The Blue Collar Buddha Podcast
I have a felony on my record. I'm not going to soften that or dance around it. What I am going to do is make a distinction that changed everything for me — and might change something for you. There is a world of difference between I am a felon and I have a felony. Between I am an alcoholic and I had a drinking problem. Between I am an abuse survivor and I was abused. One collapses the experience into your identity permanently. The other keeps them separate. I have a pair of Doc Martens. I am not Doc Martens. I have a felony. I am not a felon. When I believed I was a felon — when I had fully internalized that label and everything the culture attaches to it — I couldn't get a job, couldn't provide for my family, couldn't imagine doing a podcast, couldn't see past the shame of what that word meant. The label was running the show. When I changed the language to I have a felony — something shifted. Not the record. Not the circumstances. My relationship to them. This episode is about the self-concept work that lives in the words we use to define ourselves. About the labels we've inherited, internalized, and never questioned. About what happens when you finally ask: is this who I am, or is this something I experienced? And yes — at the end, I'll tell you what the felony was for.
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