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Why Women Lose Themselves - And How Safe Environments Help Us Rise Again
During a recent podcast recording, my co-host and I talked about what it really means to bring your authentic self to the table - for both men and women. That conversation stayed with me. It made me think deeply about the environments we move through every day as women, and how profoundly they shape (or suppress) our self‑expression. Somewhere along the way - often quietly, gradually, and without noticing - we start giving up the parts of ourselves that once made us feel alive. Before the rules. Before the expectations. Before the roles we were handed and told to carry with grace. When we were younger, we moved through the world without self‑consciousness. And then life happened. Careers, relationships, motherhood, invisible labour, and the pressure to be good, capable, responsible, appropriate, enough, begin to shape us. Piece by piece, women trade spontaneity for structure, joy for duty, intuition for approval. But something powerful happens with age, maturity, and consciousness: we begin to remember. We remember who we were before the world told us who to be. We remember what we loved before we were taught to minimise ourselves. We remember the parts of our identity that were never lost - only buried. And this rediscovery doesn’t happen in isolation. It happens in environments that allow it. Environments - at work and at home - that are psychologically safe, emotionally intelligent, and free from manipulation or dismissal give people permission to bring their whole selves forward. When people feel safe, they reconnect with their creativity, their joy, their intuition, their voice. They show up with authenticity rather than armour. Environments that are controlling, dismissive, or manipulative do the opposite. They shrink people. They silence instincts. They teach women (and men) to abandon the parts of themselves that don’t fit the unspoken rules. They reward compliance over truth, performance over presence, and self‑abandonment over self‑expression. In today’s world, women often forget who they are at their very core - not because they’re disconnected, but because they’ve been over‑responsible for too long in environments that didn’t make space for their full humanity.
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Why Women Lose Themselves - And How Safe Environments Help Us Rise Again
The first question you need to ask yourself isn’t “How do I say this?”
It’s “Why can’t I talk openly to this person in the first place?” Whether it’s a partner, a colleague, a friend, or even a family member - if you feel something, but you can’t express it, your brain pays the price. When we silence ourselves to keep the peace, the nervous system receives two conflicting messages: “This feels wrong”… but also… “I’m not allowed to say it.” That internal conflict activates the brain’s threat circuitry. Over time, that leads to stress, anxiety, resentment, and emotional shutdown. And if you grew up around manipulation, criticism, or unpredictable reactions - your brain learned early that speaking up wasn’t safe. So now, even as an adult, your body reacts before your logic does. This isn’t weakness. It’s conditioning. It’s survival learning. So the real starting point is this: Why does my system believe that honesty is dangerous? Because once you understand that, you can begin to heal the pattern - not just the moment.
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The first question you need to ask yourself isn’t “How do I say this?”
Understanding the Roots of “Not Enoughness” – Now in the Classroom
Hi everyone, I’ve just uploaded a powerful TEDx talk from Dr. Patti Ashley into the Classroom tab, and it’s one that speaks directly to the deeper layers of shame, emotional safety, and the nervous system. Dr. Ashley explores a striking statistic: just one month after COVID‑19 began, calls to the National Mental Health Hotline rose by 891%. She breaks down how the belief of “I’m not good enough” - shaped by early childhood experiences, ancestral patterns, and our brain’s wiring - has played a major role in this mental health crisis. Drawing from more than forty years in education, child development, and psychotherapy, she explains how shame forms, how it gets stored in the nervous system, and how it disconnects us from belonging, love, and emotional safety. Her approach, which she calls wholehearted psychotherapy, focuses on creating long‑term changes in the brain by helping people break through unconscious barriers to self‑love and connection. This talk is especially meaningful for anyone navigating trauma, grief, family patterns, or the lingering emotional impact of the last few years. It’s a grounded, compassionate reminder that healing begins with understanding the roots of our pain - not blaming ourselves for it. You can now watch the full talk inside the Classroom. #mentalhealth #traumahealing #shameinformedtherapy #nervoussystemhealing #emotionalwellbeing #selfworth #healingjourney #psychology #authenticity #belonging #innerwork #skoolcommunity
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Understanding the Roots of “Not Enoughness” – Now in the Classroom
The Importance of Authenticity and Mindfulness – Now in the Classroom
Hi everyone, I’ve just uploaded a powerful TEDx talk by my friend, Andrea Beil, into the Classroom tab, and it’s one I think many of you will deeply resonate with. This talk explores why authenticity and mindfulness aren’t just personal development buzzwords, but essential foundations for a grounded, meaningful life. Andrea shares how staying connected to your inner truth, slowing down enough to actually hear yourself, and showing up with presence can transform the way you lead, relate, and make decisions especially after trauma and abuse. In a world that pushes speed, performance, and comparison, this is a reminder that real alignment comes from within. When we choose authenticity, we stop abandoning ourselves. When we practice mindfulness, we create the internal space needed for clarity, emotional regulation, and intentional action. If you’re on a journey of self‑growth or healing, this is a beautiful watch — and a reminder that the most important relationship you’ll ever build is the one you build with yourself. #authenticity #mindfulness #selfgrowth #leadershipdevelopment #innerwork #emotionalregulation #nervoussystemhealing #selfconnection #healingjourney #intentionalliving #skoolcommunity
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The Importance of Authenticity and Mindfulness – Now in the Classroom
When is a Relationship “Just Difficult”… and When is it Manipulative?
During yesterday’s UNMASKED: How Manipulators Hijack Your Brain — And How to Become a Woman Who Cannot Be Manipulated Again masterclass, someone asked a question that so many women carry quietly: “How do I know if this relationship - work or personal - is simply difficult… or if it’s actually manipulative?” It’s a powerful question because confusion is part of the harm. Manipulation blurs your internal signals, makes you second‑guess your instincts, and conditions you to tolerate what you would never accept in a clear state. I’ve uploaded the clip of my full answer here, but here’s the essence of what we explored together: 🌫️ Difficult Relationships Create Discomfort. Manipulative Relationships Create Distortion. A difficult relationship might involve miscommunication, mismatched needs, stress, or clashing personalities. But even in the hard moments, you still recognise yourself. You still feel like you. Manipulation is different. It alters your internal landscape. It changes how you think, how you feel, and how you interpret reality. You start working harder to stay connected while losing connection to yourself. 🧠 The Nervous System Knows Before the Mind Does One of the most important points from the masterclass: Your body often recognises manipulation long before your mind can name it. If you’re constantly bracing, shrinking, explaining, or trying to “earn” emotional safety, your nervous system is telling the truth - even if the situation looks “normal” from the outside. This conversation matters because the moment you can name the difference, you can finally choose yourself again. The full masterclass recording is available under the Classroom tab. #healingafterharm #manipulationrecovery #traumainformed #nervoussystemhealing #emotionalclarity #psychologicalsafety #womensupportingwomen #unmaskedmasterclass #relationshipredflags #selftrust #boundariesmatter #healingjourney #innerstrength #reclaimyourself
When is a Relationship “Just Difficult”… and When is it Manipulative?
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