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What if your most frustrating patterns were once your smartest survival skills? The Myth of Normal opens up the idea that when attachment and authenticity collide, we adapt to belong but slowly mute our needs. Instead of pushing for quick fixes, we're reframing anxiety, burnout, and numbness as intelligent signals from a nervous system that’s been working overtime to keep us safe.
Guided by The Myth of Normal, we explore how shame fuels perfectionism and people-pleasing, why blame gives the illusion of control, and how a single question—What happened?—can soften self-judgment into clarity. We talk about the body’s memory, the cost of chronic self-silencing, and the subtle ways culture rewards performance over presence. Then we practice turning toward ourselves with compassion, not as a loophole but as a precise response to context. When we understand what a pattern has protected, we stop fighting ourselves and start building safety.
You’ll hear practical, humane ways to shift: replace self-critique with curiosity, swap pressure for pace, and use simple grounding cues—breath, touch, sound—to restore connection without analysis. We also include a guided micro-practice to help you settle and listen. Hope here isn’t wishful thinking; it’s the lived experience that nothing essential in you was lost. It was safeguarded, waiting for welcome.
Here are a couple of Reflection Prompts that might help you digest this episode and the book!
Take your time with these. There’s no need to answer them all — or at all. You might simply sit with one and notice what arises.
1. Belonging & Adaptation
- Who did I learn to become in order to belong?
- What parts of myself felt safest to express? Which felt risky?
- What did this adaptation once protect me from?
2. The Cost of Being ‘Good’
- Where in my life do I feel over-responsible?
- What might it feel like to disappoint someone — and survive it?
You don’t need to act on what you discover. Awareness is enough.
And if this episode stirred something, here are a few gentle Grounding Practices to settle your nervous system.
1. Orienting (1–2 minutes)
Look around the room slowly.
Name (silently or aloud):
- 5 things you can see
- 3 things you can hear
- 1 thing you can physically feel
This reminds your nervous system that you are here, now, and safe enough in this moment.
2. Hand-to-Heart Reset
Place one hand on your chest or arm.
Take one slow breath in.
And quietly say:
“I’m here.”
“I’m allowed to take this slowly.”Repeat 2–3 times.
3. Containment Visualization
If emotions feel bigger than you expected:
Imagine placing them in a container — a box, a jar, a basket.
Not to get rid of them.
Just to hold them safely until you’re ready to return.
If you’ve been carrying the weight of being “too much” or “never enough,” this conversation offers relief, language, and tools to come home to yourself—slowly, kindly, and on your terms. If our work helps you feel less alone, subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who needs a gentler path back to their own voice.
Our final quote from Gabor rounds out the episode like this:
“To make peace with our inner tormentors, we have to first understand them against the backdrop of
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