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Trust doesn’t usually disappear in one moment. It fades in a thousand small ways when early relationships feel inconsistent, unsafe, or emotionally misattuned and the nervous system learns to stay on guard. I’m Michele Gorman, and I’m naming what so many of us live with quietly: the overachiever drive, the perfectionist pressure, the caretaker role, and the constant second-guessing that comes from not trusting our own inner voice.
We move through attachment theory in plain language and connect it to real life patterns like rumination, excessive worry, and the habit of hunting for other people’s opinions because our own judgment doesn’t feel reliable. I share parts of my story of growing up without dependable models of trust, and how that shaped my ability to listen to intuition. You’ll also hear two poems from Finding My Journey, one on Trust and one on Compassion, to capture the emotional truth behind this work in a way that facts alone can’t.
Then we get practical and honest: attachment patterns are learned, which means they can be relearned. Self-trust rebuilds slowly through consistent experiences of safety, including the safety we create for ourselves through boundaries and self-honoring choices. We also clarify what compassion is and what it is not. Compassion doesn’t mean forgetting, excusing harm, or reopening doors that should stay closed. It means seeing clearly and choosing differently, so we stop repeating generational patterns and start building a future rooted in trust and safety.
If this resonates, follow the show, share it with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find this path back to themselves. What’s one place in your life where you’re ready to trust your own voice again?
By Michele GormanSend us Fan Mail
Trust doesn’t usually disappear in one moment. It fades in a thousand small ways when early relationships feel inconsistent, unsafe, or emotionally misattuned and the nervous system learns to stay on guard. I’m Michele Gorman, and I’m naming what so many of us live with quietly: the overachiever drive, the perfectionist pressure, the caretaker role, and the constant second-guessing that comes from not trusting our own inner voice.
We move through attachment theory in plain language and connect it to real life patterns like rumination, excessive worry, and the habit of hunting for other people’s opinions because our own judgment doesn’t feel reliable. I share parts of my story of growing up without dependable models of trust, and how that shaped my ability to listen to intuition. You’ll also hear two poems from Finding My Journey, one on Trust and one on Compassion, to capture the emotional truth behind this work in a way that facts alone can’t.
Then we get practical and honest: attachment patterns are learned, which means they can be relearned. Self-trust rebuilds slowly through consistent experiences of safety, including the safety we create for ourselves through boundaries and self-honoring choices. We also clarify what compassion is and what it is not. Compassion doesn’t mean forgetting, excusing harm, or reopening doors that should stay closed. It means seeing clearly and choosing differently, so we stop repeating generational patterns and start building a future rooted in trust and safety.
If this resonates, follow the show, share it with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find this path back to themselves. What’s one place in your life where you’re ready to trust your own voice again?