Your Trauma-Wise Career Guide

Power Was Never Meant to Be Used This Way

14 min · 19. maj 2026
episode Power Was Never Meant to Be Used This Way cover

Description

Summary In this solo episode, Cyndi Bennett takes on a topic she has been sitting with for a while: power, and what happens when someone gets it and uses it the wrong way. This is not a political episode or a narcissism episode. It is an honest, grounded conversation about what misused authority actually looks like in the workplace, what it costs the people around it, and why, for trauma survivors, those environments can feel so painfully familiar. Drawing from her own study of leadership and her work with trauma survivors navigating their careers, Cyndi also paints a clear picture of what power used well looks like, and why you deserve to be in spaces where that is the norm, not the exception. Key Thoughts * When someone gets a title and the dynamic shifts overnight, your body recognizes that pattern long before your mind can name it. * Power misused looks like taking up space. Power used well looks like making room. * The leaders who leave the deepest mark are almost never the ones who use their position to elevate themselves. They are the ones who use it to elevate everyone around them. * What gets taken first in a misused power dynamic is your voice. Not all at once, but gradually, until the cost of speaking starts to feel too high. * When you are inside a harmful dynamic long enough, it starts to feel like just how things are. That normalization is what makes it so hard to leave and so hard to trust the next place you step into. * Your nervous system is not overreacting. It is connecting dots that are real. * You are allowed to want workplaces where power is used well. For those of us who were told our needs were too much, that can feel like a radical idea. But it is simply the baseline. What This Means For You If any part of this episode is landing in a way that feels familiar, here are some things worth sitting with: * What you are experiencing is real. If you are in an environment right now where authority is being used against you rather than for you, you are not imagining it and you are not oversensitive. The impact on your nervous system is real, and it deserves to be taken seriously. * Learn to assess your environments from a place of clarity, not hypervigilance. Who has power in the spaces you are in? How are they using it? What does it cost you to be there? These are not paranoid questions. They are important ones, and you are allowed to ask them. * Notice what misused power takes from you. Your voice. Your sense of reality. Your sense of what is normal. Once you can name what has been chipped away, you can begin to understand why the healing work matters so much. * Hold on to examples of power done right. If you have ever worked with someone who made you feel like your voice belonged in the room, who shared credit freely and stayed curious about the people around them, that is not a unicorn. It is what leadership is supposed to look like, and it is worth holding as your reference point. * You get to want something different. Not someday, not when things settle down. Now. You are allowed to make decisions, over time, in the direction of environments where you can bring your whole self and not spend half your energy just trying to survive the room. Come Journey With Us If this resonated with you and you would like to go deeper with the exact tools, resources, and community built specifically to support trauma survivors navigating their careers, consider joining us in the Resilient Career Academy. You don’t have to figure this out alone. There is a place where people understand exactly what you are carrying, and where your pace, your healing, and your story are not just welcomed, they are honored. Get full access to Resilient Career Academy at resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe [https://resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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61 episodes

episode How To Ask For What You're Worth When You've Been Taught To Be Grateful Just to Have a Job artwork

How To Ask For What You're Worth When You've Been Taught To Be Grateful Just to Have a Job

Summary In this episode, Cyndi Bennett digs into the very specific kind of silence that shows up right before you ask for more money. The moment you have done the research, rehearsed the words, and then something tightens and a voice says, “Who do you think you are?” This is an honest exploration of where that voice comes from, what is happening physiologically in those moments, and how to build the capacity, on both a cognitive and somatic level, to ask for what you are worth and mean it. Whether the message you received was about survival, gratitude, or what happens to people who push, this episode is for anyone who has prepared well, received an offer, and then gone quiet at the exact moment it mattered. Key Thoughts * Gratitude as a shield, smallness, and silence are not character flaws. They are protective responses your nervous system built from real experiences, and the nervous system does not automatically update just because the context has changed. * The gap between people who negotiate and people who don’t compounds over an entire career. Every future offer, promotion, and equity refresh anchors to the number that came before it. * Both things are true at once. The system creates real obstacles, and your preparation creates real leverage. * When your nervous system perceives a threat, your prefrontal cortex goes partially offline. Saying a number clearly and holding your ground requires a part of your brain that may not be fully online in that moment, and that is not weakness. * Preemptive discounting, over-explaining, and the gratitude loop all feel like pragmatic, realistic assessments in the moment. They are often your nervous system finding a way to avoid a risk that feels dangerous. * The highest point of leverage in a new job negotiation is after you have a written offer and before you accept it. That window is real, and it is worth using. * Asking for what you are worth is not aggression or ingratitude. It is an act of clarity. What This Means For You If any part of this episode is landing, here are some things worth sitting with: * Notice the thoughts that arrive fully formed in the moment. “This isn’t worth it.” “I should just be grateful.” “I don’t want to start off on the wrong foot.” These feel like decisions, but they are often your nervous system’s protective response showing up disguised as logic. * Prepare on two levels, not just one. Cognitive preparation means knowing the market range for your role and being able to articulate your value with specificity. Somatic preparation means saying the number out loud, in your body, in a low-stakes setting before the real conversation happens. * Watch for the three patterns. Preemptive discounting, over-explaining, and the gratitude loop can all undercut your ask before the other person has even responded. Naming them when they show up is often the first step to a different relationship with them. * You don’t have to fill the silence after pushback. A pause is not a crisis. Sitting with discomfort for a few extra seconds is often the most useful thing you can do. * This builds through accumulation, not a single conversation. Each ask is a data point. Asking and surviving, asking and getting a partial yes, asking and getting a yes. Over time, your internal evidence about what is possible for you starts to shift. And you do not have to build that capacity alone. Come Journey With Us If this resonated with you and you would like to go deeper with the exact tools, resources, and community built specifically to support trauma survivors navigating their careers, consider joining us in the Resilient Career Academy. You don’t have to figure this out alone. There is a place where people understand exactly what you are carrying, and where your pace, your healing, and your story are not just welcomed, they are honored. Get full access to Resilient Career Academy at resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe [https://resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

16. juni 202622 min
episode How To Stay Professionally Visible When You Want to Disappear artwork

How To Stay Professionally Visible When You Want to Disappear

Summary In this episode, Cyndi Bennett talks about something she sees constantly: talented, capable people doing genuinely good work who are still being passed over, overlooked, and left out of conversations where they belong. The reason, more often than not, comes back to visibility. Or more specifically, to the ways that being seen feels like a threat. This episode is an honest look at why the pull toward invisibility makes complete sense for trauma survivors, what it actually costs when we go quiet in our careers, and what it can look like to stay professionally visible in a way that does not require you to override your nervous system to do it. Key Thoughts * The urge to disappear professionally is not weakness. It is a logical protective response from a nervous system that learned, through real experience, that being visible led to harm. * Promotions, opportunities, and leadership roles go to people whose names come to mind. Quality alone does not move careers forward in most professional environments. How that quality gets communicated matters too. * When we consistently hold ourselves back from being seen, over time that can start to feel like evidence that we do not belong. That story accumulates quietly, and it can feel very true even when it has nothing to do with actual capability. * There is a kind of visibility that feels performative and activates the threat response. And there is another kind that comes from being genuinely present in spaces where you already belong. That second kind is often just as powerful, and far more sustainable. * The hyper-competence trap is real. Doing more excellent work quietly does not make it more visible. The work still needs a voice. * Visibility work that skips the nervous system piece and goes straight to strategy tends not to stick. Understanding your own responses is where this work actually starts. * Slower is not the same as stuck. Durable change gets built in that slower movement, even when it is hard to see. What This Means For You If any part of this episode is landing, here are some things worth sitting with: * Get curious about what happens in your body when a visibility opportunity comes up. Do you forget to follow up on praise? Take yourself off the list for something you actually wanted? Feel a wave of dread before a meeting where you will be asked to speak? That is your nervous system doing its job. Noticing it without judgment is where this work begins. * Identify which forms of visibility feel workable for you right now. Not the loudest version career advice usually recommends. The version that fits how you actually work and what you actually value. Something smaller and more sustainable is still progress. * Pay attention to the stories running underneath. A lot of what keeps people invisible lives on the inside. The narrative that says it is not safe to be seen, or that you are not quite ready yet. Understanding where those stories came from, and gently questioning whether they are still accurate, is significant work. * Learn to make your work legible. There is a real skill in communicating the value of what you do in ways that land with the people who need to hear it. That skill can be developed, and it does not require performing or self-promoting in ways that feel hollow. * If every attempt to work on this feels like too much, that feeling is worth listening to. It might mean the steps are too large, or that you are moving to strategy before spending enough time on the nervous system piece. It might also mean the environment you are in is still actively unsafe. Your system may be accurately picking that up. Come Journey With Us If this resonated with you and you would like to go deeper with the exact tools, resources, and community built specifically to support trauma survivors navigating their careers, consider joining us in the Resilient Career Academy. You don’t have to figure this out alone. There is a place where people understand exactly what you are carrying, and where your pace, your healing, and your story are not just welcomed, they are honored. Get full access to Resilient Career Academy at resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe [https://resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

9. juni 202616 min
episode How to Job Search When Burnout Has Stalled Your Momentum artwork

How to Job Search When Burnout Has Stalled Your Momentum

Summary In this episode, Cyndi Bennett speaks directly to the people who know they need to do something about their job situation and yet cannot seem to make themselves start. This is not an episode about productivity hacks or applying to more jobs. It is an honest look at what is actually happening when burnout meets a job search, why the standard advice feels almost absurd when you are in it, and how to start moving again in a way that honors where you actually are. If the momentum has stalled and you have been blaming yourself for it, this one is for you. Key Thoughts * Job searching while burned out is one of the hardest professional challenges there is, and one of the least acknowledged. The fact that your momentum has stalled is not a personal failing. It is a signal. * Burnout erodes your felt sense of your own capability. It makes it genuinely hard to believe that what you have to offer is real, even when that truth has not changed at all. * The usual job search advice treats burnout as a motivation problem. It is actually a capacity and safety problem, and those require a very different response. * A small, sustainable action taken consistently will almost always outperform a burst of energy followed by a crash and a long recovery. * There is often grief wrapped up in the stall. Grief for the career you thought you were building, the energy you had before, the version of yourself that believed a certain workplace was going to work out. * You do not have to be fully recovered to move forward. You just have to find the pace that is honest to where you are. * The depletion does not get to tell you that you have nothing to offer. That is the burnout speaking, not the truth. What This Means For You If any part of this episode is landing, here are some things worth sitting with: * Ask yourself what a sustainable job search actually looks like for you right now. Not what you think you should be able to do. What you can genuinely do without pushing yourself further into depletion. The answer might be smaller than you expect, and that is okay. * You have permission to work in the lighter layers. Orientation, reading a job description without the pressure to apply, updating one small section of your resume, reconnecting with one person without asking for anything. These count. Preparing the ground is real progress, even when it does not feel like it. * Structure what you can control. Decide in advance how many applications you will send in a given week and hold that boundary. Build in recovery time after interviews. Your nervous system needs it even when the pull to keep going is strong. * Name the grief if it is there. If what stops you when you open a job board feels less like tiredness and more like loss, that deserves acknowledgement. Being asked to start over from that place is a heavier ask than the productivity advice accounts for. * Your nervous system is still protecting you. If you walk into interviews scanning for red flags, presenting a more guarded version of yourself, or feeling dread in conversations that are going well, that is not a sign you are not ready. It is a sign your system remembers something as dangerous. That recalibrates over time, and learning to work alongside it is part of the process. Come Journey With Us If this resonated with you and you would like to go deeper with the exact tools, resources, and community built specifically to support trauma survivors navigating their careers, consider joining us in the Resilient Career Academy. You don’t have to figure this out alone. There is a place where people understand exactly what you are carrying, and where your pace, your healing, and your story are not just welcomed, they are honored. Get full access to Resilient Career Academy at resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe [https://resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

2. juni 202616 min
episode What To Say When Your Career History Is Messy artwork

What To Say When Your Career History Is Messy

Summary In this episode, Cyndi Bennett tackles something that most career advice completely misses: what happens in your body when an interviewer asks you to explain a gap, a difficult departure, or a stretch of time you are still making sense of. This is not an episode about polishing your talking points. It is an honest, practical conversation about why narrating a complicated career history is genuinely harder for trauma survivors, what the freeze, the spiral, the performance, and the avoidance are actually telling you, and how to build a relationship with your own story that is honest, boundaried, and yours. If you have ever closed a job application because you could not figure out how to explain your background, this one is for you. Key Thoughts * The freeze, the spiral, the performance, the avoidance. These are not signs that something is wrong with you. They are protective strategies your nervous system built for good reasons, in environments that taught them to you. * When someone asks why you left a job, they are asking a professional question. If what you lived through was genuinely harmful, that question lands somewhere much deeper than the interviewer intended. * Your story is yours. The portion you share in an interview is a professional excerpt. Choosing what belongs in that excerpt is discernment, not dishonesty. * You do not have to speak badly about a former employer to be honest. “It wasn’t a healthy environment for me” tells them what they need to know. * A grounded pause in an interview is more compelling than an anxious rush of words. You are allowed to take a moment before you answer. * The urge to keep talking is where the spiral lives. You get to decide in advance when you have said enough, and then stop. * The version of you that froze was not failing. The version of you that stopped applying was protecting yourself in the only way that felt available at the time. You are building something different now. What This Means For You If you have an interview coming up, or if the idea of one makes something tighten in your chest, here are some things worth sitting with: * Understand why it feels the way it feels. Your nervous system learned that professional environments require careful navigation. That was a reasonable adaptation. Knowing that does not make the interview easy, but it does mean you can stop treating your own reactions as evidence of failure. * Your full story and your professional excerpt are two different things. You are not required to hand your entire history to someone who has not yet earned access to it. Deciding what to share is not dishonesty. It is the same discernment every person in that room is exercising. * Write it out for yourself first. Before you rehearse anything, write out what actually happened, what it cost you, and what you carry differently now. Not to share it, but to give the story somewhere to settle in your body so it stops circling as anxiety. This step matters more than most people realize. * Find the two or three true things. From everything you wrote, identify the honest, relevant pieces that reflect your growth and point toward where you are going. Practice saying those out loud until they sound like yours, not like a script. * Know your stopping point before you walk in. Decide in advance when you have said enough. When you reach it, stop and let the silence sit. You do not have to fill it. * A complicated history is not a liability. It is often what makes someone a thoughtful colleague, a perceptive leader, someone who understands working with people in ways that simply cannot be learned any other way. You get to walk in as someone who knows what happened, knows what they learned, and knows where they are going. Come Journey With Us If this resonated with you and you would like to go deeper with the exact tools, resources, and community built specifically to support trauma survivors navigating their careers, consider joining us in the Resilient Career Academy. You don’t have to figure this out alone. There is a place where people understand exactly what you are carrying, and where your pace, your healing, and your story are not just welcomed, they are honored. Get full access to Resilient Career Academy at resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe [https://resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

26. maj 202615 min
episode Power Was Never Meant to Be Used This Way artwork

Power Was Never Meant to Be Used This Way

Summary In this solo episode, Cyndi Bennett takes on a topic she has been sitting with for a while: power, and what happens when someone gets it and uses it the wrong way. This is not a political episode or a narcissism episode. It is an honest, grounded conversation about what misused authority actually looks like in the workplace, what it costs the people around it, and why, for trauma survivors, those environments can feel so painfully familiar. Drawing from her own study of leadership and her work with trauma survivors navigating their careers, Cyndi also paints a clear picture of what power used well looks like, and why you deserve to be in spaces where that is the norm, not the exception. Key Thoughts * When someone gets a title and the dynamic shifts overnight, your body recognizes that pattern long before your mind can name it. * Power misused looks like taking up space. Power used well looks like making room. * The leaders who leave the deepest mark are almost never the ones who use their position to elevate themselves. They are the ones who use it to elevate everyone around them. * What gets taken first in a misused power dynamic is your voice. Not all at once, but gradually, until the cost of speaking starts to feel too high. * When you are inside a harmful dynamic long enough, it starts to feel like just how things are. That normalization is what makes it so hard to leave and so hard to trust the next place you step into. * Your nervous system is not overreacting. It is connecting dots that are real. * You are allowed to want workplaces where power is used well. For those of us who were told our needs were too much, that can feel like a radical idea. But it is simply the baseline. What This Means For You If any part of this episode is landing in a way that feels familiar, here are some things worth sitting with: * What you are experiencing is real. If you are in an environment right now where authority is being used against you rather than for you, you are not imagining it and you are not oversensitive. The impact on your nervous system is real, and it deserves to be taken seriously. * Learn to assess your environments from a place of clarity, not hypervigilance. Who has power in the spaces you are in? How are they using it? What does it cost you to be there? These are not paranoid questions. They are important ones, and you are allowed to ask them. * Notice what misused power takes from you. Your voice. Your sense of reality. Your sense of what is normal. Once you can name what has been chipped away, you can begin to understand why the healing work matters so much. * Hold on to examples of power done right. If you have ever worked with someone who made you feel like your voice belonged in the room, who shared credit freely and stayed curious about the people around them, that is not a unicorn. It is what leadership is supposed to look like, and it is worth holding as your reference point. * You get to want something different. Not someday, not when things settle down. Now. You are allowed to make decisions, over time, in the direction of environments where you can bring your whole self and not spend half your energy just trying to survive the room. Come Journey With Us If this resonated with you and you would like to go deeper with the exact tools, resources, and community built specifically to support trauma survivors navigating their careers, consider joining us in the Resilient Career Academy. You don’t have to figure this out alone. There is a place where people understand exactly what you are carrying, and where your pace, your healing, and your story are not just welcomed, they are honored. Get full access to Resilient Career Academy at resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe [https://resilientcareers.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

19. maj 202614 min