Becoming the Sanctuary
Why do so many of us treat healing like another thing we need to get right? Why do we speak to ourselves in ways we would never speak to someone we love? Why do we believe growth should feel hard all the time? And why does the process of becoming healthier so often become another source of pressure? In Episode 7 of Becoming the Sanctuary, Kelley explores a pattern she still catches herself falling into more often than she'd like to admit: turning healing into a punishment program. Many of us say we want to grow. We say we want to heal. We say we want to become healthier, happier, calmer, more regulated, and more present versions of ourselves. But somewhere along the way, something subtle begins to happen. Healing quietly transforms into another impossible standard we place on ourselves. Every flaw must be corrected. Every mistake must be analyzed. Every trigger must be fixed. Every emotion must be managed perfectly. Every setback becomes evidence that we're doing something wrong. And before we know it, healing becomes another way of telling ourselves we aren't enough yet. This episode explores a difficult but important question: what if many of us aren't actually healing? What if we're trying to perfect ourselves instead? Because those are two very different things. Throughout this conversation, Kelley dives into perfectionism, shame, self-awareness, accountability, and the exhausting pressure many people place on themselves to get life right all the time. She explores how the same voice that tells us to grow is often the very same voice telling us we're constantly falling short. One of the central themes of this episode is understanding the difference between self-awareness and self-criticism. Self-awareness helps us understand ourselves. Self-criticism attacks us. Self-awareness creates curiosity. Self-criticism creates shame. Self-awareness says, "What can I learn from this?" Self-criticism says, "You should have known better." Many people spend years believing those two voices are the same when, in reality, they are completely different experiences. This episode also explores how healing itself has become entangled with achievement culture. We live in a world that constantly encourages us to optimize every aspect of our lives. Improve your morning routine. Improve your sleep. Improve your productivity. Improve your finances. Improve your relationships. Improve your body. Improve your nervous system. Improve your mindset. While none of those things are inherently bad, they can quietly create an underlying message that many people begin to believe without ever questioning it: Who you are today isn't enough. That message is exhausting. Because if every day becomes another opportunity to become someone better, when do we allow ourselves to simply be human? When do we stop treating ourselves like unfinished projects? When do we stop acting as though life is a race toward some perfected future version of ourselves? Kelley reflects on how these patterns have shown up in her own life while building Thrivewell Hub, creating workshops, writing books, launching a podcast, transitioning into a new full-time position, and continuing her own healing journey at the same time. She shares something that many people quietly experience: perfectionism doesn't disappear simply because we become more self-aware. In many ways, self-awareness can actually strengthen perfectionism if compassion isn't introduced alongside it. The more aware we become, the more opportunities we can find to criticize ourselves. The more we learn, the more we can convince ourselves that we should already know better. The more we grow, the more we can believe we should be further along than we are. That cycle can become endless if we don't consciously interrupt it. This conversation also explores the reality that many people have unintentionally turned healing into another full-time job. They consume books, podcasts, social media content, courses, certifications, and endless advice about becoming better versions of themselves. While growth is beautiful, there is a point where self-improvement can quietly become self-rejection. When every day becomes another opportunity to fix yourself, it's easy to forget that you were never a problem to solve in the first place. The episode also dives deeply into shame and why it is such a poor teacher. Many people unknowingly use shame as motivation. They believe that if they are hard enough on themselves, they'll finally change. If they criticize themselves enough, they'll finally become disciplined. If they punish themselves enough, they'll finally become successful. But sustainable change is rarely built through fear. Long-term healing is rarely built through criticism. And emotional safety matters far more than many people realize. Kelley also breaks down the difference between guilt and shame. Guilt says, "I made a mistake." Shame says, "I am the mistake." That distinction may sound simple, but it has profound implications for how we move through life. Because mistakes are inevitable. Being human is inevitable. Imperfection is inevitable. The goal is not to eliminate mistakes. The goal is to change our relationship with them. This episode also redefines what compassion actually means. Many people misunderstand compassion as lowering standards, making excuses, or avoiding accountability altogether. But compassion is none of those things. Compassion is accountability without self-abandonment. Compassion is honesty without cruelty. Compassion is learning from mistakes without turning them into evidence that we're failing. Compassion is responding instead of attacking. Compassion is understanding that growth and grace can coexist. Listeners are also invited to reflect on an important question: Would you ever speak to someone you love the way you speak to yourself? Would you talk to a child that way? Would you talk to a friend that way? Would you talk to someone actively trying to heal that way? For many people, the answer is no. Yet those same impossible standards are often turned inward every single day. This conversation invites listeners to begin extending some of that same compassion back toward themselves. Not because life is easy. Not because accountability doesn't matter. But because healing was never supposed to become another war we fight against ourselves. One of the deeper realizations woven throughout this episode is that many of us have become so accustomed to fixing ourselves that we've forgotten how to simply be with ourselves. We've become incredibly skilled at identifying problems, but not always at acknowledging progress. We've become incredibly skilled at correction, but not always at compassion. We've become incredibly skilled at striving, but not always at allowing ourselves to feel proud. And perhaps that's because modern life rarely celebrates progress. It celebrates outcomes. It celebrates arrival. It celebrates completion. Yet human beings are never truly finished. We are always evolving. That means there may never be a moment when we suddenly arrive at some perfected version of ourselves. There may never be a day when every trigger disappears, every emotion is regulated, every insecurity is gone, and every mistake stops happening. And that's okay. Because healing is not a destination. Healing is a relationship. Healing is a practice. Healing is returning. Returning to yourself after mistakes. Returning to yourself after setbacks. Returning to yourself after difficult seasons. Returning to yourself after old patterns resurface. Returning without shame. Returning without abandoning yourself. At its core, Healing Is Not Self Punishment is an invitation to stop making yourself the enemy. It is a reminder that accountability and compassion can coexist. Growth and grace can coexist. Progress and imperfection can coexist. Healing and humanity can coexist. Because maybe healing was never about becoming someone else. Maybe it was never about becoming perfect. Maybe it was about becoming kinder to the person who has been trying so hard all along. Real healing asks something much harder than perfection. It asks us to tell the truth about ourselves without abandoning ourselves in the process. If you've ever felt like you're failing at healing, if you've ever turned personal growth into another impossible standard, if you've ever felt exhausted trying to become a better version of yourself, or if you've ever wondered why your own inner voice can sometimes be your harshest critic, this episode is for you. Because perhaps the greatest act of healing isn't becoming a new person at all. Perhaps it's learning to stop treating yourself like a problem to solve. #BecomingTheSanctuary #ThrivewellEstate #HealingJourney #Perfectionism #SelfCompassion #EmotionalHealing #PersonalGrowth #MentalWellness #SelfAwareness #HealingPodcast #Mindfulness #Embodiment #InnerWork #AuthenticLiving #RecoveryJourney
8 episodios
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