Ep 11 - Wired Different: When Your Gift Looks Like a Problem
There's something in your design that keeps creating friction. In your relationships, in how people receive you, maybe even in how you receive yourself. And if it's come up enough times, you've probably started to wonder if it's just... a flaw.
It's not.
In this episode I'm talking about the parts of us that are most essentially us, the ones that are genuinely wired in and doing exactly what they're supposed to do, and why those are almost always the parts that get the most pushback.
I'm using my own chart as the example. Specifically the channel 63-4, a logical pressure-testing channel that questions everything, and how I spent years in a long friendship softening that part of myself because it kept being received as an attack. And what I finally understood about why that friction existed and what it was actually trying to show me.
This isn't about villainizing anyone. It's about what happens when you spend so long adjusting yourself around someone else's discomfort that you start to forget the adjusted version isn't the real one.
We also talk about Gate 42, endings, and why letting something complete is not the same as giving up.
If you have something in you that you've been told is too much, too direct, too intense, too curious, this one is for you.
In this episode:
* The difference between a gift and how it's being received, and why that gap is information not verdict
* Why the things in our design that create the most friction are usually the things our actual people need us for most
* The Phoebe problem, and why being loved as a novelty is not the same as being known
* Gate 42 and what it actually means to let something complete
* How Human Design gives you a framework for the thing you've been experiencing as a character flaw
Mentioned in this episode:
Human Design Oracle Reading, one hour where you bring a pattern, a situation, or something you keep bumping into and we look at it together through your chart. No fixing. Just clarity.
Book at ayprilporter.com.