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In this episode of The Dynamics of Everyday Life, Julia explores a familiar but uncomfortable truth: knowing why we do something doesn’t mean we can stop doing it.
Using a tennis metaphor (and a healthy dose of self-awareness), she unpacks why insight alone rarely leads to lasting change; and why so many intelligent, motivated people continue to repeat patterns they understand perfectly well.
This is a grounded exploration of the limits of insight, the myths of personal development culture, and what a psychodynamic lens can offer when change stalls.
Here are the highlights of this episode:
(3.30) The personal development myth
(4.23) The repetition compulsion
(5.56) Secondary gains and unconscious loyalty
(7.30) Why tools aren’t enough
Sign Up for your free Resource Sheet HERE
Connect with Julia:
Website
By Julia RogersIn this episode of The Dynamics of Everyday Life, Julia explores a familiar but uncomfortable truth: knowing why we do something doesn’t mean we can stop doing it.
Using a tennis metaphor (and a healthy dose of self-awareness), she unpacks why insight alone rarely leads to lasting change; and why so many intelligent, motivated people continue to repeat patterns they understand perfectly well.
This is a grounded exploration of the limits of insight, the myths of personal development culture, and what a psychodynamic lens can offer when change stalls.
Here are the highlights of this episode:
(3.30) The personal development myth
(4.23) The repetition compulsion
(5.56) Secondary gains and unconscious loyalty
(7.30) Why tools aren’t enough
Sign Up for your free Resource Sheet HERE
Connect with Julia:
Website