In today's episode I am on my own.
Last week Toni Will left the next guest a question.
What have you changed your mind about lately?
Usually my guests get hit with that question without warning. This time it landed on me.
For most of my life I believed the problem in my relationships was the other person.
The partner.
The boss.
The coworker.
Different people. Same story.
Eventually something uncomfortable happened.
I ran out of people to blame.
This episode sits inside that turning point.
The moment where I started to realise that if the same dynamic keeps happening with different people, the common denominator might actually be me.
I talk about how easy it is to build an identity around being the victim of your story. How we walk around repeating the same narrative about what happened to us, who hurt us, and why things never seem to work out.
And how confronting it is when that story starts to fall apart.
I also talk about a moment that landed for me recently through a simple Japanese haiku.
Barn burns down.
Now I can see the moon.
Sometimes the thing we thought was protecting us is actually what was blocking us.
When the structure collapses it feels terrifying. But sometimes that collapse is exactly what lets us see something deeper that was always there.
This episode also touches on something that gets missed in a lot of personal development conversations.
Responsibility sounds mature. It sounds enlightened.
But responsibility can also be dangerous if you offer it in the wrong places.
If you start owning your behaviour around people who will not look at themselves, that responsibility can quickly be turned into a weapon against you.
So the work is not just about looking in the mirror.
It is also about knowing where it is safe to do that work.
Because if only one person in a relationship starts waking up, the dynamic often cannot survive the shift.
We do not solve it.
We sit inside the discomfort of recognising our own patterns, our own ego, and the ways we keep repeating the same story.
The question I leave for the next guest is this.
Have you ever admitted you were wrong or at fault in a relationship and had it used as a weapon against you?
It’s You, Oh Fuck, It’s ME In Session with a Psychotherapist
Hosted by Chad Taylor
No tips.
No fixing.
Just real conversations.
You can find my book here- https://chadtaylorpsychotherapy.com.au/book-sales
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Email- chadtaylorpsychotherapy@gmail.com