evidence that you're trustworthy. What are you proud of? What’s something you didn’t know how to do that is now easy for you?

 

Tell a good story about the past. How you think and talk about your past decisions is going to affect how you make decisions today. The kinder you are about the things you’ve done in the past, the easier it will be to be kind to yourself today and in the future.

Think about a decision you made 10 years ago. You were in a different stage of life, under different circumstances. How do you think about that past decision? Do you think, “Oh my god, what were you thinking? That was so stupid,” or do you think, “You were doing your best, and I love you for it”?

If you’re shitting on your past decisions and past self, you’re going to assume that future you is gonna shit on current you. Trusting in your decision today is going to be a lot harder if you believe that future you is going to be super negative and mean about it.

On the other hand, if you know that you are going to be kind to all the past, present, and future versions of yourself, it will be easier to trust yourself. Let the future you know that you always have her back, and you’re here setting her up for success. 

 

Take care of your nervous system. This one is so basic and so hard to do. We’re meant to flow back and forth between periods of activation and rest. When you are feeling unsafe, your nervous system is activated. 

In order to get back to rest, you have to notice that activation, soothe and reset yourself. The more you practice this, the more smoothly you’ll be able to move between the two states. I teach the Pause Break to reset your mind, body, and emotions (you can learn more about it in the free “Stop Yelling Cheat Sheet”). 


Remember - you are safe with you. You can trust that your love for yourself is unconditional and that you can handle problems when they come up. You’ve got this, Mama!

  

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Transcripts

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Welcome back to Become a Calm Mama. I'm your host. I'm Darlene

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Childress. I'm a life and parenting coach. And this is part

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two of our how to heal series, where I am

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walking you through a six part sort of hierarchy

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of healing and giving you some really actionable

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steps of how to heal from emotional pain, how

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to figure out what's not working in your life

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and how to make changes to get to a different

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state of being, whether you want to feel happier,

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show up as a calm mama, or not be so reactive.

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Maybe you wanna improve your relationship with yourself, with your body, with

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your partner, in work, make you know, reach more

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goals. Whatever it is that you want in life, you

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are probably going to have to go through a process of

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healing from something that might be blocking you,

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an obstacle that might be blocking you from getting you to

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that next state of life. Today

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on that pod, I'm going to teach you about radical

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self trust, and we're gonna talk about why that's

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important and what it means. Before I even get

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into it, I wanna ask this opening question to you because I was

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thinking about this. How like, I was thinking, how do you tap

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into this concept of self trust? Like,

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what's the entry point to feeling

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this experience of self trust. And I was

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thinking really it's by having had an experience of

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feeling very safe with somebody. So I

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wanted to ask you, is there anyone in your life that you

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feel completely safe with that you can admit

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anything to where you're willing to say

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the, like, shameful,

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embarrassing, negative thing out

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loud to them, and you trust that

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they can handle that, like,

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that vulnerability with unconditional love.

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If you can think of someone like that I mean, just think about how lucky

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you are. If that's your spouse or your best friend or a parent

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or or a sibling, a lot of people don't

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have someone in their life that they can completely trust,

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who they feel completely safe with. And what I

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mean by feeling like being able to trust is

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that you feel safe enough to share something vulnerable,

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where you know that their love for you will not

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change. So that's why last week's episode was all about

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this unconditional self love, this radical self

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love, and getting to deeper and deeper areas

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of loving yourself unconditionally

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because that's the foundation. If we think of this hierarchy of

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healing, self love is the basis. It's the

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foundation that we need to be looking at

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our behaviors, our patterns, our thoughts, our

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negative feelings. Anything that we're wanting to shift,

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we're not gonna be able to shift into new

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places of healing and, you know, self actualization

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if we don't start from a premise of self love. And

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then the next part of that is self trust.

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So what do I mean by radical self

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trust? It is this idea

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that you remember I said last week that I was gonna give you a set

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of statements for each concept. So here's your set of

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statements for radical trust, and it is,

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I am safe with me. I

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unconditionally love and accept myself.

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I trust that my love for myself is unconditional.

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I'm gonna revisit that in a little while. But right now, I want

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you to just kind of start to understand, like, this is the

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idea that we're working with is that I am safe with me,

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and I trust that my love for myself is

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unconditional. Okay. So let's get into

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a little bit of, like, what are we healing from and talk about healing in

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general. Because I think it's helpful to just

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understand, like, what is it that I'm talking about when I talk about

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what are you healing from? Like, what's this healing all about?

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So when I think about healing, I'm talking about emotional

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pain, And I'm talking about

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going back and looking at possibly

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moments in the past, whether that's childhood, young

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adulthood, your, you know, your twenties, your thirties, your forties. I

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mean, it could be happening now. But a moment where your

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core emotional or physical needs were not met.

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Now let me talk a little bit about core emotional

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needs because this is helpful as a parent. You wanna know how to,

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like, trauma proof your kids and not create trauma for them. Right? So

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they don't have to heal from their childhood.

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Remember, one of my life missions is to heal the

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next generation in advance. And what I mean by

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that is really creating an experience of life

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where they don't have a lot of trauma or they don't have wounds, primal

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childhood wounds that they have to go back and heal from. Now a lot of

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you have childhood trauma or childhood wounds

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that you're going back to heal from. So what are we talking about

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when we talk about these emotional needs and these wounds that

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were created when our emotional needs weren't met?

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So the first emotional need a child has is determining

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whether they are safe. It is our core

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genetic species based need

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because babies are born and they're very vulnerable

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and they know that they are not able to take care of

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themselves. And so a child, a baby, that's its

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first foundational developmental question is, am I

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safe? And that core

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is this a core need? The second core need

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is, am I loved unconditionally? So sometimes

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when I talk about this in, you know, the podcast or in

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my programs, in my group program and in my one on one coaching program,

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we talk about the developmental questions that kids

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have. So the first one is, am I safe? The second one is

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am I the boss of my body? The third one is

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am I good when I'm bad? Now we don't

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think of our children as good or bad, but we do sometimes think of

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their behavior as good or bad, And we kind of say to our kids, like,

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you know, that's not good. Don't act like that. And what happens is

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a lot of times a kid can interpret by saying I am my behavior

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because they're not able to really separate themselves from their behavior. So

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we want our kids to start to understand, hey. You know what? You're

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loved no matter what. You are unconditionally loved and accepted,

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and your core need for authenticity is met.

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So our kids have this core need of attachment, which is safety, and they

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have this core need of authenticity, which is love.

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So if you have any point in your life have not

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felt safe or have not felt unconditionally loved,

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you probably will have a wound from that.

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And so when we talk about healing, we're going back and we're healing

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some of those past times where our core emotional and

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physical needs were not met. Now what happens if you grow up not

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feeling safe? This was true for me because I experienced

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abandonment because my dad left my family when I was a kid. I

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experienced sexual abuse as a child. I experienced

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a mother who was emotionally unstable

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because she had pretty severe depression as well as

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undiagnosed ADHD. And so she was a lot of times

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not available for me. She also put me in positions

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that with like, she chose men that were not safe for me. And

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I my body got hurt. So along the way, I started

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to decide the world's not safe. Like, look around.

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Like, the adults are unreliable. The adults hurt you. The

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adults leave. The adults aren't taking care of business. And

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so I have a core wound of not feeling safe. So what does that look

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like? It can look like hypervigilance, scanning for hazards, looking

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to see do I fit, do I belong, am I okay? Being

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insecure, like, literally insecure is, like, the lack

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of security. And one of the things I worked on all last

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year in 2024 was internalized

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security. I wanted to teach my body that I was safe

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and that I was I was okay because I didn't really

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wanna have that anxiety come up all the time, that pressure and that feeling in

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my chest and, you know, that, you know, that anxiety

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feeling. I wanted to train myself to not

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go there, not not create a sympathetic nervous

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system response. I wanted to teach my body at a primal level that I was

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safe. That was partly because of that wound that I had.

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Right? Being very controlling is a symptom of

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not feeling safe. Having the need to, like, know everybody's business,

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know what's going on, be in charge, direct the traffic of

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your life. Needing power or feeling powerless

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or being really rigid and feeling like if something goes off

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schedule, everything's gonna go bad. Right? Not having that

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response flexibility being in that rigid space, that is

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really about not feeling safe. Now, of

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course, if you don't feel that you're loved unconditionally, that

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can also look like people pleasing, pushing others

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away, over performing perfectionism, over

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planning. So you see how when we

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have a core wound, it shows up in our

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behavior. And those behaviors are really

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maladaptive strategies that we used in

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childhood to cope with pain, to cope with

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discomfort. Maybe you develop some maladaptive

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strategies in your, adulthood that you don't

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even realize were there to mask a wound or to fill a

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hole. And what happens,

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especially when you become a parent, is you start to realize

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that some of your current life circumstances,

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like a kid not going to bed on time, or a kid, you

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know, refusing to eat a meatball or whatever,

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that you have like a a chandelier type response, like

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an overreactive response, like chandeliers are in the

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ceiling. Right? So, like, you kinda hit the roof. It's just this

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intense reactivity that doesn't really make sense based on

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the current circumstance. Like, you're overreacting.

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Right? And that is an indication that you might have

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some something to heal from, some trigger, some

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reactivity going on that you want to change.

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And so that's how why we want to heal is

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because there's, like, current life circumstances that

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if we're responding to them from past emotional wounds,

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we may be creating more pain either for ourself or others. I

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have so many examples of this in my life. Like, the first is

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just being aggressive with Lincoln when he was little and, you

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know, wanting to use my body and even hurting his body. I

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hit him twice when he was little. And I was like, uh-oh. Woah. This

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is not safe. This is not okay. It's even shameful to admit it to

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all of you here. But it was, like, scary to me. I was

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like, oh my god. Who am I? And instead of deciding I'm a

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monster, I decided to say I'm a person struggling.

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I'm a person in pain. I'm a person having an emotional

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reaction. I need help. And that

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we have to feel safe And we have to feel loved

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in order to go take that action to be vulnerable, to admit

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that we are struggling. But that behavior

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is like the the hint that

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discomfort, that feeling of shame, that feeling of guilt, that feeling of

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discomfort, or that feeling of pressure, that feeling of, you know,

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not being satisfied, feeling of resentment, feeling of anger.

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Like, if you have an intense emotion or you're

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ashamed of your behavior, I'm not here to judge you. I don't want

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you to judge yourself. I want you to see it as a hint, as an

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invitation to grow, to heal. So we

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look at our behavior today and we

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start to get curious about what could be going on

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that is driving this behavior. What wound,

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what unmet emotional need could be driving this

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behavior. So when you think about healing, in

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many ways, it's a form of reparenting. We've heard this phrase

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on Instagram and TikTok, like, what is reparenting?

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I think of it not as going back to childhood wounds

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necessarily and reparenting yourself. I really think of it

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as being the parent that you need

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right now. Like, showing up

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for yourself today as the parent that

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you want right now, which all of us

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want our parent to say you're safe and you're

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loved. I've got you and I'm here.

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And that's what I want you to do for yourself is

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become the parent that you wanna be for your children, become

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that mom to you right now. Hey, girl.

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You're safe and I love you. There's nothing you can

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do that would make me love you less. There

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is no danger here. I am the adult. I'm right

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here. We talked about core self from last week. It's that core

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self that is love and goodness. And

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that's her. She's the one who is parenting

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you. And we wanna teach you that

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you are safe with your core self, you're safe with her.

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Isn't that cool? So you get to become the loving and supportive

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parent that you strive to be for your kids, you get to be that for

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yourself. That's what I think of as reparenting.

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So now how do we do it, right? How do we actually

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heal? I've kind of talked about this. Healing

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means just looking at patterns in your life that might be causing

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pain And then gently shifting those patterns

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towards new ones that cause less pain.

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I was thinking about sharing this and I wasn't sure, but I've said,

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you know, I experienced sexual abuse as a child. And

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then that was from it's so hard to talk about it, but it was from

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the ages of five to 10. And then when I went into adolescence, I

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didn't want to be victimized any longer. And I

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was very promiscuous. And it was like I wanted power. I wanted

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choice. I wanted to be the boss of my body. But instead of

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actually listening to myself and actually connecting

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to what I wanted, believing that I was worthy of saying

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no and that people would listen to me. Like, I had so many wounds

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around this, but that promiscuity really was a

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maladaptive strategy. It was a pattern in my

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life that made me feel safe, that made me feel

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loved, but was actually causing me a lot of

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pain because I was allowing myself to be

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unloved and unappreciated and also unsafe at

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times. So we wanna look at our

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patterns. But the truth is that any of the patterns

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of behavior that you have, you will

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not be able to look at

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those patterns and be honest with yourself because the

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next part of, healing series is

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honesty. So if you wanna be honest with yourself,

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the prerequisite is feeling safe with yourself.

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I can't be honest with how shitty I act

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or why I'm doing something if I don't feel safe

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and loved. So remember, this is a conversation between you and you.

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This is a internal dialogue. And a lot of

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us hide our own behavior from ourselves.

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We get we keep it subconscious. We don't wanna take a look

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at it. We don't wanna examine it. We don't wanna

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wonder why am I doing that? Where is this behavior

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coming from? What wound could be here? Or what

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emotional need might not be being met? We're afraid

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to look at some of our behavior because we are

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ashamed of it. We don't want anyone to know.

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So we wanna just put on some lipstick and move on. But that's

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not gonna get you to the shifts that you want. We've gotta go

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through the dirt. We gotta go through the junk. We gotta be honest

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about it all. We gotta take action. We gotta get help.

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That's the truth. But you can't do that if you

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don't feel unconditionally loved and unconditionally

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safe with yourself. Yeah. It starts with you. You can't

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change anything in your life if you're not honest about it, and you won't be

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honest about it if you don't feel safe and you won't feel safe if you

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don't feel loved. That's why this is a hierarchy. We start with

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love. We go to safety, just trust, and then we go to honesty.

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This hierarchy of healing, the foundation is love, and then

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trust. I think of it as radical

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trust. So if you wanna change something in your

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life, you have to teach yourself that you're safe.

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Even if you don't do that thing or even when you are doing that thing,

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you're still loved if you're being promiscuous. Now, I

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do wanna say something about promiscuity. For me, it was

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not a behavior based in self esteem

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and self worth. It was a behavior that was

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based in fear and self loathing ultimately.

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So I'm not over here slut shaming anybody. I'm just

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being really clear that you have to know why you're

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doing something. If it is like sexual expression and you're

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just, you know, the boss of your body and you're making it work for you,

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like, awesome. I I go for it. You know, I'm not

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here to say I've talked about this before, like,

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people have behaviors, they have patterns, they

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have strategies that on the surface could look

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unhealthy but are truly healthy and or on the surface could look healthy

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but are unhealthy. An example of a maladaptive strategy

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for me is dieting. To others, it looks like self

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control. It looks like discipline. It looks like really beautiful

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self care. But deep down, it's self loathing loathing and

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insecurity and restriction and control. And it's

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because I don't feel safe in my body that I wanna make me

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hungry so that I can be in a hypervigilant state.

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Fascinating about my eating disorder is really rooted

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in creating just enough hunger that

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I am paying attention to my body so that I stay safe.

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But if I teach myself I'm safe, I don't have to do that strategy.

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So I say all that because I'm not here to judge your

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pattern. But I do want you to be judging

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your pattern, not from negativity. I

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want it to be looked at from self compassion, from self

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love, from trust, And looking at yourself and

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being like, I'm doing that thing. I wonder

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why. What's going on? And I

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have a lot of conversations that are like, Darlene, what is going

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on here? And it sounds like I'm being mean, but I'm just like, you're

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good girl, but we need to be honest about this. Radical trust

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is really this this deep relationship that

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I cultivate with myself that you get to cultivate with

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yourself that says, hey, you are safe. You can be

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honest with me. You are loved no matter what your

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behavior is. You can trust that my love for you

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is unconditional. I also like to make

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promises to myself. I promise I won't be mean to

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me. Right? So it's like me talking to me. I promise I won't

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be mean to you, darling. You are good. You are

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worthy. You are lovable. You are safe. You can

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tell me the truth. If for some reason I hurt

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myself, I trust that I'm gonna forgive myself. That's another

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aspect of it. I also love to trust that I can

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handle the future. So I'm gonna talk a little bit about a strategy to

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do that. But if I believe deep down that I am the

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grown up I've been waiting for, that I'm her, and

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then I can handle things. My brother and I have this joke of,

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like, who's your grown up? And really, a lot of times Kevin

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is my grown up. Like, what do we mean by that is who do you

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go to when you kinda need a grown up to, like, help you think through

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something, make a decision, maybe rescue you a little bit? My

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brother is, like, I'm your grown up and I'm his grown up. So I have

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two grown ups, my brother and my husband. And

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I also have myself. And I've been working on being my own grown up for

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a long time. And sometimes I think of it as being my own muse, like

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of different phrases. But the grown up that you're looking for

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is you. And you get to trust her. She unconditionally

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loves you and you are safe with her and she can handle things.

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So that trust is not just I trust that you're safe, but

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also I trust that I've got it.

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If I can trust that I can handle anything, I said this a

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couple episodes ago, that I deeply believe

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that I can solve any problem that comes my way

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except for death, and death is none of my business.

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Anything that comes in life, I'm ready. I could handle it. I

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can figure it out. I can resource myself. I can ask for help.

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Like, I have taught myself that I'm safe. I've

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also taught myself I'm safe because I say, I know how to drive

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and I have a credit card, which is a way that I teach

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myself that I can get out of any scrap that I put myself into as

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long as I have, like, money and a way to escape.

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Okay? So you get to pick what is

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it for you that you know you're safe because of

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what? Like, I can trust myself because

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what do you know about yourself? What do you know is true about you?

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What do you know that you know about yourself so deeply

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that makes you feel safe? If you were to say, I know I'm a

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an adult because what are the reasons that you know you're a grown

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up? My sister and I were joking because we don't know how to fold a

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fitted sheet. And we're like, this is like a failure of

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adulting. So maybe you don't know how to fold a fitted sheet or

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maybe you do. And you're like, hey, I'm really quite the grown up because

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I know how to fold a fitted sheet. But you know how to do lots

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of things. Right? You know how to make money. You know how to go to

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grocery store. You know how to cook something. Hopefully, you know how

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to do the laundry, take care of some things. Like, what do you already know?

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What do you know how to do? I'm sure there's lots and lots of stuff

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that you know how to do. So build up that confidence that you can trust

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yourself because you can take care of things. Now, let me give you

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a couple of strategies that I like that help me

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develop radical self trust in me. These

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are strategies that I have used and that I think are

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really helpful. So the first one I'm calling

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inventory of resilience. And

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what that means is making an inventory,

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making a list of times where

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you have been resilient, things that you have overcome.

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And this is really important because if you wanna trust yourself

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today, you need to look for evidence that you're trustworthy.

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And so going back and looking at the past and seeing

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things that you have done that you

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have learned or grown or overcome or that used to be

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hard for you that you eventually figured out how to do.

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It can be really simple. Like, I didn't know how to drive and then I

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did know how to drive, if you know how to drive. You know, I used

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to not know how to cook and now I do know how to cook. I

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used to not how know how to ask for help, but

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now I do know how to ask for help. You know, whatever it is that

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you've overcome. Inventory of resilience. Just

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like, what are you proud of? What do you know is true about

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you that you think is like yeah. No. That used to be

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hard and now it's easy. And it might be difficult for you to think

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about. Like, parenting used to be hard for me and then I worked on

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it and it actually became pretty easy for me. The relationship

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pieces and, like, you know, dealing with children is always kinda challenging. But I

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had clarity once I created the Calm Mama process. I was like, oh,

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Calm Connect, limits that correct. It just like, for me, it made

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it easy. Whenever I create a system for something, I'm

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like, oh, okay. Like healing. Okay. Now I know how to heal because I know

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what it takes. Right? I know I have to love myself, trust myself, be honest,

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listen to myself, accept myself, and then take action. It's

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like, yeah. So what are some examples of

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areas in your life that you have overcome, that you've been

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resilient? I used to not know how to do a podcast

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and now I have one. I used to not know

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how to, like, it's gonna sound weird, but, like,

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sell parent coaching. I was a parent coach. I was qualified

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and I had no idea how to tell people to, like, help

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them. I didn't know where to meet people or how to talk to them about

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it and then I learned how. I didn't know how to run a business. And

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now I know how to run a business. That my marriage was a real in

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shambles in 2017. I didn't know if we were gonna make it.

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And we kept at it. I learned a lot. I grew a lot.

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And now I know I can trust myself that I can handle

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whatever comes. So give yourself a little pat on the back

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and tell yourself a good story. Inventory of

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resilience. So that helps you build evidence that you

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are trustworthy. So you could say, I am trustworthy because

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or I have overcome the following things.

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Some kind of prompt like that. I've been resilient in the past because

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I didn't know about this, and now I do. Something like that. The

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second strategy is this conversation that you

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have with your past self and your future self.

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So I want you to tell a good story

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about the past. Now let me explain what I

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mean by this. Right now, you are a person, you're whatever

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age you are, and you're in whatever life stage you are, your kids are whatever

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age they are, and you're making decisions. This is February,

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so you're making decisions about the summer, maybe summer camp. You're

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making decisions about next school year. You're making decisions possible

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about where to live, whether you should work full time or part time or not

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go back to work, whether you should have your kids do a medical

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treatment or not, whether you should get them tested for

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something. Like, right now, you're being faced with a

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decision. K? Now how you talk

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about your past decisions is going to

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make it easier for you to make decisions

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today. So right now the

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person you are is present, whoever you are. You're in the present.

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But there was someone in the past, also you, ten years ago

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who made some decisions. And if you look at those

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decisions that she made in the past and you think, oh my god, what were

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you thinking? You're such a loser. That was so stupid. You should never have

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done that. You have a lot of regret. You have a lot of non

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forgiveness. You have a lot of resentment towards the past

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you. That means that right

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now you're making a decision but ten years from now,

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future you will look at today and think

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negative thoughts of her. If you're thinking negative thoughts about you from

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the past and you don't change that right now, in the

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future you're gonna think negative thoughts about yourself as you are

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today. You know this about you. If

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you don't trust past you, future

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you won't trust present you. I know this sounds meta, but

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just think about it. So fifteen years ago, I moved my kids to

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a small town. And if I look at that person and I'm like, that

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was a big mistake. We should never have left the city. You didn't really make

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good friends. You should have stayed there. And, like, you know, whatever.

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I could have a lot of regret about that. But then I'm making

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decisions now for the future where we should live or

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whatever. And it's like, if I mean to

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past me, then that means I'm pretty much being mean to present

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me. I cannot trust myself if I'm mean to

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myself. Whether it's decisions I made in the past or

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decisions I'm gonna make in the future and how I'm gonna think about today. I

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need to be kind to me, all the

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versions of me, past me, future me, present me.

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The kinder I am, the more love I show,

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the more self compassion I show, the more kindness and

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appreciation I show for all the parts of me, all

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the life experiences, all the decisions I've made, the easier it is

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for me to trust myself. If I'm shitting on my past

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decisions and past me, future me is

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gonna shit on me today, And that's not developing trust.

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Future me needs to believe that I always have her back that I'm I'm here

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hooking her up. I'm setting her up for success. I'm doing the best I

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can for me in the future. I am

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smart. I am wise. I am making good decisions. Am I

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making the right decision? I don't know. I know that I'm doing my

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best and I'm do I'm getting as much information as I can, and I

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can trust myself that I have to trust past me too.

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I have to trust current me and I have to let future me trust me

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too. So it's kind of this like very strange future me,

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past me, present me conversation. But I

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do want to invite you to start building a relationship with your

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past and with your future self. So

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doing that inventory of resilience is really good to reinforce this.

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Like, hey. Look at all the good stuff you've done in the past. Look

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at all the decisions you made and all the things that were hard that you

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solved, that you figured out. The kinder you are to the things that

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you've done in the past, the easier it will be to be kind to yourself

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today and the easier it will be to be kind to yourself in the

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future. Okay. Hopefully, that makes sense.

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Message me on Instagram or reply to an email. Let me know if it's

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super confusing. The last strategy is really

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so basic, but so hard. And it really is about taking

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care of your nervous system. So what does that mean? It means that

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we have our parasympathetic and our sympathetic nervous

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system are activated and our rest state. Right?

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And we're supposed to flow back and forth between

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a sympathetic, like an aroused state, to

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a parasympathetic, which is a rest state. And that's

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how we are meant to be. Right? We're not supposed to be at rest all

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the time nor are we supposed to be activated all the time. I talk about

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this in episode 97, your nervous system

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explained. So go back and listen to that one. Now

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how do you take care of your nervous system? Episode two where

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I talk about the pause break is really, really helpful. I also do

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did a series where I break the pause breakdown, and we'll

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link all those in the show notes. But it's like moving your mind, moving

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your body, moving your emotions. When you have an activated

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nervous system in the present, right, that's your fear

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response, that's your unsafe response, You're

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noticing it. You're soothing yourself and then you're

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shifting. So we do that with the pause break. We stop what we're

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doing and we go and we reset our nervous system.

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So the pause break is stop

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and reset. Stop. Do nothing. Don't talk. Don't do it. Go take care of

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yourself. So you're in your activated system.

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Now a lot of us don't even notice that we're in an activated

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stress response. We are not paying close enough attention partly because

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of shame, partly because of disassociation, different

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reasons. It's doesn't really matter whenever you

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notice. You don't have to judge that you didn't notice or did, but just

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notice and then figure out what it is that your body needs. Most of us

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need to move and then do some mindset work. So I always say move your

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body, move your mind. In the toolkit that I offer

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for free on my website, if you don't have it or you haven't looked at

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it for a while, the stop yelling cheat sheet goes through the

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process of how to do this. So this is a really important thing.

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But recognizing your nervous system is activated and then going

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through and taking care of it is really important. So those are three

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strategies to help develop trust in yourself.

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Remember, we're going to be working for the next four episodes.

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So this was episode two of a six part series on how to

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heal, And they all build on each other. We're

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started with love, radical self love. This

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is radical trust. Next, you're gonna be

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radical honesty, which is vulnerability,

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radical listening, figuring out who you are, what you like,

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what you want, radical acceptance, true deep acceptance of

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who you are in your circumstances and just being okay

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with today. And then radical action.

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Like, we have to do stuff in order to shift. We have to do stuff

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in order to heal. We have to create new habits. So I'm gonna talk about

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that as well. So this is the episode. Today was all

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about trust, remembering you're safe with you. You can trust

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that your love for yourself is unconditional, promising that you

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won't be mean to yourself. If you are mean to

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yourself, you can forgive yourself, trusting that you can handle

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problems when they come up. I'm gonna leave you with this final note

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from Sharon Salzberg who wrote the book loving kindness.

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I referenced it last week. It's very good. She says,

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love for others without the foundation of love

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for ourselves becomes a loss of boundaries,

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codependency, and a painful and fruitless

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search for intimacy. The intimacy

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that you are longing for, the appreciation you're longing for,

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the respite, the care, the love, the safety,

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the grown up that you're longing for is you.

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And I think she's really, really great.

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Alright, mama. I will talk to you next week.

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