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Weaponizing therapy-speak co-opts healing language as a way to avoid the actual work of healing.
"I'm triggered." "I don't feel safe." "He's a narcissist." "You're gaslighting me." These are rarely accurate, and more often than not they're just a fancy way to say "shut up", and stifle the big uncomfortable feelings of disagreement and misunderstanding.
Therapy-speak is helpful when it's a doorway, and relationally dangerous when it's the destination.
In this episode, Georgianna and Steph dig into what's actually happening when we reach for diagnostic language in real time, what it costs us in relationships, and the somatic shadow work tools we can use to access what's underneath — the stuff this language is helping us avoid.
Steph goes hard on the ways this unresolved shadow material scales — from your body, to your relationships, to the wider world — and Georgianna brings the somatic mechanism — what's actually happening in the body when a trigger fires, and the small, doable practices that build the capacity to be with discomfort instead of trying to legislate it out of existence.
They confess their own patterns from years gone by: Georgianna's temporary relief when she discovered therapy-speak, which gave her the vocabulary to describe what she was experiencing with an avoidant ex, and Steph's past weaponizing of these terms as diagnoses to shut people up and avoid her own big feelings. Same mechanism, different use case. Both very common in society today, and all of it ultimately unhelpful for our lives and relationships.
The throughline: words like "triggered" and "unsafe" should be starting points for curiosity and connection. When they're not, our relationships contract, the world shrinks, and the unresolved fight energy underneath comes out sideways in every aspect of our experience.
What you'll learn:
Resources Mentioned:
If you're tired of the therapy-speak and want to know what's next, this episode opens the door.
With love,Georgianna & Steph
By Georgianna Lee + Stephanie HunterWeaponizing therapy-speak co-opts healing language as a way to avoid the actual work of healing.
"I'm triggered." "I don't feel safe." "He's a narcissist." "You're gaslighting me." These are rarely accurate, and more often than not they're just a fancy way to say "shut up", and stifle the big uncomfortable feelings of disagreement and misunderstanding.
Therapy-speak is helpful when it's a doorway, and relationally dangerous when it's the destination.
In this episode, Georgianna and Steph dig into what's actually happening when we reach for diagnostic language in real time, what it costs us in relationships, and the somatic shadow work tools we can use to access what's underneath — the stuff this language is helping us avoid.
Steph goes hard on the ways this unresolved shadow material scales — from your body, to your relationships, to the wider world — and Georgianna brings the somatic mechanism — what's actually happening in the body when a trigger fires, and the small, doable practices that build the capacity to be with discomfort instead of trying to legislate it out of existence.
They confess their own patterns from years gone by: Georgianna's temporary relief when she discovered therapy-speak, which gave her the vocabulary to describe what she was experiencing with an avoidant ex, and Steph's past weaponizing of these terms as diagnoses to shut people up and avoid her own big feelings. Same mechanism, different use case. Both very common in society today, and all of it ultimately unhelpful for our lives and relationships.
The throughline: words like "triggered" and "unsafe" should be starting points for curiosity and connection. When they're not, our relationships contract, the world shrinks, and the unresolved fight energy underneath comes out sideways in every aspect of our experience.
What you'll learn:
Resources Mentioned:
If you're tired of the therapy-speak and want to know what's next, this episode opens the door.
With love,Georgianna & Steph