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You check your phone. Again.
Waiting for that text back. That like. That comment. Anything to tell you it was okay—what you said, what you posted, who you are.
And maybe you hate that about yourself. This constant need to know that someone out there approves.
You're exhausted from performing. From editing yourself. From wondering if you're too much or not enough.
But here's what makes it worse: you're an adult. You're successful. You have responsibilities. You should be over this by now.
So why aren't you?
The uncomfortable truth: We seek validation as adults for the exact same reason we sought it as children—because at some point, we learned that our worth was conditional. This isn't abstract psychology. This is lived experience for most of us.
The adult validation trap: As adults, the stakes feel higher. We're not just seeking validation from parents anymore—it's partners, bosses, colleagues, social media followers, even strangers. Every time we look outside ourselves for confirmation, we're telling our nervous system: "I'm not safe being me. I need approval to exist."
Why this isn't weakness: Seeking validation is a survival strategy, not a character flaw. When we were children, we actually did need approval to survive. Your nervous system was doing exactly what it was designed to do. The problem? Most of us never got the memo that we've outgrown that strategy.
The neurological reality: Your brain has something called the social engagement system. From an evolutionary perspective, being rejected by your social group was a death sentence. So your nervous system developed sophisticated mechanisms to detect approval and disapproval. This isn't something you're doing wrong. This is biology.
The path forward: You can't change what you can't see. I share four practical strategies:
The spiritual dimension: The deepest answer to "why do adults seek validation?" is this—because we've forgotten who we really are. We're not actually seeking validation. We're seeking recognition. To be seen for the vast, luminous beings we actually are beneath all the conditioning and performance.
My own experience: I share how prison stripped me of everything that defined me, and in that void, the hunger for validation became unbearable. But it also forced me to find something solid within myself. The validation I'd been seeking my entire life was never going to come from outside.
Seeking validation isn't weakness. It's an outdated survival strategy. And the moment you recognize that—the moment you see it for what it is—you can begin to choose something different.
The validation you've been seeking is actually already there. It was always there. You've just been looking in the wrong direction.
About The Martin Pavion Podcast:
Clinical hypnotherapist, NLP master practitioner, and ICF trained coach - Martin Pavion helps successful but stuck professionals navigate life's crossroads. Combining practical coaching with transformative hypnosis, this podcast explores the psychology of change, authentic living, and what it really takes to rebuild when everything falls apart.
New episodes twice a week.
By Martin PavionYou check your phone. Again.
Waiting for that text back. That like. That comment. Anything to tell you it was okay—what you said, what you posted, who you are.
And maybe you hate that about yourself. This constant need to know that someone out there approves.
You're exhausted from performing. From editing yourself. From wondering if you're too much or not enough.
But here's what makes it worse: you're an adult. You're successful. You have responsibilities. You should be over this by now.
So why aren't you?
The uncomfortable truth: We seek validation as adults for the exact same reason we sought it as children—because at some point, we learned that our worth was conditional. This isn't abstract psychology. This is lived experience for most of us.
The adult validation trap: As adults, the stakes feel higher. We're not just seeking validation from parents anymore—it's partners, bosses, colleagues, social media followers, even strangers. Every time we look outside ourselves for confirmation, we're telling our nervous system: "I'm not safe being me. I need approval to exist."
Why this isn't weakness: Seeking validation is a survival strategy, not a character flaw. When we were children, we actually did need approval to survive. Your nervous system was doing exactly what it was designed to do. The problem? Most of us never got the memo that we've outgrown that strategy.
The neurological reality: Your brain has something called the social engagement system. From an evolutionary perspective, being rejected by your social group was a death sentence. So your nervous system developed sophisticated mechanisms to detect approval and disapproval. This isn't something you're doing wrong. This is biology.
The path forward: You can't change what you can't see. I share four practical strategies:
The spiritual dimension: The deepest answer to "why do adults seek validation?" is this—because we've forgotten who we really are. We're not actually seeking validation. We're seeking recognition. To be seen for the vast, luminous beings we actually are beneath all the conditioning and performance.
My own experience: I share how prison stripped me of everything that defined me, and in that void, the hunger for validation became unbearable. But it also forced me to find something solid within myself. The validation I'd been seeking my entire life was never going to come from outside.
Seeking validation isn't weakness. It's an outdated survival strategy. And the moment you recognize that—the moment you see it for what it is—you can begin to choose something different.
The validation you've been seeking is actually already there. It was always there. You've just been looking in the wrong direction.
About The Martin Pavion Podcast:
Clinical hypnotherapist, NLP master practitioner, and ICF trained coach - Martin Pavion helps successful but stuck professionals navigate life's crossroads. Combining practical coaching with transformative hypnosis, this podcast explores the psychology of change, authentic living, and what it really takes to rebuild when everything falls apart.
New episodes twice a week.