The Wired for Well-Being Podcast
Discover your free gift from Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein at drjeffreyrutstein.com/links [http://drjeffreyrutstein.com/links] — a 20-minute video on nervous system states and the practices that can help you find regulation. Want to leave a question? Call 866-357-5156 You know the person. Every conversation circles back to everything that's gone wrong for them, and somehow, you leave drained instead of closer. You want to be a good friend, a good coworker, a good son or daughter — so you keep listening, and you feel the guilt rise when your patience runs thin. The complaining never seems to land anywhere; it just loops. And here's the uncomfortable part: sometimes you catch yourself doing it too. What looks like negativity is often the nervous system reaching for connection the only way it ever learned felt safe. In this episode of Wired for Well-Being, psychologist, trauma expert, and nervous system specialist Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein draws a crucial line between victimization — real harm that happened — and a victim mentality, where someone builds an identity around their pain. It's a nervous system pattern, usually learned young, and understanding it changes everything about how you respond. Drawing on polyvagal theory, shame research, and decades of trauma-informed clinical work, Jeffrey unpacks why chronic complaining quietly pushes people away when it's reaching for closeness, how a "poor me" stance can become a hidden bid for power and control, and what shame has to do with finding it easier to ask for help through suffering than to name a need directly. He also turns the lens inward — offering a way to notice when you're the one flooding the field, and how to stay grounded around the people in your life who can't seem to stop. Have a question for Jeffrey? Leave a voicemail at 866-357-5156. If you can't reach that number, record a voice memo or email hello@drjeffreyrutstein.com [hello@drjeffreyrutstein.com]. Discover your free gift from Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein. Find it at drjeffreyrutstein.com/links [http://drjeffreyrutstein.com/links]. The content in this podcast is for informational purposes only and is not intended as professional mental health advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for medical or mental health concerns.
38 episodios
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