Brain vs Me™

The Cost of Waiting Until It Feels Clear

14 min · 9. maalis 2026
jakson The Cost of Waiting Until It Feels Clear kansikuva

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Send a text [https://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2461438/open_sms]  What looks like responsibility isn’t always responsibility. Sometimes it’s avoidance with better language. In this episode, Josh walks through a familiar pattern: delaying action not because of laziness or confusion, but because starting would make something real. Using performance reviews as the entry point, he explores how intelligent, self-aware people get stuck negotiating with discomfort, mistaking preparation, reflection, and insight for progress. This is a quiet look at how avoidance hides behind good intentions — and why nothing actually changes until behavior does.  You’re listening to the Brain vs Me podcast - A show about the moments your brain gets ahead of you — usually before you’re ready. Here’s your host, Joshua Ericson. Thanks for listening to The Brain vs Me Podcast. If you enjoyed this and want to keep up, follow or subscribe to the show.  You can leave a comment, ask a question, or share the episode wherever you’re listening. If you’d like to support the show, or explore Joshua Ericson’s books and writing, visit brain versus me.com. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461438/support]

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19 jaksot

jakson The Cost of Waiting Until It Feels Clear kansikuva

The Cost of Waiting Until It Feels Clear

Send a text [https://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2461438/open_sms]  What looks like responsibility isn’t always responsibility. Sometimes it’s avoidance with better language. In this episode, Josh walks through a familiar pattern: delaying action not because of laziness or confusion, but because starting would make something real. Using performance reviews as the entry point, he explores how intelligent, self-aware people get stuck negotiating with discomfort, mistaking preparation, reflection, and insight for progress. This is a quiet look at how avoidance hides behind good intentions — and why nothing actually changes until behavior does.  You’re listening to the Brain vs Me podcast - A show about the moments your brain gets ahead of you — usually before you’re ready. Here’s your host, Joshua Ericson. Thanks for listening to The Brain vs Me Podcast. If you enjoyed this and want to keep up, follow or subscribe to the show.  You can leave a comment, ask a question, or share the episode wherever you’re listening. If you’d like to support the show, or explore Joshua Ericson’s books and writing, visit brain versus me.com. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461438/support]

9. maalis 202614 min
jakson Anxiety, Avoidance, and the Gym Door kansikuva

Anxiety, Avoidance, and the Gym Door

Send a text [https://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2461438/open_sms] For months, I told myself I wasn’t avoiding the gym.  I was “preparing.” Because preparation feels productive. Avoidance feels lazy. In this episode of Brain vs. Me, I talk about why walking into the gym was harder than the workout itself — and how anxiety turns simple actions into psychological obstacle courses. This isn’t a fitness episode. It’s a story about uncertainty, visibility, overthinking, and the fear of being new in public. About how our brains demand confidence before action, even though confidence only comes after repetition. I break down what actually helped: shrinking the mission, normalizing awkwardness, stopping the meaning-making spiral, and letting “normal” be good enough. If you’ve been emotionally preparing for something way longer than necessary, this episode is for you. You’re listening to the Brain vs Me podcast - A show about the moments your brain gets ahead of you — usually before you’re ready. Here’s your host, Joshua Ericson. Thanks for listening to The Brain vs Me Podcast. If you enjoyed this and want to keep up, follow or subscribe to the show.  You can leave a comment, ask a question, or share the episode wherever you’re listening. If you’d like to support the show, or explore Joshua Ericson’s books and writing, visit brain versus me.com. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461438/support]

4. maalis 202612 min
jakson When the Therapy That Saved You Isn’t Enough Anymore kansikuva

When the Therapy That Saved You Isn’t Enough Anymore

Send a text [https://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2461438/open_sms] For a long time, I thought changing therapists meant something went wrong.  That I failed. That therapy failed. That I was starting over. It turns out, it meant I was paying attention. In this episode of Brain vs. Me, I talk about changing therapists without turning it into a crisis — not quitting therapy, not rejecting the past, but evolving as your needs change. I break down how DBT helped me survive emotional chaos, why that same structure eventually felt like maintenance instead of growth, and how moving toward CBT wasn’t erasing progress — it was building on it. This isn’t about abandoning what helped you before.  It’s about recognizing when survival tools need to become growth tools. If you’ve ever stayed with something out of loyalty instead of alignment, this episode is for you. You’re listening to the Brain vs Me podcast - A show about the moments your brain gets ahead of you — usually before you’re ready. Here’s your host, Joshua Ericson. Thanks for listening to The Brain vs Me Podcast. If you enjoyed this and want to keep up, follow or subscribe to the show.  You can leave a comment, ask a question, or share the episode wherever you’re listening. If you’d like to support the show, or explore Joshua Ericson’s books and writing, visit brain versus me.com. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461438/support]

2. maalis 202612 min
jakson Recognizing Depression Before It Breaks You kansikuva

Recognizing Depression Before It Breaks You

Send a text [https://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2461438/open_sms] Depression doesn’t always look like sadness.  Sometimes it looks like numbness, exhaustion, self-doubt, and quietly pulling away from your own life. In this episode of Brain vs. Me, Joshua Erickson talks about the quiet version of depression — the kind that doesn’t announce itself, doesn’t feel dramatic, and often goes unnoticed until it’s already settled in. This isn’t a clinical breakdown or a motivational speech. It’s a personal, honest look at how depression actually shows up: the inner critic that sounds reasonable, the slow erosion of care, the emotional flatness that feels “normal” from the inside. This episode isn’t about fixing yourself.  It’s about recognizing when something has shifted — and responding before the whisper gets louder. If you’ve ever thought, “I’m fine… just tired… just off lately,” this one’s for you. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461438/support]

25. helmi 20269 min
jakson You Don’t Need to Be Fixed kansikuva

You Don’t Need to Be Fixed

Send a text [https://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2461438/open_sms]  For a long time, Josh believed that being different meant something was wrong with him. Being too sensitive, thinking too much, reacting differently — all of it got framed as damage instead of wiring. In this episode, he explores how easily difference gets labeled as broken, how diagnoses and assumptions turn into identities, and the cost of trying to be “normal.” This isn’t about fixing yourself. It’s about understanding how your brain works, letting go of the mask, and building a life that fits who you actually are.  You’re listening to the Brain vs Me podcast - A show about the moments your brain gets ahead of you — usually before you’re ready. Here’s your host, Joshua Ericson. Thanks for listening to The Brain vs Me Podcast. If you enjoyed this and want to keep up, follow or subscribe to the show.  You can leave a comment, ask a question, or share the episode wherever you’re listening. If you’d like to support the show, or explore Joshua Ericson’s books and writing, visit brain versus me.com. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461438/support]

23. helmi 202615 min