The Salty Goddess

55 Seasons isn't enough- Why Aren't You Acting Accordingly?

31 min · 22. apr. 2026
episode 55 Seasons isn't enough- Why Aren't You Acting Accordingly? cover

Description

You are not broke. You are not unlucky. You are not out of opportunities. You are hemorrhaging time. And most of it is being wasted on people, patterns, and behaviors that produce absolutely zero return on investment. In this unapologetically direct episode of The Salty Goddess Podcast, Anne Margaret Perry delivers a hard truth most people avoid: * People have ROI - emotionally, intellectually, and energetically. * “Trying” without results is performative effort—not progress. * Habits and routines are predictive algorithms of the future. * You cannot fix someone committed to their own dysfunction. * Our internal dialogue is either building your life, or sabotaging it. This episode dives deep into: * Why words mean nothing without consistent action (Verba vs. Acta) * The danger of investing in low-discipline, high-drama individuals * How to identify patterns that forecast someone’s future behavior * Why purpose must be intrinsic and not borrowed or outsourced * The brutal reality of finite time and why most people waste it on gossip, assumptions, and emotional nonsense * How your environment and proximity influence your identity over time And most importantly: A perspective that will stop you in your tracks: Life is not measured in years… but in seasons. When you realize someone had only 55 springs, 55 summers, 55 autumns, and 55 winters… you begin to understand just how limited your time really is. Even 100 seasons wouldn’t be enough. So why are you wasting even a fraction of yours? Episode Dedication This episode is dedicated to Piper, my Princess Piobaire, whose time was spent fully, loyally, and without wasted investment. SALTY Final Truth When someone shows you who they are through patterns, behaviors, and consistency: * Believe the data. * Not the story. * Not the promise. * Not the potential.

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70 episodes

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Evict Avoidance: Stop Allowing it Squatter's Rights.

You audited the avoidance. Now what? In this episode of The Salty Goddess Podcast, Anne Margaret takes the next step in the avoidance arc: taking action. After defining avoidant behavior patterns and learning how to audit for them, it is time to decide who gets full access, conditional access, limited access, or no access at all. Avoidant people are not always malicious, but their patterns can still create instability, resentment, confusion, emotional labor, and stalled growth. They avoid the decision, and you carry the uncertainty. They avoid the conflict, and you carry the resentment. They avoid accountability, and you carry the cleanup. That is not peace. That is outsourcing discomfort to the nearest responsible adult. Anne Margaret breaks down why removal is not cruelty, why boundaries are not rage, and why some people do not deserve another season of your life just because they are uncomfortable with accountability. She also turns the mirror back on the listener, because sometimes the avoidant person in the realm is us. If you have been saving seats for people who vanish when accountability enters the room, this episode is your eviction notice. Stop chasing. Stop over-explaining. Stop paying the emotional bill for people who keep leaving the table. It is time to protect the realm.

Yesterday34 min
episode Audit for Avoidance — or Become Its Prisoner artwork

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Avoidance has receipts, darling, and in this episode, we are opening the books. In this episode of The Salty Goddess Podcast, Anne Margaret continues the three-part arc on avoidant behavior patterns with Episode 2: the audit. Last week defined avoidance and explained how avoidant behaviors often begin as protection. This week asks the harder question: what is avoidance costing you? Avoidance may provide temporary relief, emotional distance, control, and a short-term sense of safety, but that relief is not free. Avoiding hard conversations, intimacy, decisions, accountability, apologies, boundaries, responsibility, visibility, or necessary endings can cost you trust, closeness, leadership credibility, opportunity, repair, peace, and time. This episode walks listeners through how to audit themselves and their court. Where does avoidance show up? What are you calling it instead? Are you truly keeping the peace, setting boundaries, processing, being strategic, or staying private, or are you avoiding discomfort and letting your ego guard the cell door? Anne Margaret also challenges listeners to examine the people around them: who benefits from your silence, lack of boundaries, conflict avoidance, overwhelm, or unwillingness to grow? Who mirrors avoidance back to you? Who triggers your automatic withdrawal? Who is harmed by your silence, defensiveness, delay, or refusal to repair? This is not a shame spiral. It is not self-attack. It is not an excuse parade. It is evidence collection. Because avoidance does not just protect you from discomfort. It delays honesty, blocks repair, damages trust, weakens leadership, starves intimacy, and convinces you that silence, distance, and delay are the same thing as peace. They are not. If you have ever avoided a conversation, used busyness as an excuse, called discomfort “peace,” let family history override healthy boundaries, delayed accountability, or stayed in dysfunction because walking away felt too hard, this episode will hand you the mirror with just enough salt to make it useful. Audit thyself. Audit thy court. And stop spending your most valuable currency on people, patterns, and prisons that have NEVER served you.

10. juni 202647 min
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Avoidance is sneaky. It does not always look like running away. Sometimes it looks like being busy, private, independent, calm, logical, low-maintenance, professional, or “above the drama.” But what if the thing you keep calling peace is actually avoidance? What if that boundary language, emotional distance, busyness, or polished self-control is not protecting your peace, but in fact helping you build your own prison? In this episode of The Salty Goddess Podcast, Anne Margaret begins a new three-part arc on avoidant behavior patterns. This first episode is the assessment: what avoidant behaviors are, why people develop them, and what avoidance does for the person who uses it. This is not a diagnostic conversation and it is not medical advice. This episode explores the very human ways people avoid discomfort, vulnerability, conflict, commitment, intimacy, feedback, decisions, success, uncertainty, grief, joy, accountability, and repair. Avoidance often begins as protection. Maybe emotional needs were dismissed. Maybe conflict felt unsafe. Maybe vulnerability was used against you. Maybe being low-maintenance earned approval. Maybe success, visibility, love, or healing created too much risk. But the strategy that protected you in one season can imprison you in another. This episode asks the essential question: Are you protecting your peace, or avoiding discomfort while your ego stands guard at the cell door? If you have ever avoided a hard conversation, delayed a decision, refused to ask for help, stayed in potential instead of action, ghosted your own growth, or called emotional distance “keeping your peace,” this episode will hand you the mirror with just enough salt to make it useful. Avoidance is a prison, not peace. Your ego is the warden. Next week, the arc continues with the audit: how to determine whether avoidance is costing you connection, trust, leadership, intimacy, confidence, and your most valuable currency — time.

3. juni 202644 min
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Salty warning: this episode is 65 minutes long. That is not a mistake. That is a masterclass and you are  welcome, it is also free!  Hydrate, pack a snack, adjust your crown, plan a bathroom break, do the work! In this extended episode of The Salty Goddess Podcast, Anne Margaret closes the confidence versus ego arc with the action phase: how to move from being ego-led to confidence-led, how to build real confidence through evidence and practice, and how to handle people who refuse to grow even after you have led them directly to the Fountain of Confidence. This episode breaks down five practical behaviors for personal growth: telling the truth faster, practicing clean accountability, building competence on purpose, regulating before responding, and keeping small promises to yourself. Anne Margaret explains why confidence is not a mood, a performance, or a motivational slogan, it is a practiced way of life built through self-trust, evidence, repetition, accountability, and emotional regulation. The episode also explores how to lead ego-led people toward confidence without becoming their therapist, emotional valet, self-esteem witness, or unpaid maturity consultant. You will learn how to model confidence-led behavior, correct behavior without attacking identity, ask better questions, reinforce progress, hold boundaries, and recognize when someone refuses to drink from the fountain. And when they refuse? You stop overexplaining. You stop confusing potential with pattern. You adjust access. You stop rescuing them from consequences. You release the assignment. Because confidence is not just knowing who you are. Confidence is knowing what behavior earns access, and what behavior gets escorted back to the gate.

27. maj 20261 h 5 min
episode Audit Thyself AND Thy Court! artwork

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