Self Study Lab

Ep. 7: Same World, Different Hardware

13 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Ep. 7: Same World, Different Hardware

Descripción

Most of us move through the world assuming our senses are giving us an accurate readout of reality. And if someone else is having a different experience of the same moment, one of us must be off. In this episode, I make the case that that assumption is wrong — and that a lot of unnecessary conflict, self-judgment, and misunderstanding lives inside it. In this episode, I talk about: * Why no two nervous systems process the world the same way * How sensory thresholds for smell, sound, and pain vary measurably between people * What chronotype research tells us about morning and night people * The concept of baseline arousal and why some systems run hotter or cooler from the start * How epigenetics suggests some of what we carry was shaped by the people who came before us * Why calling someone "too sensitive" is often a mismatch in hardware, not a character flaw This week's tiny practice Find one moment where you notice yourself reacting more strongly, or less strongly to something sensory than the people around you. A smell, a sound, a temperature. Instead of explaining it away, just get curious. Sign up for my biweekly newsletter Notes from the Field here: https://egostrength.net/newsletter [https://egostrength.net/newsletter] DISCLAIMER The Self Study Lab Podcast is for education and personal growth. It isn’t therapy and does not replace working with a licensed mental health provider.

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7 episodios

Portada del episodio Ep. 7: Same World, Different Hardware

Ep. 7: Same World, Different Hardware

Most of us move through the world assuming our senses are giving us an accurate readout of reality. And if someone else is having a different experience of the same moment, one of us must be off. In this episode, I make the case that that assumption is wrong — and that a lot of unnecessary conflict, self-judgment, and misunderstanding lives inside it. In this episode, I talk about: * Why no two nervous systems process the world the same way * How sensory thresholds for smell, sound, and pain vary measurably between people * What chronotype research tells us about morning and night people * The concept of baseline arousal and why some systems run hotter or cooler from the start * How epigenetics suggests some of what we carry was shaped by the people who came before us * Why calling someone "too sensitive" is often a mismatch in hardware, not a character flaw This week's tiny practice Find one moment where you notice yourself reacting more strongly, or less strongly to something sensory than the people around you. A smell, a sound, a temperature. Instead of explaining it away, just get curious. Sign up for my biweekly newsletter Notes from the Field here: https://egostrength.net/newsletter [https://egostrength.net/newsletter] DISCLAIMER The Self Study Lab Podcast is for education and personal growth. It isn’t therapy and does not replace working with a licensed mental health provider.

Ayer13 min
Portada del episodio Ep. 6: You Can’t Change What You Can’t See

Ep. 6: You Can’t Change What You Can’t See

In this episode, I make the case that self-awareness is the foundation for any meaningful change. This episode explores why so much of your behavior is driven outside of conscious awareness, how conditioning and nervous system patterns shape your reactions, and why learning to observe yourself is the starting point for reclaiming choice. In this episode, I talk about: * Why most of your reactions happen outside of conscious awareness * How your nervous system makes rapid judgments about safety * Why conditioning continues to shape behavior, even when your beliefs have changed * The difference between patterns and inputs * How patterns explain your reactions and inputs explain your capacity * Why awareness, not willpower, is the first step toward change This week’s tiny practice Catch one moment a day where you notice yourself reacting, and pause to ask: What just happened inside me? What might be driving this? If you want to go deeper, the Self-Study Lab is a small group coaching experience designed to help you practice this work. Daily check-ins, weekly lessons, and personalized feedback so you can see your patterns more clearly. egostrength.net [https://egostrength.net] DISCLAIMER The Self Study Lab Podcast is for education and personal growth. It isn’t therapy and does not replace working with a licensed mental health provider.

12 de abr de 202615 min
Portada del episodio Ep. 5: Freeze and Fawn — States, Not Traits

Ep. 5: Freeze and Fawn — States, Not Traits

In this episode, I translate nervous system theory into everyday experience. This episode explores freeze and fawn as nervous system states, how they shape behavior outside of conscious choice, and why recognizing state is essential for reducing shame and reclaiming agency. In this episode, I talk about: * Freeze and fawn as adaptive mammalian survival responses * How nervous system state, not personality, drives automatic shutdown or people-pleasing * How freeze and fawn often go unnoticed because they can look like calm, competence, or kindness * Why many “high-functioning” patterns are actually nervous system strategies * How freeze can feel like going blank, numb, or oddly calm * How fawn can feel like tracking others, smoothing tension, or losing access to your own wants * Why awareness and curiosity matter more than trying to change these patterns This week’s tiny practice When you notice yourself going quiet, compliant, indecisive, or numb, pause and ask: * What state am I in right now? * What am I orienting to for safety? * Where do I feel that in my body? Free companion sheets are available if you want to track your states and patterns: egostrength.net/patterns [https://egostrength.net/patterns] DISCLAIMER The Self Study Lab Podcast is for education and personal growth. It isn’t therapy and does not replace working with a licensed mental health provider.

9 de feb de 202615 min
Portada del episodio Ep. 4: Fight and Flight — States, Not Traits

Ep. 4: Fight and Flight — States, Not Traits

In this episode, I translate nervous system theory into everyday experience. This episode explores fight and flight as nervous system states, how they shape perception before conscious thought, and why understanding state is essential for compassion and change. IN THIS EPISODE, I TALK ABOUT: * Fight and flight as adaptive mammalian survival responses * How nervous system state, not personality, drives automatic reactions * How fight and flight show up in subtle, everyday ways * Why many high-functioning behaviors are actually stress responses * What safety (ventral vagal) feels like in the body * Why awareness and curiosity matter more than fixing THIS WEEK’S TINY PRACTICE When a thought feels especially convincing or urgent, pause and ask: * What state am I in right now? * Where do I feel that in my body? No fixing. Just noticing. If you want to experiment more, try a brief body scan. One or two minutes. Just gathering data. FOUNDERS LAB — EARLY ACCESS This podcast is the public side of the Self-Study Lab. There’s also a guided version where we practice this work together with structure, daily check-ins, and support. The Foundations Lab opens soon. Join the early access list here: 👉 https://egostrength.net/ DISCLAIMER The Self Study Lab Podcast is for education and personal growth. It isn’t therapy and does not replace working with a licensed mental health provider.

12 de ene de 202615 min
Portada del episodio Ep. 3: It's Not a Flaw, It's a State

Ep. 3: It's Not a Flaw, It's a State

In this episode, I translate last week’s big-picture context into everyday experience. Why can the same situation feel manageable one day — and completely overwhelming the next? Why do we sometimes react in ways we don’t recognize or like? This episode explores how your nervous system state shapes perception before conscious thought, and why understanding state is foundational to real change. In this episode, I talk about: * Why humans are wired for fear and negativity and why that isn’t a flaw * The three universal fears all nervous systems respond to: * loss of safety, approval, autonomy/control * How nervous system state shapes the story your mind tells * Why the same person can react very differently to the same situation * Why insight alone doesn’t always help * How mistaking state for character creates unnecessary shame * Why curiosity matters more than fixing THIS WEEK’S TINY PRACTICE When a thought feels especially convincing, ask: What state am I in right now? No fixing. Just noticing. FOUNDERS LAB — EARLY ACCESS This podcast is the public side of the Self Study Lab. There’s also a guided version where we go deeper, with structure, practices, and real support for applying this to daily life. The Founders Lab opens soon. If you want to be part of the first group, join the early access list here: 👉 https://egostrength.net/ DISCLAIMER The Self Study Lab Podcast is for education and personal growth. It isn’t therapy and does not replace working with a licensed mental health provider.

27 de dic de 202522 min