Episode 2: How to Stop Feeling Stuck When Life Feels Out of Control
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How to stop feeling stuck when life feels out of your control — and why staying stuck often isn’t a choice. For a lot of people it’s learned helplessness: a program written into them before they were old enough to question it. A belief — quiet, automatic, deeply convincing — that nothing they do will change what happens to them.
In this episode, Mari shares the hand she was dealt — two parents gone by 20, her siblings to care for, a body that eventually staged a revolt — and the kitchen table moment with a $10 book that changed everything. Then she goes into the science behind why people stay stuck, and what it actually takes to start building new wiring.
This Episode Covers
- Learned helplessness: what it is, where it comes from, and why it isn’t your fault
- Martin Seligman’s research — and why the dogs in his famous experiment matter to your life
- Seligman’s explanatory style: the three P’s that keep people stuck (permanent, pervasive, personal)
- Neuroplasticity: how the brain builds new wiring — and what you have to do to make it happen
- Five steps to start rewriting the program
- How one woman — who never escaped poverty herself — may have given her children the most important thing of all
If Episode 1 was about making a plan when crisis hits — Episode 2 is about understanding why so many of us couldn’t make that plan in the first place. And what changes when we finally do.
Research & References
- Peale, N.V. (1952). The Power of Positive Thinking. Prentice Hall.
- Seligman, M.E.P. & Maier, S.F. (1967). Failure to escape traumatic shock. Journal of Experimental Psychology, 74(1), 1–9.
- Seligman, M.E.P. (1990). Learned Optimism: How to Change Your Mind and Your Life. Knopf.
- Doidge, N. (2007). The Brain That Changes Itself. Viking Penguin.
- Psychology Today. Neuroplasticity. psychologytoday.com/us/basics/neuroplasticity
- Harvard Health Publishing. Grief can hurt — in more ways than one. health.harvard.edu
- NIH/NCBI StatPearls. Grief and Prolonged Grief Disorder. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK507832
About Really, Universe?
Really, Universe? is for anyone who has ever looked at their life and thought — is this really it? Hosted by Mari Peck — someone who has survived more plot twists than seems statistically reasonable and decided to stop keeping the lessons to herself — each episode combines honest personal storytelling with real research to help you understand why you’re stuck, what it actually costs to change, and how to keep going anyway. Honest. Research-backed. And occasionally — when the Universe particularly outdoes itself — a little bit funny. For anyone ready to stop living a life that no longer fits.