Coverbild der Sendung Patterns Between Us Podcast

Patterns Between Us Podcast

Podcast von Cyd McDaniel

Englisch

Gesundheit & Persönliche Entwicklung

Begrenztes Angebot

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / MonatJederzeit kündbar.

  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts
Loslegen

Mehr Patterns Between Us Podcast

A podcast exploring the relational patterns and emotional triggers that shape how we love, connect and heal. patternsbetweenuspodcast.substack.com

Alle Folgen

6 Folgen

Episode The Map Cover

The Map

It’s been about a month since we started this show together. Six episodes in. And before we go anywhere else, I wanted to stop and name something out loud. This isn’t really a podcast about relationships. Or — it is, but not in the way I thought when I started. It’s a podcast about the patterns capable women carry. Patterns that show up in romantic relationships, yes. But also in friendships. In work. In money. In motherhood. In our body. In our quiet Tuesday afternoons when no one is watching. Same woman. Same pattern. Just showing up in different rooms. Today, I want to map that. Not all of it — we have a whole season for that — but the beginning of it. The blueprint. So you can see what we’ve been doing, and where we’re going next. What we’re doing in this episode Every one of us entered adulthood carrying a map. We didn’t draw it consciously. We didn’t choose what went on it. But it’s there — and it’s been guiding us far longer than we realize. The map tells us things like: * What does love feel like? * What do I have to do to be chosen? * Is it safe to need someone? * What happens when I show my real feelings? * How much of myself can I bring before it becomes too much? The problem isn’t that we have a map. The problem is most of us don’t know we’re using one. In this episode, I walk through the four patterns I’ve seen most often after 20 years in the room with women like you: * Working too hard for love — when love felt conditional, you learned to earn it. Now you over-give, you over-perform, and underneath it all is the quiet fear: if I stop working this hard, they will leave. * Emotional distance — when feelings weren’t welcomed in your early environment, you learned to carry yours alone. Now intimacy feels foreign, and the people who love you experience your self-containment as a wall. * Anxious attachment — when love was inconsistent, you became the watcher. The scanner. The one always reading the room for signs the warmth is about to pull back. * Losing yourself — when your needs weren’t the priority, you became exquisitely attuned to everyone else’s. Now you give until you’re empty, and resent that no one ever asks about you — though you rarely ask either. The reframe at the center of this episode These patterns are not failures. They are adaptations. Brilliant, creative, necessary adaptations your younger self developed to stay connected in the environment you were given. And one more line to sit with: What kept you safe as a child can keep you stuck as an adult. That is not your fault. But it is now your opportunity. The question to carry with you this week Pick one pattern. Just one. The one you already know — the working too hard, or the shutting down, or the watching, or the losing yourself. Or one I didn’t name that is your own. Then ask, gently, with curiosity: What was I protecting when I learned this? Who did I first learn this with? What did this pattern allow me to hold on to, or keep me safe from, back then? You don’t have to fix it. You don’t have to change it. Just see it. Give it a name. Let it be something you understand rather than something you are ashamed of. That is where the real work begins. Where we’re going from here The four patterns I named today show up in romantic relationships first, because intimacy is where we are most exposed. But across the rest of this season, we’re going to follow them into the other rooms — your friendships, your work, your money, your motherhood, your relationship with your own body, the parts of your life no one sees but you. Because if we can see the pattern clearly in one room, we can start to see it in all the others. Come with me through the rest of the season Two easy ways to subscribe: * Say to your phone: “Hey Siri, remind me to subscribe to Patterns Between Us podcast.” * Or text PATTERNS to 803-991-4247. You’ll get the subscribe link back. Nothing else comes through unless you ask for it. And if today’s episode meant something to you, share it with one woman in your life who might recognize herself in it. That is how this work travels. That is how the women who need it find it. Where this work continues beyond the podcast * Free Your Mind Program — the monthly virtual gathering where we do the inner work the podcast points toward. Founding member rate open now. * Free Your Mind Retreat — October 15–18, 2026. Four days. Twenty women. Five suite tiers. * A Black Woman’s Journey Brunch + Founding Circle — the in-person door into the sanctuary. I’m glad you’re here. I’m Cyd, and we’ll keep making sense of the patterns between us. Cyd McDaniel is a trauma-informed therapist and the founder of Essential Journey Wellness and A Black Woman’s Journey. Patterns Between Us is part of the Free Your Mind ecosystem. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit patternsbetweenuspodcast.substack.com [https://patternsbetweenuspodcast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

20. Mai 2026 - 19 min
Episode The Last Line Item Cover

The Last Line Item

I was twenty-seven years old the first time I paid someone to take care of my hands. The women who raised me did not do this. My mother did not. My grandmother did not. And last week, I walked into a nail salon and saw a little girl getting a fill-in, scrolling on her phone like it was nothing — because for her, it is nothing. Something has shifted between her generation and mine, and between mine and my mother’s. This episode is about the shift we have made, and the deeper shift we still have not made. It is about the pattern of being the last line item in our own lives — and what it actually costs us, and the women coming behind us, to keep living that way. In this episode * The generational shift in what “self-investment” was even allowed to look like for Black women — and where that shift still has not gone far enough * Why looking well-kept is not the same as being well-resourced * The inheritance we are quietly carrying: that a good woman gives until she is empty * A working definition of self-investment as intentional, a deposit (not an expense), and spanning every domain of your life — emotional, physical, intellectual, spiritual, relational, financial * The difference between self-improvement (trying to prove you are enough) and self-investment (the response to the enough you already are) * Why “collapse with better marketing” is not the same as rest * A direct invitation to open your calendar and your bank account and ask one honest question A line to sit with Self-improvement is a verdict. Self-investment is a blessing. And another: You are the account that everyone else flows from. If she is empty, everything downstream is empty. The question to carry with you After this episode ends, open your calendar. Open your bank account. Open your schedule. And ask, honestly: What have I actually invested in myself this month? Not for your children. Not for your husband. Not for your mother. Not for the ministry. Not for the job. In you. Sit with the answer. Whatever it is. Where this work continues If this episode moved something in you, the ecosystem is built to hold what comes next: * Free Your Mind Program — the monthly virtual gathering on the psychology of wealth, rest, and resourcing yourself like you are worth it. Founding member rate open now. * Free Your Mind Retreat — October 15–18, 2026. Four days of clinical retreat for Black women ready to stop coming last in their own lives. * A Black Woman’s Journey Brunch + Founding Circle — the in-person door into the sanctuary. Listen + subscribe Subscribe to Patterns Between Us wherever you get your podcasts, and subscribe to this Substack so the companion essays land in your inbox alongside each new episode. If this one met you somewhere, share it with the woman you were thinking about while you listened. The pattern can end with you. And you can be the woman your daughter remembers as the one who finally gave herself permission. You are worth the investment. You have always been worth the investment. Cyd McDaniel is a licensed clinician and the founder of Essential Journey Wellness and A Black Woman’s Journey. Patterns Between Us is part of the Free Your Mind ecosystem. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit patternsbetweenuspodcast.substack.com [https://patternsbetweenuspodcast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

15. Mai 2026 - 18 min
Episode The Moment Before You Disappear Cover

The Moment Before You Disappear

Last week, we sat together and named a pattern. Self-abandonment. The way we hand ourselves over, slowly, often in the smallest moments — to keep peace, to keep connection, to keep being seen as the capable one. This week, I want to take you somewhere harder. I want to show you what self-abandonment actually looks like. Not in a story from your childhood. Not in a relationship that ended years ago. But on a Tuesday afternoon. In an email exchange. In a text thread with someone whose opinion matters to you. Because that is where it lives. Not in the past. In the present. In the small moments most of us do not even register — until we are already gone. A few weeks ago, someone whose opinion I respect asked me to soften something. Not something small. Something that sat at the heart of work I had been doing. The request was reasonable on its surface. It was framed as helpful. And it asked me to take a word I had chosen carefully, a word that came from years of watching, a word that was true — and replace it with something easier. Something more pleasant. Something that would land more softly on more people. I want to tell you what happened next. Not what I thought. What I felt. I felt my stomach go empty. Not anxious. Not angry. Empty. A particular kind of empty I have felt before — and so have you, if you are a woman who has spent her life being the capable one. Here is the part I want you to hear. I almost said yes. Not out loud, not yet. But in my head, the sentence was already forming. You are probably right. Let me think about how to make it more positive. That sentence had a particular flavor. It was reasonable. It was collaborative. It was — easy. And it would have cost me something I could not have named in the moment. That is what self-abandonment looks like on a Tuesday afternoon. Not a dramatic surrender. A small, almost-invisible yes — in the place where a no, or even a let me sit with that, needed to be. A reasonable yes. A polite yes. A yes that protects the relationship and costs only a small piece of yourself. That is how it always goes. Not in one big betrayal. In a thousand reasonable yeses, said too quickly, by women who were taught that the cost of a no was higher than the cost of a slow disappearance. Here is what this episode names: — That inspirational content does not heal high-achieving women. It tells us to come home to ourselves without ever asking where we went. — That there is a difference between softening something true and sanitizing it. Softening serves the listener. Sanitizing serves the messenger. — That the empty stomach is not a problem to be fixed. It is information. It is your body, doing the job it has been trying to do for you your whole life — telling you when something true is being asked to disappear. — That self-abandonment does not stop when you stop having the feeling. It stops when you stop overriding it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit patternsbetweenuspodcast.substack.com [https://patternsbetweenuspodcast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

13. Mai 2026 - 18 min
Episode When the Pattern Is Self-Abandonment Cover

When the Pattern Is Self-Abandonment

Sometimes the deepest pattern isn't with a partner. It's with yourself — the quiet ways you keep leaving yourself behind, even in the rooms you worked hardest to enter. In this special Field Notes episode, Cyd reflects on what surfaced for her during the Black Women Invent (BWI) experience — and the pattern of self-abandonment she watched move through the room and through herself. With honesty and care, she names the way Black women often pour out without ever pouring in, and what it costs to keep doing that. In this episode: What self-abandonment actually looks like (and why it's rarely loud) Why high-achieving women are often the most disconnected from their own needs The difference between being responsible and being depleted Why naming the pattern is the first step to interrupting it A question to sit with this week: Where in your life are you consistently leaving yourself behind — and what would it look like to come back? Subscribe to Patterns Between Us so you don't miss what's next. And if this episode named something for you, share it with someone who's been quietly asking the same questions. 🎙️ Listen on Apple Podcasts | Spotify This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit patternsbetweenuspodcast.substack.com [https://patternsbetweenuspodcast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

28. Apr. 2026 - 11 min
Episode It Started Before You Think It Did Cover

It Started Before You Think It Did

Most of us think our patterns started with a heartbreak or a hard relationship. The truth is, the blueprint was already being written before we said our first word. EPISODE SUMMARY In Episode 2, Cyd takes you back further than most conversations about relational patterns ever go — to the womb, to your earliest caretakers, to the emotional environment you were formed inside of before you had any language for what was happening. With clinical depth and personal warmth, she traces how your nervous system began learning what connection feels like long before your first relationship. KEY TAKEAWAYS * Why your nervous system began organizing in utero, not at birth * What your relationship with your mother taught you about emotional safety * What your relationship with your father taught you about being valued and chosen * How siblings (or their absence) shaped your sense of belonging * Why your earliest experiences are still running in the background of every adult relationship REFLECTION QUESTION What was the emotional environment you were born into and what did connection feel like with the people who were most consistently present in your earliest years? CALL TO ACTION Subscribe to Patterns Between Us so you don’t miss what’s next. And if this episode named something for you, share it with someone who’s been quietly asking the same questions. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit patternsbetweenuspodcast.substack.com [https://patternsbetweenuspodcast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

20. Apr. 2026 - 13 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

Wähle dein Abonnement

Am beliebtesten

Begrenztes Angebot

Premium

20 Stunden Hörbücher

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo

  • Keine Werbung in Podimo Podcasts

  • Jederzeit kündbar

2 Monate für 1 €
Dann 4,99 € / Monat

Loslegen

Premium Plus

100 Stunden Hörbücher

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo

  • Keine Werbung in Podimo Podcasts

  • Jederzeit kündbar

30 Tage kostenlos testen
Dann 13,99 € / monat

Kostenlos testen

Nur bei Podimo

Beliebte Hörbücher

Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €. Dann 4,99 € / Monat. Jederzeit kündbar.