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Whisper into the void with me: https://rainbowafterdark.micro.blog
Podcast is on an indefinite hiatus
In this episode, we enter the soft, messy, ever-changing place of becoming—this is me coming home to myself in real time. This is an unscripted, vulnerable stream of thought on authenticity, emotional fluidity, embodiment, and the process of learning how to feel. Let’s explore the ways we’re often taught to hide, repress, or perform ourselves into safety—and what it means to begin shedding those layers.
We’ll talk about the fear that comes up when we let ourselves be seen, the complexity of discerning between intuition and trauma responses, and the tenderness of learning how to meet all of our emotions—especially the ones that feel inconvenient or overwhelming. This is an invitation (for you and for me) to soften, to stay curious, and to practice the radical art of not abandoning ourselves.
If you’re navigating your own return to self, I hope this feels like a small recognition along the way.
Welcome home. 💕
Thanks for listening to Rainbow After Dark! If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss future ones. If something resonated with you, I’d love to hear your thoughts—feel free to leave a comment here, or on YouTube (I don’t use it much, but I exist!).
This podcast is a space for reflection and exploration—it is not a substitute for professional advice. Please take care of yourself and seek support as needed.
———
Transcript for Episode 7 — “Welcome Home”:
If you don’t know, I’m Rainbow, and you’re listening to Rainbow After Dark.
I would like to invite you to be here, to be present with me, and to remind you that right now you don’t need to fix or figure anything out. And this is a space of exploration, and I may very well be saying that more for myself than anyone else—and I also always just have the hope that perhaps there’s a chance that what I say could help somebody else out there.
So if you’re here, if you’re joining me—welcome.
I’d like to invite you into this space.
And what I want to talk about today is rediscovering authenticity and reclaiming self.
I feel like we often hear the advice “just be yourself”, “just be you”, “just be yourself”, which isn’t… I have complicated feelings about this.
Because most of us are kind of like bundles of survival strategies, right? I feel like humans are extremely sensitive. If you listened to my last episode I feel like I was extremely clear about this: we are soft, squishy, sensitive things.
Unraveling what it means to be our authentic self is a complicated process and it takes a lot of commitment and a lot of compassion and even courage to be able to do that, and I also understand that not everyone has the capacity or the resources or the support to be able to do that. Because it’s also really important to acknowledge that in order to be authentic—truly authentic—we have to have some degree of safety, right? Which is-it feels weird for me to say that, as someone who has never really experienced safety. I don’t know if I’ve ever felt safe in my life. I am learning very much how to feel safe with myself and that’s been a very long and ongoing process, and I’m doing my best to learn how to be safe in relationship with and to others, which is really scary for me. And I feel like, in some ways, it’s sad because so many of us are so shaped by what we—our survival strategies—who we’ve had to become and adapt to being in order to survive, in order to continue living in this world that we have, this world that we have designed. And I often feel like even though the world we exist in is designed by humans, it’s not designed for humans. It’s pure irony.
I know for me I developed a pattern of fawning, of people pleasing—I have a tendency toward perfectionism and ironically, I also kind of, like, inversely had a tendency to be kind of a little bit rebellious—a bit counter culture, alternative, that kind of thing. It was like I was stuck in the space between what other people expected of me and needed of me and rejection of that because it felt incorrect. And neither of them—neither of those expressions of me were fully honest. Which, you know… in some ways it was. It was honest to where I was at, right? It was honest to my present experience—to the experience I was having at the time and the things I was going through even if it was inauthentic. Which sounds contradictory and at the same time I don’t think it is.
And untangling that—exploring how these adaptations limit us—it’s a lot, right?
Especially because there is so much that is deemed “unacceptable” depending on the culture you’re in. There’s a lot of things that are deemed as being unacceptable and cognitively, I feel like in our present day climate, it’s easy to dismiss how important acceptance really is, right? Like, we all kind of know vaguely like, oh we all wanna be, like, loved and accepted, right? But I don’t feel like we always give full stock to what that really means and why it is so hard wired for us. Because historically as humans, if you were not accepted first off by your caregivers as a child, as an infant, you… I mean, you wouldn’t survive. You had to have that basic level of acceptance from your caregivers in order to survive into childhood and adolescence and adulthood.
How do I remove the masks?
And we accept that this is a process and that it is something that you choose over and over again, and each moment where you realize that you’re not—that you’re being inauthentic—is a moment that is inviting you to grow and practice compassion for yourself.
When we let go of those old identities, when we take those masks off, we are able to make space for what wants to emerge. For what feels less like survival and more like flourishing.
And also accepting that as we go through this process and become more ourselves, as we begin to accept and integrate our wholeness and our experiences, there’s a lot of feelings that are going to come up and we’re gonna have to meet grief and anger and fear. We might feel depressed, we might feel anxious. We might have already felt those things but they might come up in a way that has a different kind of texture or flavor that we’re not really accustomed to.
I feel like most people aren’t given the tools or the space or the resources or the support to actually feel their feelings, and when you don’t feel your feelings they just leak out sideways. They don’t stay contained. You know, you’re-you’re trying to bottle a tsunami. And this just doesn’t work. And you can try—but controlling your feelings is… I don’t feel like that’s really the goal, right?
I know for me, befriending fear, naming fear as my friend and not an enemy, not something to fight or beat or overcome, that has made a huge difference in the way I operate and the amount of compassion that I can have for myself and then extend to others.
Even right now, there’s a lot of fear coming up for me in expressing everything that I’m saying because even if nobody hears me, even if nobody ever listens to this, I feel vulnerable because this is a true expression of my thoughts, right?
A lot of this has to do with just, not only listening to our emotions, but listening to our bodies, and I think emotions are kind of born from the body. There’s a sort of feedback loop between the mind and the body when it comes to emotions, right? Because the way you think can absolutely influence the way you feel, but the way you feel also influences the way you think and it’s a whole thing.
And I also feel like most of us are very disconnected from our bodies. We are taught to ignore our body’s signals, our intuition, and not honor that our somatic experience is what really shapes our reality. And we have to understand it—we get a chance to understand it and what it wants to tell us and what it means for us as people and utilize it as a sort of gateway to what—to truth.
And this is especially hard if we have been gaslit and abandoned and invalidated and dismissed, especially repeatedly, especially throughout our entire lives throughout multiple, you know, relationships and experiences where this is something that’s really reinforced. That our body and our feelings and our experiences can’t be trusted.
And then trying to differentiate the sensations you feel—is what you’re feeling, you know, are you just, are you, are you triggered?
And I feel like humans tend to be quite intuitive creatures, right?
Everything is energy, and different energies kind of have different flavors, different textures—what is palatable and enjoyable for different people is going to be different. And our own personal perceptions are going to also contribute to how we actually interpret certain energies, and especially if we’ve experienced copious amounts of trauma, ongoing stress, you know, chronic stress—various experiences that I feel are fairly common throughout the scope of humanity, right?
Extending compassion to ourselves and just doing our best—doing what we can to be aware and conscious and compassionate, first and foremost, to be compassionate towards ourselves—to make room for the fluidity, you know, that—the multiplicity, the evolution—because we’re not static.
We’re not static beings.
I’ve had people in the past accuse me of being inauthentic because I’m not the same with everyone and I can understand that kind of perception, right?
Ideally we don’t abandon ourselves.
It’s a balance.
Each moment, through each little moment that we are able to really connect to ourselves is transformative. It’s radical. It’s a radical thing to choose self compassion—to choose not to abandon yourself, to choose to hold yourself accountable in a loving way. Because we’re not trying to be perfect, here. Nobody’s perfect and what even is perfect? Even if that was attainable, I feel like everyone’s idea of perfection would be different. So that’s not the goal—it’s never the goal. You know what they say, they say “progress over perfection,” right?
Because this is all just about coming home to ourselves and the journey that we go on in order to get there, and the journey is the thing.
And sometimes that’s frustrating and that is fair.
But that’s the entire point.
I don’t feel like we would incarnate as humans and have this experience of being humans if we were meant to stay static—if we were meant to just be one thing and experience one thing.
We’re here for the full spectrum, right?
‘Cause the other thing, too, is that sometimes, I think, we think we want to be a certain version, a certain character, or even caricature of ourselves. Or we are attracted to something in someone else that we want for ourselves. And it’s important to ask “why”? You know, what does that mean for me?
But are you at peace with that?
These are just thoughts—my thoughts.
Take it or leave it.
I do hope that if you’re listening, if you’re still here listening to me, that there’s something I’ve said that has felt like it is recognition.
I think I’m gonna wrap this up, so, if you’re still here—thank you.
I would like to invite you to reflect a bit and maybe ask:
You are not alone in this.
I am here and I exist and I am—this is my journey, too, right?
I don’t have it all figured out.
I’m figuring it out as much as I can figure it out—I’m walking the path, I am taking each step—even though it’s dark—trusting that it’s… it might make sense at some point, right?
So, I encourage you—if you’re able to do your best to meet yourself with softness, with grace, with care, and compassion—wherever you are, whatever part of the journey you’re at, whatever your journey looks like.
You’re here.
So thank you for being here.
And remember, that I love you.
By Rainbow OhreinsofWhisper into the void with me: https://rainbowafterdark.micro.blog
Podcast is on an indefinite hiatus
In this episode, we enter the soft, messy, ever-changing place of becoming—this is me coming home to myself in real time. This is an unscripted, vulnerable stream of thought on authenticity, emotional fluidity, embodiment, and the process of learning how to feel. Let’s explore the ways we’re often taught to hide, repress, or perform ourselves into safety—and what it means to begin shedding those layers.
We’ll talk about the fear that comes up when we let ourselves be seen, the complexity of discerning between intuition and trauma responses, and the tenderness of learning how to meet all of our emotions—especially the ones that feel inconvenient or overwhelming. This is an invitation (for you and for me) to soften, to stay curious, and to practice the radical art of not abandoning ourselves.
If you’re navigating your own return to self, I hope this feels like a small recognition along the way.
Welcome home. 💕
Thanks for listening to Rainbow After Dark! If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss future ones. If something resonated with you, I’d love to hear your thoughts—feel free to leave a comment here, or on YouTube (I don’t use it much, but I exist!).
This podcast is a space for reflection and exploration—it is not a substitute for professional advice. Please take care of yourself and seek support as needed.
———
Transcript for Episode 7 — “Welcome Home”:
If you don’t know, I’m Rainbow, and you’re listening to Rainbow After Dark.
I would like to invite you to be here, to be present with me, and to remind you that right now you don’t need to fix or figure anything out. And this is a space of exploration, and I may very well be saying that more for myself than anyone else—and I also always just have the hope that perhaps there’s a chance that what I say could help somebody else out there.
So if you’re here, if you’re joining me—welcome.
I’d like to invite you into this space.
And what I want to talk about today is rediscovering authenticity and reclaiming self.
I feel like we often hear the advice “just be yourself”, “just be you”, “just be yourself”, which isn’t… I have complicated feelings about this.
Because most of us are kind of like bundles of survival strategies, right? I feel like humans are extremely sensitive. If you listened to my last episode I feel like I was extremely clear about this: we are soft, squishy, sensitive things.
Unraveling what it means to be our authentic self is a complicated process and it takes a lot of commitment and a lot of compassion and even courage to be able to do that, and I also understand that not everyone has the capacity or the resources or the support to be able to do that. Because it’s also really important to acknowledge that in order to be authentic—truly authentic—we have to have some degree of safety, right? Which is-it feels weird for me to say that, as someone who has never really experienced safety. I don’t know if I’ve ever felt safe in my life. I am learning very much how to feel safe with myself and that’s been a very long and ongoing process, and I’m doing my best to learn how to be safe in relationship with and to others, which is really scary for me. And I feel like, in some ways, it’s sad because so many of us are so shaped by what we—our survival strategies—who we’ve had to become and adapt to being in order to survive, in order to continue living in this world that we have, this world that we have designed. And I often feel like even though the world we exist in is designed by humans, it’s not designed for humans. It’s pure irony.
I know for me I developed a pattern of fawning, of people pleasing—I have a tendency toward perfectionism and ironically, I also kind of, like, inversely had a tendency to be kind of a little bit rebellious—a bit counter culture, alternative, that kind of thing. It was like I was stuck in the space between what other people expected of me and needed of me and rejection of that because it felt incorrect. And neither of them—neither of those expressions of me were fully honest. Which, you know… in some ways it was. It was honest to where I was at, right? It was honest to my present experience—to the experience I was having at the time and the things I was going through even if it was inauthentic. Which sounds contradictory and at the same time I don’t think it is.
And untangling that—exploring how these adaptations limit us—it’s a lot, right?
Especially because there is so much that is deemed “unacceptable” depending on the culture you’re in. There’s a lot of things that are deemed as being unacceptable and cognitively, I feel like in our present day climate, it’s easy to dismiss how important acceptance really is, right? Like, we all kind of know vaguely like, oh we all wanna be, like, loved and accepted, right? But I don’t feel like we always give full stock to what that really means and why it is so hard wired for us. Because historically as humans, if you were not accepted first off by your caregivers as a child, as an infant, you… I mean, you wouldn’t survive. You had to have that basic level of acceptance from your caregivers in order to survive into childhood and adolescence and adulthood.
How do I remove the masks?
And we accept that this is a process and that it is something that you choose over and over again, and each moment where you realize that you’re not—that you’re being inauthentic—is a moment that is inviting you to grow and practice compassion for yourself.
When we let go of those old identities, when we take those masks off, we are able to make space for what wants to emerge. For what feels less like survival and more like flourishing.
And also accepting that as we go through this process and become more ourselves, as we begin to accept and integrate our wholeness and our experiences, there’s a lot of feelings that are going to come up and we’re gonna have to meet grief and anger and fear. We might feel depressed, we might feel anxious. We might have already felt those things but they might come up in a way that has a different kind of texture or flavor that we’re not really accustomed to.
I feel like most people aren’t given the tools or the space or the resources or the support to actually feel their feelings, and when you don’t feel your feelings they just leak out sideways. They don’t stay contained. You know, you’re-you’re trying to bottle a tsunami. And this just doesn’t work. And you can try—but controlling your feelings is… I don’t feel like that’s really the goal, right?
I know for me, befriending fear, naming fear as my friend and not an enemy, not something to fight or beat or overcome, that has made a huge difference in the way I operate and the amount of compassion that I can have for myself and then extend to others.
Even right now, there’s a lot of fear coming up for me in expressing everything that I’m saying because even if nobody hears me, even if nobody ever listens to this, I feel vulnerable because this is a true expression of my thoughts, right?
A lot of this has to do with just, not only listening to our emotions, but listening to our bodies, and I think emotions are kind of born from the body. There’s a sort of feedback loop between the mind and the body when it comes to emotions, right? Because the way you think can absolutely influence the way you feel, but the way you feel also influences the way you think and it’s a whole thing.
And I also feel like most of us are very disconnected from our bodies. We are taught to ignore our body’s signals, our intuition, and not honor that our somatic experience is what really shapes our reality. And we have to understand it—we get a chance to understand it and what it wants to tell us and what it means for us as people and utilize it as a sort of gateway to what—to truth.
And this is especially hard if we have been gaslit and abandoned and invalidated and dismissed, especially repeatedly, especially throughout our entire lives throughout multiple, you know, relationships and experiences where this is something that’s really reinforced. That our body and our feelings and our experiences can’t be trusted.
And then trying to differentiate the sensations you feel—is what you’re feeling, you know, are you just, are you, are you triggered?
And I feel like humans tend to be quite intuitive creatures, right?
Everything is energy, and different energies kind of have different flavors, different textures—what is palatable and enjoyable for different people is going to be different. And our own personal perceptions are going to also contribute to how we actually interpret certain energies, and especially if we’ve experienced copious amounts of trauma, ongoing stress, you know, chronic stress—various experiences that I feel are fairly common throughout the scope of humanity, right?
Extending compassion to ourselves and just doing our best—doing what we can to be aware and conscious and compassionate, first and foremost, to be compassionate towards ourselves—to make room for the fluidity, you know, that—the multiplicity, the evolution—because we’re not static.
We’re not static beings.
I’ve had people in the past accuse me of being inauthentic because I’m not the same with everyone and I can understand that kind of perception, right?
Ideally we don’t abandon ourselves.
It’s a balance.
Each moment, through each little moment that we are able to really connect to ourselves is transformative. It’s radical. It’s a radical thing to choose self compassion—to choose not to abandon yourself, to choose to hold yourself accountable in a loving way. Because we’re not trying to be perfect, here. Nobody’s perfect and what even is perfect? Even if that was attainable, I feel like everyone’s idea of perfection would be different. So that’s not the goal—it’s never the goal. You know what they say, they say “progress over perfection,” right?
Because this is all just about coming home to ourselves and the journey that we go on in order to get there, and the journey is the thing.
And sometimes that’s frustrating and that is fair.
But that’s the entire point.
I don’t feel like we would incarnate as humans and have this experience of being humans if we were meant to stay static—if we were meant to just be one thing and experience one thing.
We’re here for the full spectrum, right?
‘Cause the other thing, too, is that sometimes, I think, we think we want to be a certain version, a certain character, or even caricature of ourselves. Or we are attracted to something in someone else that we want for ourselves. And it’s important to ask “why”? You know, what does that mean for me?
But are you at peace with that?
These are just thoughts—my thoughts.
Take it or leave it.
I do hope that if you’re listening, if you’re still here listening to me, that there’s something I’ve said that has felt like it is recognition.
I think I’m gonna wrap this up, so, if you’re still here—thank you.
I would like to invite you to reflect a bit and maybe ask:
You are not alone in this.
I am here and I exist and I am—this is my journey, too, right?
I don’t have it all figured out.
I’m figuring it out as much as I can figure it out—I’m walking the path, I am taking each step—even though it’s dark—trusting that it’s… it might make sense at some point, right?
So, I encourage you—if you’re able to do your best to meet yourself with softness, with grace, with care, and compassion—wherever you are, whatever part of the journey you’re at, whatever your journey looks like.
You’re here.
So thank you for being here.
And remember, that I love you.