Why Successful People Feel Dead Inside (And What Actually Helps) Podcast Por  arte de portada

Why Successful People Feel Dead Inside (And What Actually Helps)

Why Successful People Feel Dead Inside (And What Actually Helps)

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If you’ve ever went to a therapist to talk about your problems,see if this resonates:You're sitting in your counsellor/therapist’s office, week after week, talking through the same issues.Your relationship problems. Your childhood patterns. Your communication struggles.You understand everything intellectually. You can analyze your dynamics perfectly. You know exactly what's "wrong" and what you "should" do differently.But nothing changes.If that sounds familiar, here’s why:You can't think your way out of emotional numbness.If you're someone who's built success through intellect and analysis,this might be the most frustrating realization you'll ever face.You're used to solving problems with your mind. It's worked in every other area of your life. Your career. Your finances. Your goals.But in relationships– when we are stuck in what's called "functional freeze,”Our greatest strength becomes our biggest obstacle.What's cool about functional freeze is that it doesn't look like traditional depression. You're not lying in bed unable to function. You're not crying or visibly struggling.From the outside, you look fine. Successful, even.You show up to work. You meet your obligations. You maintain your responsibilities.But inside, you’re…. dissociated.You feel... nothing.Your partner tries to connect emotionally, and you just stare blankly. They share their feelings, and you can't access yours. They get upset, and you shut down even more.This creates a toxic cycle where the more they try to reach you, the more frozen you become. And the more frozen you become, the more frustrated and disconnected they get.For many successful folks, this pattern is maddening because it makes no logical sense.This is why my first marriage ended.Because I didn’t understand this issue with my ex-wife."Why can't I just feel something?" she would say.What she was likely going through: "Why doesn't talking about it help?" (our talk therapy didn’t solve the issue)."Why do I understand everything but can't change anything?"Check this out: functional freeze is actually a brilliant survival strategy your nervous system developed long ago.Maybe you grew up in a family where anger wasn't allowed. Where being "too emotional" was criticized or shamed.Maybe you learned early that the safest way to navigate conflict was to go numb. To shut down. To disappear emotionally while staying physically present.This protected you then. But now, unresolved– it keeps you trapped in relationshipswhere intimacy feels impossible.Here's where it gets really intense:All that anger, sadness, and pain you've been told to suppress…It doesn't just disappear.It gets stored in your body. Compressed. Turned inward. And over time, this internalized emotion manifests as:Chronic fatigue (your body is exhausted from holding all that suppressed feeling)Autoimmune issues (your system literally attacks itself)Depression (anger turned inward)Digestive problems (emotions you can't stomach)Sleep disorders (your nervous system can't truly rest)Your body becomes the repository for every emotion you weren't allowed to feel.And here’s the biggest blind spot…The way out isn't through more analysis or understanding.Or even talking.The way out is through feeling.“Feeling? What specifically?”Specifically, through feeling the emotions you've spent years avoiding.And the first step isn't pretty: it's anger. Sounds counterintuitive, I know. Society tells us anger is "bad." Spiritual teachings often frame it as something to transcend. Therapy sometimes treats it as something to “manage.”But here's what I've learned working with folks stuck in freeze: anger is actually an upgrade.Think about the “emotional ladder”:Freeze/Despair (bottom)Anger/Activation (middle)Safety/Connection (top)You can't jump from freeze directly to connection. You have to go through activation first.This is why I’ll often see when my son has a complete meltdown – screaming, crying, getting angry – and then suddenly he’s fine. Happy. Connected again.That’s because he felt his way up the ladder.But adults– we've been conditioned to skip the feeling part. To stay stuck in freeze because it's "more civilized."But what I had to get was that learning to feel anger –safely and appropriately –is actually the key to accessing joy, connection, and intimacy.Think about it: What if those tears you've been holding back aren't weakness, but the very mechanism your nervous system uses to regulate itself?Watch a child who's been hurt or upset. They cry hard, then they're done. Reset. Back to their natural state of curiosity and connection.That's not childish. That's how the nervous system is designed to work.But most people– especially the successful ones– have been taught that this natural processis somehow wrong or unprofessional.So instead of feeling and releasing, you freeze. You intellectualize. You ...
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