『The Dynamics Of Everyday Life』のカバーアート

The Dynamics Of Everyday Life

The Dynamics Of Everyday Life

著者: Julia Rogers
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Welcome to The Dynamics of Everyday Life, where we're setting off on an incredible journey into the realm of psychodynamic theory with me, Julia Rogers. I'm here to take the seemingly complex concepts of psychology and break them down into digestible, relatable bits that can apply to our daily lives. Together, we'll uncover the mysteries of our inner selves, navigate the intricacies of human relationships, and discover the keys to personal happiness.Copyright 2026 Julia Rogers 個人的成功 社会科学 科学 自己啓発
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  • Don't bother Ken, I'll do it myself
    2026/05/12

    This week on The Dynamics of Everyday Life, Julia takes a psychodynamic look at one iconic Victoria Wood moment: “Don’t bother Ken, I’ll do it myself.”

    What starts as a funny, familiar line opens into something much deeper. Competence as identity, the fear of relying on other people, resentment, emotional labour, and the strange loneliness that can come from always being the capable one.

    Why is asking for help so hard for some people? Why do we quietly over-function and then feel furious that nobody notices? And how do we accidentally train people to stop helping us altogether?

    Sharp, funny and painfully recognisable in places, this episode explores the hidden emotional dynamics underneath “I’ll just do it myself.”

    Here are the highlights of this episode:

    (1.41) Competence can easily become part of our personality

    (2.46) The hidden irony

    (3.47) Over functioning

    (6.51) What do we do with all this?

    Connect with Julia:

    Website

    LinkedIn

    Instagram

    ABOUT THE PODCAST

    The Dynamics of Everyday Life explores the psychological patterns shaping how we think, work and relate to others; bringing psychodynamic thinking into coaching, leadership and everyday life.

    If you're a coach interested in learning more about psychodynamic approaches to coaching, you can explore Julia's training programmes on her website.

    FOLLOW THE PODCAST

    If you're enjoying The Dynamics of Everyday Life, follow the podcast on your listening app so you don't miss future episodes.

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    11 分
  • I've got a feeling
    2026/05/05

    When something feels off, most of us don’t trust it.

    We explain it away. Override it. Or ask everyone else what they think, as if someone else might have better access to what’s going on in our own heads.

    In this episode, Julia takes a closer look at that hard-to-pin-down sense that something isn’t quite right, and why it’s rarely as random as we’d like to believe.

    Drawing on psychodynamic thinking, she explores what’s happening beneath the surface: how we pick up patterns, respond to micro-signals, and react to things we can’t yet consciously explain.

    She also makes a crucial distinction. Not every feeling is intuition. Sometimes it’s anxiety, old patterns, or projection. The challenge is knowing the difference.

    Because ignoring that feeling completely?

    That doesn’t tend to end well.

    If you’ve ever left a conversation thinking “that was weird” but couldn’t say why,this episode will help you think about it differently.

    Here are the highlights of this episode:

    (1.47) Our brains hate ambiguity

    (2.34) What’s actually going on in these moments?

    (4.20) Not every feeling is intuition

    (5.55) What do we do about this?

    Connect with Julia:

    Website

    LinkedIn

    Instagram

    ABOUT THE PODCAST

    The Dynamics of Everyday Life explores the psychological patterns shaping how we think, work and relate to others; bringing psychodynamic thinking into coaching, leadership and everyday life.

    If you're a coach interested in learning more about psychodynamic approaches to coaching, you can explore Julia's training programmes on her website.

    FOLLOW THE PODCAST

    If you're enjoying The Dynamics of Everyday Life, follow the podcast on your listening app so you don't miss future episodes.

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    8 分
  • Can't get it out of my head
    2026/04/28

    Why is it that one small comment can stay with you for days, while everything else disappears?

    In this episode, Julia explores why certain remarks don’t just land… they linger.

    What starts as a throwaway comment can quickly turn into something much bigger. Not because of what was said, but because of what it touches.

    This episode looks at:

    1. Why some comments stick while others don’t
    2. The gap between what was said and what was heard
    3. How old narratives shape present reactions
    4. Why ambiguity makes things worse (not better)
    5. What’s actually going on when you “can’t get it out of your head”

    It’s not just about overthinking. It’s about history, meaning, and the stories we already carry.

    So if something’s been replaying in your mind long after it happened…

    there’s probably more to it than you think.

    Here are the highlights of this episode:

    (3.36) Landing on old history

    (4.50) What you say is all about you

    (5.46) Ambiguity is like rocket fuel

    (7.41) What do we do with all this?

    Connect with Julia:

    Website

    LinkedIn

    Instagram

    ABOUT THE PODCAST

    The Dynamics of Everyday Life explores the psychological patterns shaping how we think, work and relate to others; bringing psychodynamic thinking into coaching, leadership and everyday life.

    If you're a coach interested in learning more about psychodynamic approaches to coaching, you can explore Julia's training programmes on her website.

    FOLLOW THE PODCAST

    If you're enjoying The Dynamics of Everyday Life, follow the podcast on your listening app so you don't miss future episodes.

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    10 分
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