NDA: No D*cks Allowed

Body Image: Appreciation Sold Separately

36 min · 9 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Body Image: Appreciation Sold Separately

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602993/fan_mail/new] TW: This episode includes discussion of body image, weight, eating disorder recovery, sexual abuse, medical procedures, and women's experiences with body-based judgment and objectification. Listener discretion is advised. Women are taught early that our bodies are projects. Something to improve. Something to shrink. Something to manage. Something to earn approval through. In this deeply personal episode, we unpack the complicated relationship women have with their bodies and the messages that shaped it from childhood comments and beauty standards to workplace expectations, intimacy, confidence, and self-worth. We share our own experiences with body image, weight, health, trauma, and the realization that so much of life can be spent waiting to become "acceptable." This isn't a conversation about loving every part of yourself every second of every day. It's a conversation about what changes when you stop treating your body like a problem to solve.

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12 episodios

episode Body Image: Appreciation Sold Separately artwork

Body Image: Appreciation Sold Separately

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602993/fan_mail/new] TW: This episode includes discussion of body image, weight, eating disorder recovery, sexual abuse, medical procedures, and women's experiences with body-based judgment and objectification. Listener discretion is advised. Women are taught early that our bodies are projects. Something to improve. Something to shrink. Something to manage. Something to earn approval through. In this deeply personal episode, we unpack the complicated relationship women have with their bodies and the messages that shaped it from childhood comments and beauty standards to workplace expectations, intimacy, confidence, and self-worth. We share our own experiences with body image, weight, health, trauma, and the realization that so much of life can be spent waiting to become "acceptable." This isn't a conversation about loving every part of yourself every second of every day. It's a conversation about what changes when you stop treating your body like a problem to solve.

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episode Inconveniently Complex artwork

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602993/fan_mail/new] We love to talk about generations. Boomers don't like change. Millennials are entitled. Gen Z doesn't want to work. At least that's what we're told. In this episode, we're unpacking why generational stereotypes have become one of the most socially accepted forms of bias and what gets lost when we reduce complex human beings (especially women) to labels. The moment we start using those labels to explain someone's entire personality, we stop being curious about who they actually are. We explore: • Why generational stereotypes feel so easy to believe • The fear and uncertainty often hiding underneath them • How these assumptions show up in workplaces and leadership • The hidden cost of replacing curiosity with judgment • Why women have an opportunity to learn from, not compete with, women in different generations Human beings are inconveniently complex, but maybe that's not a problem to solve. Maybe that's the point.

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602993/fan_mail/new] Women are often taught that humility is a virtue. And it is, until it becomes self-erasure. In this episode, we unpack the way many women instinctively minimize their accomplishments, deflect praise, over-credit others, and move past their wins without ever fully allowing themselves to feel proud of what they achieved. We explore how women are socially conditioned to prioritize humility, likability, and belonging, while confidence and visible self-advocacy are often rewarded differently in men, especially in leadership and workplace environments. Over time, many women learn that being visible can feel risky, so they shrink their contributions before anyone else has the chance to. The result? Women who are deeply capable become overlooked, under-recognized, and disconnected from their own success. This conversation is not about arrogance, ego, or becoming louder than everyone else. It’s about learning the difference between bragging and healthy ownership, and understanding that acknowledging your contribution does not take anything away from the people around you. Because there’s a difference between being humble… and disappearing from your own story.

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