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Everyone around you already knows.
Your clients see it. The people who've worked alongside you see it. The people who love you have probably tried to name it — in ways you found reasons to dismiss.
In Episode 58, Patrick continues the Johari Window series by moving from the Arena into the most uncomfortable quadrant: the Blind Spot. Not the things you're hiding. The things you don't know you're broadcasting.
Using his own creative identity as the case study — the self-deprecation, the Terrible brand, the mid-sentence bail — Patrick traces the armor back to its origin: a three-bedroom house in Freeport, Illinois, a dinner table where the competition was already over before it started, and a crayon surrender he signed before he was old enough to know what surrender meant.
This episode is about the system you built to survive. Why it made sense when you built it. And why it might be costing you more than it's protecting you now.
In this episode:
The specific look Alycia gives when Patrick abandons his own story mid-sentence — and what it means that he smiles instead of getting defensive. Steven Berglas and the Harvard research on self-handicapping — why capable people undermine themselves before anyone else can, and why success doesn't fix it. The sociometer — Mark Leary's theory about the internal gauge that monitors social acceptance in real time, and why most of ours are still calibrated for rooms we left twenty years ago. The two kinds of armor: lead and chrome. Why one makes you invisible and the other makes you blinding — and why both are running the same old software. Brian, the coloring book, and the crayon surrender. The Katie problem — what it means to be fully seen, how rare it actually is, and what the armor has to do with why it's so hard to find.
The Johari Window — where we are:
Last episode: The Arena — what you show the world, and why being visible isn't the same as being known.
This episode: The Blind Spot — what everyone else can see that you can't.
Coming up: The Facade, The Unknown, and the negotiation between all four.
If this one landed somewhere uncomfortable:
That's the episode working correctly.
Email Patrick. He reads everything and responds to most of it — especially the ones that cost something to send.
Connect:
Email Patrick: [email protected]
Website: terriblephotographer.com
The Book — Lessons From A Terrible Photographer: terriblephotographer.com/the-book
Support the show: terriblephotographer.com/support
Newsletter — Pub Notes: the-terrible-photographer.kit.com/223fe471fb
Instagram — The Terrible Photographer: @terriblephotographer
Instagram — Patrick Fore: @patrickfore
The Terrible Creative is written, produced, and hosted by Patrick Fore.
Music licensed through Epidemic Sound and Blue Dot Sessions.
Episode photography by Michał Parzuchowski — @m.parzuchowski
Recorded from a garage in San Diego, California.
Episode title and subtitle:
"The Tell" The Johari Window Part Two — What Everyone Around You Already Knows
By Patrick Fore4.4
1919 ratings
Everyone around you already knows.
Your clients see it. The people who've worked alongside you see it. The people who love you have probably tried to name it — in ways you found reasons to dismiss.
In Episode 58, Patrick continues the Johari Window series by moving from the Arena into the most uncomfortable quadrant: the Blind Spot. Not the things you're hiding. The things you don't know you're broadcasting.
Using his own creative identity as the case study — the self-deprecation, the Terrible brand, the mid-sentence bail — Patrick traces the armor back to its origin: a three-bedroom house in Freeport, Illinois, a dinner table where the competition was already over before it started, and a crayon surrender he signed before he was old enough to know what surrender meant.
This episode is about the system you built to survive. Why it made sense when you built it. And why it might be costing you more than it's protecting you now.
In this episode:
The specific look Alycia gives when Patrick abandons his own story mid-sentence — and what it means that he smiles instead of getting defensive. Steven Berglas and the Harvard research on self-handicapping — why capable people undermine themselves before anyone else can, and why success doesn't fix it. The sociometer — Mark Leary's theory about the internal gauge that monitors social acceptance in real time, and why most of ours are still calibrated for rooms we left twenty years ago. The two kinds of armor: lead and chrome. Why one makes you invisible and the other makes you blinding — and why both are running the same old software. Brian, the coloring book, and the crayon surrender. The Katie problem — what it means to be fully seen, how rare it actually is, and what the armor has to do with why it's so hard to find.
The Johari Window — where we are:
Last episode: The Arena — what you show the world, and why being visible isn't the same as being known.
This episode: The Blind Spot — what everyone else can see that you can't.
Coming up: The Facade, The Unknown, and the negotiation between all four.
If this one landed somewhere uncomfortable:
That's the episode working correctly.
Email Patrick. He reads everything and responds to most of it — especially the ones that cost something to send.
Connect:
Email Patrick: [email protected]
Website: terriblephotographer.com
The Book — Lessons From A Terrible Photographer: terriblephotographer.com/the-book
Support the show: terriblephotographer.com/support
Newsletter — Pub Notes: the-terrible-photographer.kit.com/223fe471fb
Instagram — The Terrible Photographer: @terriblephotographer
Instagram — Patrick Fore: @patrickfore
The Terrible Creative is written, produced, and hosted by Patrick Fore.
Music licensed through Epidemic Sound and Blue Dot Sessions.
Episode photography by Michał Parzuchowski — @m.parzuchowski
Recorded from a garage in San Diego, California.
Episode title and subtitle:
"The Tell" The Johari Window Part Two — What Everyone Around You Already Knows

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