
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode, Natasha continues the trauma conversation — and explains why so many founders stay stuck simply because they refuse to label what happened as trauma.
Using a recent, scary personal story (her son being in multiple car accidents), Natasha breaks down “trauma negation”: the habit of saying “it’s not a big deal” even when something has clearly changed your nervous system, confidence, and sense of safety.
You’ll hear why trauma is subjective, why “little T vs big T” still matters, and how minimizing your story keeps the healing from ever starting. Natasha shares how patterns like perfectionism, people-pleasing, and fear of anger often come from early environments — and how those same patterns can quietly cap your business growth.
If you’ve ever felt like you’re “too strong” to be affected, this one is your permission slip: name it, work with it, and get free.
By Natasha GolinskyIn this episode, Natasha continues the trauma conversation — and explains why so many founders stay stuck simply because they refuse to label what happened as trauma.
Using a recent, scary personal story (her son being in multiple car accidents), Natasha breaks down “trauma negation”: the habit of saying “it’s not a big deal” even when something has clearly changed your nervous system, confidence, and sense of safety.
You’ll hear why trauma is subjective, why “little T vs big T” still matters, and how minimizing your story keeps the healing from ever starting. Natasha shares how patterns like perfectionism, people-pleasing, and fear of anger often come from early environments — and how those same patterns can quietly cap your business growth.
If you’ve ever felt like you’re “too strong” to be affected, this one is your permission slip: name it, work with it, and get free.