Flip Your Mindset
Some conversations stay with you long after you stop recording. My conversation with Junie Moon was one of them. If you’ve ever smiled on the outside while quietly falling apart on the inside, this episode is for you. Junie spent 20 years in a marriage where she walked on eggshells, managing everyone’s moods, micromanaging every detail, making herself smaller so she wouldn’t rock the boat. From the outside, she looked like she had it all together. Inside, she was 200 pounds, miserable, and completely disconnected from herself. What struck me most is how far back it actually went. Junie thought her story started with the marriage. But as we talked, she realized the eggshells started in childhood, with a mother whose illness made the house unpredictable, and a father she idolized who died when she was just 14. She learned early: be the good little girl, don’t drop the ball, don’t lose the love. So she became the fiercely independent one. The woman who could handle anything on her own and never needed to rely on anyone. That’s a trauma response. And like she said, it works beautifully, until it doesn’t. The moment everything changed For Junie, the turning point had a face. Her son. When he was 12, getting bullied at school and then coming home to be bullied again, she watched her six-foot husband tower over her child. And something in her body said enough. She stepped between them. She broke the rule she’d been trained to follow her whole life, don’t stand up, don’t make it worse and she protected her son. That was the moment she picked up the sword. She was no longer willing to witness abuse, or to accept it. Everything changed from there. Our kids really are our greatest teachers, if we’re willing to look in that mirror. Why “just let them go” doesn’t work for everyone We got into something I think a lot of you will feel in your body. When The Let Them Theory went viral, I moderated several packed book clubs on it. And what came up wasn’t the relief everyone expected. For a lot of people, it brought up shame. Because some folks can just let go, while for others, releasing control feels like cutting off a leg. Here’s the thing Junie and I both keep coming back to: that’s not a mindset problem. It’s a nervous system thing. The part of you that learned control equals safety isn’t going to surrender just because a book told it to. That part kept you alive. Of course it doesn’t want to let go. In my work, we call this parts work. In Junie’s world, it’s shadow work, shining a light on the pieces of ourselves we decided long ago were too much, too vulnerable, too angry, too bright, and learning to bring them back in a healthy, integrated way. Different language, same heart. We’re helping people move from being part-led back to being Self-led. Self-trust is an inside job So many of the women Junie works with single women in midlife, often after narcissistic abuse, believe they’ve already done the healing. They’ve rebuilt their lives, they feel good, they think they trust themselves again. But one foot is on the gas (I’d love to meet someone) and one foot is quietly on the brake (what if I crash and burn again, what if I can’t trust myself?). That brake is the part that never got healed. Junie said something I wrote down: trust is an inside job. Yes, there are bad actors out there. But the real work is cultivating a relationship with yourself where you know — in your body, not just your head, that you’ll have your own back. That you’ll see the red flag and get out of dodge. She keeps a little pink sign in her space that says, “Know your truth and trust your knowing.” Because so often we do know our truth. It’s the trusting of it that gets eroded in these relationships, where self-doubt and self-judgment grow up together. The naked truth about shame I have to tell you about the bravest thing Junie has ever done. A few years into her healing, she was interviewing a well-known body painter for her streaming show. Mid-conversation she had a wild thought: what if he painted me, live, on camera? Then it hit her, he paints naked people. And after a lifetime of body shame, big and small, of not wanting to leave the house because someone might comment on her thighs, she realized she’d come far enough to do it. To be naked and body-painted for the world to see. It became a mini-documentary called Shed the Shame. It went viral, played in film festivals, and has racked up over 50,000 views. But here’s what she wants you to hear: it was never about getting naked. It was about deep self-love. The body was just the metaphor. As she put it, if she could do that, she could do anything. That fearlessness is the whole point. When you truly have your own back, there’s almost nothing you can’t face. Love beyond her wildest dreams So where is Junie today? She told me she was voice-messaging her partner that very morning, in tears, because she’s so happy. She has, in her words, a man beyond anything she could have imagined. “I didn’t believe he fully existed,” she said. She would have happily taken far less and still been amazed. Instead she got love beyond her wildest dreams, with a partner who’s done his own work and meets her fully. She’s not white-knuckling through her days anymore. She launched her own live talk show, Your Best Life (think Oprah meets the dating game), and she’s pitching a reality show about love in the second half of life. And no, she’s not claiming to live on the mountaintop. She’s in her sixties, her body is changing, and there are still hard moments. The difference is that what used to take her out for months or years now takes minutes or hours. She feels it, she brings herself love and compassion, and she comes back to herself. That’s emotional freedom. That’s the real prize. The one thing she wants you to take with you When I asked for her parting message, it came out organically: be curious about what you might not know. Because if you’re certain you already know everything, there’s no room for something new. And it’s the stuff we can’t yet see that holds the ticket to our freedom. So I’ll leave you with her invitation. Get curious about the blind spots that might be quietly keeping you from your best life. Then go live it. Connect with Junie Moon: Junie is a best-selling author (Loving the Whole Package), creator of the award-winning film Shed the Shame, and host of the Midlife Love Out Loud podcast. You can find her work, her podcast, and her free quiz to see how ready you are for love at midlifeloveoutloud.com [https://midlifeloveoutloud.com] and on Instagram and Facebook at @midlifeloveoutloud. Before you go: This episode was brought to you by the HURRT Assessment — a free tool I created to help you uncover the hidden patterns that might be holding you back. Take it at flipyourmindset.com/hurrt [https://flipyourmindset.com/hurrt]. If this one spoke to you, share it with someone who needs it, and hit subscribe. The more of us who tune in, the further this work travels. See you on the flip side. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flipyourmindset.substack.com/subscribe [https://flipyourmindset.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]
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