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Two or three weeks into summer, when the June exhaustion finally starts to lift, something else shows up. The quiet. And in the quiet, a voice that starts second-guessing everything — the students you didn't reach, the lessons that didn't land, the feeling that everyone else has it figured out while you were just trying to get through the year.
Edward calls it the quiet lie. And it doesn't come in one big dramatic moment. It comes in small ones, stacked up over weeks, using real moments from your year as evidence against you.
This episode is about negativity bias, the believement gap, and what it actually looks like to push back on a voice that counts on you being alone with it.
⭐ Rate and subscribe so you never miss a Sunday episode.
www.homeroomattendance.com
By Edward DeShazer5
1616 ratings
Two or three weeks into summer, when the June exhaustion finally starts to lift, something else shows up. The quiet. And in the quiet, a voice that starts second-guessing everything — the students you didn't reach, the lessons that didn't land, the feeling that everyone else has it figured out while you were just trying to get through the year.
Edward calls it the quiet lie. And it doesn't come in one big dramatic moment. It comes in small ones, stacked up over weeks, using real moments from your year as evidence against you.
This episode is about negativity bias, the believement gap, and what it actually looks like to push back on a voice that counts on you being alone with it.
⭐ Rate and subscribe so you never miss a Sunday episode.
www.homeroomattendance.com