Trash Talk: Where Self-Help Cliches Go to Die Titelbild

Trash Talk: Where Self-Help Cliches Go to Die

Trash Talk: Where Self-Help Cliches Go to Die

Von: Erin Thomas + Erica Breuer
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What if the so-called “truths” about growth and success are actually keeping you playing small?


On Trash Talk, hosts Erica Breuer and Erin Thomas unpack empty platitudes and tired cliches that dominate the business and personal development world. These ideas might be popular, but that doesn’t mean they’re useful.


Who listens to Trash Talk?


  • Skeptics and Questioners of hollow advice
  • Those asking why self-help advice fails
  • People done with toxic self-help culture
  • Anyone who wants a place to finally talk openly about all the advice that makes you roll your eyes
© 2025 Trash Talk: Where Self-Help Cliches Go to Die
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  • “You can’t pour from an empty cup.”
    Oct 7 2025

    Show notes

    “You can’t pour from an empty cup”...but what if your cup isn’t empty?

    From misreading your cup to questioning learned helplessness, Erica and Erin go beyond individual self-care and discuss the messy (mostly) terrifying context of today’s world—shrinking rights, disappearing resources, and structural chaos–and how we might think about cups in a way that generates some much-needed hope.

    Don’t forget to leave us a review and call the hotline to share your favorite or most cringe-worthy cliches:

    719-819-2175

    Links & Resources

    Arley Nevar’s amazing LinkedIn post

    https://www.linkedin.com/posts/arleynevar_i-had-an-interaction-in-the-dms-this-week-activity-7376639338253619200-zupb?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAAAWXISsBrgKoYLsfVHpibEEVDt026Lp2JOQ

    Follow Arley Nevar on LinkedIn

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/arleynevar/

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    31 Min.
  • "Get Out of Your Comfort Zone" vs. "Stay in Your Lane"
    Sep 30 2025

    Two of the most recycled pieces of advice—“Get out of your comfort zone” and “Stay in your lane”—sound helpful on the surface. Push yourself! Focus! Hustle! Specialize!

    When these concepts collide, the absurdity becomes obvious.

    Erin and Erica analyze two cliches that seem at odds, but that also define a new reality in the tension that lives between them.

    Don’t forget to leave us a review or call the hotline to share your favorite (or most cringe-worthy) cliches:

    719-819-2175


    Show Notes & Links Selective Attention

    https://thedecisionlab.com/reference-guide/neuroscience/selective-attention

    The Neuroscience of the Flow State

    https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.645498/full

    Cognitive Load During Problem Solving

    https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1207/s15516709cog1202_4



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    30 Min.
  • "Work Hard, Play Hard" with Meghan French Dunbar
    Sep 23 2025

    What does “work hard, play hard” really mean and why won’t it die?

    In this episode of Trash Talk, Erica and Erin sit down with Meghan French Dunbar, author and co-founder of Conscious Company Media, to unpack the cultural myth of “work hard, play hard.”

    Drawing on Meghan’s new book, “This isn’t Working,” this conversation explores how play has been commodified, as well as why, despite our best efforts, hustle culture from decades ago still sneaks into modern work.

    Don’t forget to leave us a review and call the hotline to share your favorite or most cringe-worthy cliches:

    719-819-2175

    Show Notes & Links

    Buy Megan’s Book, “This Isn’t Working”

    https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/meghan-french-dunbar/this-isnt-working/9781541704862/

    Visit Megan’s Website https://www.meghanfrenchdunbar.com/

    Subscript to Megan’s podcast, “Better Than This”

    https://www.meghanfrenchdunbar.com/betterthanthis

    Follow Erica Breuer: LinkedIn
    Follow Erin Thomas: LinkedIn
    Visit the Trash Talk Website: Buzzsprout

    Citations

    John Morison, Religious Improvement of the Poorer Classes, London: Fisher, Son & Jackson, 1827, p. 277.

    The Normal Instructor and Teachers’ World, Vol. 32, 1923, p. 92.

    Quoted in The Rotarian, Vol. 77, No. 3, Sept. 1950, p. 35.



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    38 Min.
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