ESSENTFLOW™ by Shae: Too Much for the Room
What happens when the performed version of you stops feeling like a performance? For high-capacity Black women, identity substitution doesn't just change how you show up — it rewires what safety feels like. In this episode, Shae unpacks the difference between suppression and substitution, why showing up authentically in a high-stakes space can feel like danger even when nothing went wrong, and what the installed self is actually fighting for when she comes back swinging. Drawing from her 17-year autoethnographic research and the foundational work of Dr. Cheryl Woods-Giscombé, Patricia Hill Collins, and Zora Neale Hurston, this episode names the mechanism behind the exhaustion of performing yourself out of existence. If you've ever walked away from a moment where you showed up as yourself and immediately questioned everything — this episode is for you. Use The SORT Method™ to sort through the panic and reclaim the truth on the other side. Research references: Dr. Cheryl Woods-Giscombé (Superwoman Schema), Patricia Hill Collins (politics of respectability), Zora Neale Hurston (interior life of Black women) #high capacity Black women #identity substitution #Superwoman Schema #Black women mental health #performing palatability #code switching identity #native self installed self #Black women exhaustion #authentic identity #too much for the room #ESSENTFLOW #Black women podcast #identity incongruence #Black women leadership #self reclamation
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