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You feel it every time - that quiet pull in your chest telling you to refuse, but you send the message anyway because you cannot put the refusal into words. This episode is about the inner no you have been overriding your entire life and why it might be the most trustworthy part of you. Most of us were trained to believe that if we cannot argue a position, it does not count. So we dismiss our gut feeling as a mood, call it being too sensitive, and let the inner critic bully us into saying yes to things our body has already rejected. This is one of the deepest patterns of self-sabotage - not because you lack discipline, but because you were taught that only one kind of reasoning is real. You will learn the difference between a feeling and an emotion, why overthinking your instincts actually makes them harder to trust, and a simple practice for honoring the verdict in your chest without needing to defend it in conversation. If you have ever left a room feeling drained, kept deferring a reply you cannot explain, or felt the anxiety of living out of alignment with what you actually want, this episode will change how you relate to your own judgment. The thing you have been calling a weakness is a different kind of intelligence - and you are allowed to use it.
By Onion LoopYou feel it every time - that quiet pull in your chest telling you to refuse, but you send the message anyway because you cannot put the refusal into words. This episode is about the inner no you have been overriding your entire life and why it might be the most trustworthy part of you. Most of us were trained to believe that if we cannot argue a position, it does not count. So we dismiss our gut feeling as a mood, call it being too sensitive, and let the inner critic bully us into saying yes to things our body has already rejected. This is one of the deepest patterns of self-sabotage - not because you lack discipline, but because you were taught that only one kind of reasoning is real. You will learn the difference between a feeling and an emotion, why overthinking your instincts actually makes them harder to trust, and a simple practice for honoring the verdict in your chest without needing to defend it in conversation. If you have ever left a room feeling drained, kept deferring a reply you cannot explain, or felt the anxiety of living out of alignment with what you actually want, this episode will change how you relate to your own judgment. The thing you have been calling a weakness is a different kind of intelligence - and you are allowed to use it.