Family Dough | Exploring the Weight of Wealth, Inherited Stories, & Reclaiming Personal Power

Emotional Reactivity: How Money Allows Bullying Behavior without Consequence

24 min · 22 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Emotional Reactivity: How Money Allows Bullying Behavior without Consequence

Descripción

What if your reactions in high pressure moments are doing more damage than the situation itself? In this episode, I dive into emotional reactivity, especially inside systems shaped by money, power, and unspoken rules. I break down what it really means to lose your pause button, how quickly things can escalate from a simple moment into control or urgency, and why so many of us don’t even realize it’s happening. Through a personal story, I share how one recent interaction revealed a deeper pattern rooted in fear, disappointment, and the need to stay in control. Topics Covered in this Episode: * The subtle difference between reacting and responding and why it changes everything * How past experiences with disappointment can quietly drive present day behavior * The hidden link between urgency, control, and emotional discomfort If you are ready to lead, relate, and live with more awareness and integrity, this episode will meet you right where you are. All show notes are available at FamilyDough.org [http://familydough.org]  Resources Mentioned: Grab your HOUSE OF SELF MINI REFERENCE GUIDE: https://johndewey.com/podcast/emotional-reactivity-copy-5/#footer [https://johndewey.com/podcast/emotional-reactivity-copy-5/#footer]

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9 episodios

episode Scientists Sat a Baby Down Next to a Pile of Money - What It Did Will Explain Your Entire Family artwork

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Research suggests that babies recognize unfairness long before they can speak. In this episode, I use that surprising finding alongside economist Thomas Piketty's work on wealth inequality to explore a different question: what does inherited wealth do to the person who receives it? Rather than focusing on policy or economics alone, I examine how fairness, identity, and legitimacy intersect for people growing up inside family wealth.  This conversation is ultimately about separating the wealth you've received from the person you're becoming and why that distinction matters.  All show notes are available at FamilyDough.com [http://familydough.com]  Resources Mentioned: Grab your HOUSE OF SELF MINI REFERENCE GUIDE HERE! [https://johndewey.com/podcast/emotional-reactivity-copy-5/#footer]

15 de jul de 202616 min
episode Recognizing Manipulation: Too Broken to Love artwork

Recognizing Manipulation: Too Broken to Love

In this episode of Family Dough, I'm talking about manipulation, not in the obvious sense, but the kind that can quietly become part of family systems built around wealth, inheritance, and legacy. I share a simple moment from my own life that unexpectedly brought up an old reaction, then explore why experiences like that can be connected to much deeper patterns. Along the way, I look at well-known family cases, including the Pritzker and Murdoch families, to examine how power, trust, and good intentions can sometimes become tangled together in ways that leave lasting emotional consequences. All show notes are available at FamilyDough.com [http://familydough.com]  Resources Mentioned: Grab your HOUSE OF SELF MINI REFERENCE GUIDE HERE! [https://johndewey.com/podcast/emotional-reactivity-copy-5/#footer]

1 de jul de 202637 min
episode Too Big for Your Britches: When a Family System Decides for You artwork

Too Big for Your Britches: When a Family System Decides for You

What if the saying, "you're getting too big for your britches," isn't actually about you? In this episode, I unpack one of the most common phrases used to keep people in their place and explore what is really happening beneath the surface when family members, friends, or mentors seem to criticize your growth. Using my own experiences, Warren Buffett's famous tide analogy, and powerful examples from Succession, I examine the difference between a loving warning and a delayed verdict. We talk about why certain people stay silent while you're rising, only to speak up when you stumble, and what that timing reveals about resentment, competition, jealousy, and the invisible roles families assign us. Most importantly, we'll discuss what it takes to stop shrinking yourself to fit old expectations and start living at your true size. All show notes are available at FamilyDough.com [http://familydough.com]  Resources Mentioned: Grab your HOUSE OF SELF MINI REFERENCE GUIDE HERE! [https://johndewey.com/podcast/emotional-reactivity-copy-5/#footer]

17 de jun de 202621 min
episode The Cutoff: Threatened Disinheritance artwork

The Cutoff: Threatened Disinheritance

What if the greatest threat in your life was never losing the money, but losing your place in the family? In this episode of Family Dough, I unpack one of the most powerful and misunderstood forces inside legacy wealth families: the threat of being cut off. Drawing from my own experience of receiving a phone call that shook me to my core long after I thought I had done the work, I explore how family systems, inherited expectations, and unspoken rules become hardwired into our bodies. We dive into why the fear of rejection can feel more devastating than the loss of wealth itself, how shame quietly shapes the lives of inheritors, and why traditional conversations about money often miss the deeper emotional reality underneath. All show notes are available at FamilyDough.com [http://familydough.com]  Resources Mentioned: Grab your HOUSE OF SELF MINI REFERENCE GUIDE HERE! [https://johndewey.com/podcast/emotional-reactivity-copy-5/#footer]

3 de jun de 202627 min
episode Family Member Banker: Who's Controlling the Money artwork

Family Member Banker: Who's Controlling the Money

In this episode of Family Dough, I unpack one of the most emotionally loaded and quietly destructive dynamics inside wealthy families: the family banker. The person who controls the money often ends up controlling far more than finances. I explore how legacy wealth can distort sibling relationships, delay autonomy, create invisible power structures, and leave grown adults still asking for permission in ways they barely recognize. Topics We Cover in This Episode:  * Why the “family banker” role changes relationships in ways most families never acknowledge * The subtle ways wealth can delay adulthood and autonomy * How dependence reshapes communication, confidence, and even identity If you are beginning to see your family system differently for the first time, know this: awareness is not small. It is the beginning of freedom. Tune in, reflect honestly, and ask yourself the question we always come back to on Family Dough: Are we making progress? All show notes are available at FamilyDough.com [http://familydough.com]  Resources Mentioned: Grab your HOUSE OF SELF MINI REFERENCE GUIDE HERE! [https://johndewey.com/podcast/emotional-reactivity-copy-5/#footer]

20 de may de 202625 min