The Women Are Plotting
One missing piece of Tupperware should not feel like a five-alarm emergency, and yet somehow it can. We start with the kind of domestic “micro crisis” that turns into a full body stress response, then zoom out to the bigger question: why do adults act like children when they’re overwhelmed, frustrated, or embarrassed? We talk through “Peter Pan syndrome” as a pop psychology concept, including traits like avoidance of responsibility, emotional paralysis, and turning partners into a parent figure. Then we connect it to something more universal: emotional coping styles that can form in early adolescence and resurface later as door slamming, short quips, and that teenage “I hate you” energy when conflict hits. We also touch on emotional childishness and narcissism, including what it looks like when someone needs constant attention, lacks a filter, blames everyone else, and shows little self-reflection. From there, we get personal and practical. Heidi shares a mortifying meltdown from her time in Korea, Jane tells the legendary Tupperware incident of 2012 and the revenge-blender twist, and Etienne opens up about how hormones, bottled resentment, and unspoken frustration can push any of us into an adult tantrum. We close with what helps: boundaries, earlier conversations, real apologies, and even cathartic outlets like rage rooms when you need to get the anger out safely. Subscribe, share this with a friend who has strong feelings about kitchen containers, and leave a review if the conversation hits home. What’s the smallest thing that has ever set you off? Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2521241/fan_mail/new] Email us at info@thewomenareplotting.com, and find us on all the socials. Be safe and be excellent to each other.
45 episodios
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