Unbecoming

Breakdown Before the Breakthrough

55 min · I går
episode Breakdown Before the Breakthrough cover

Beskrivelse

This episode is different. What happens when the biggest opportunity of your career collides with one of the hardest work weeks of your life? Fresh off Redken Symposium in Las Vegas, Laura pulls back the curtain on the reality of working one of the beauty industry's biggest stages. From coordinating models and managing chaos backstage to navigating difficult personalities, self-doubt, and a full-blown emotional breakdown, this is the side of success nobody posts about. In this episode, we talk about: • What it actually feels like to work behind the scenes at a major industry event • The pressure, politics, and personalities that come with high-level opportunities • Why freedom and creativity can be just as uncomfortable as limitations • Laura's first experience performing on the Main Stage—and why it felt nothing like she expected • The hidden emotional cost of being "the strong one" • How praise, support, and belonging can feel uncomfortable when you've never truly experienced them • The difference between looking successful and feeling successful • Why excellence matters more than greatness Whether you're a hairstylist dreaming of bigger stages, a salon owner carrying the weight of everyone around you, or someone learning how to navigate success without abandoning yourself, this conversation is raw, funny, honest, and deeply human. Because sometimes the breakthrough isn't standing on the stage. Sometimes it's surviving what happened backstage.   follow on insta for even more behind the scenes, everyday HAIRZILLAA [http://www.instagram.com/hairzillaa]

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69 Episoder

episode Breakdown Before the Breakthrough cover

Breakdown Before the Breakthrough

This episode is different. What happens when the biggest opportunity of your career collides with one of the hardest work weeks of your life? Fresh off Redken Symposium in Las Vegas, Laura pulls back the curtain on the reality of working one of the beauty industry's biggest stages. From coordinating models and managing chaos backstage to navigating difficult personalities, self-doubt, and a full-blown emotional breakdown, this is the side of success nobody posts about. In this episode, we talk about: • What it actually feels like to work behind the scenes at a major industry event • The pressure, politics, and personalities that come with high-level opportunities • Why freedom and creativity can be just as uncomfortable as limitations • Laura's first experience performing on the Main Stage—and why it felt nothing like she expected • The hidden emotional cost of being "the strong one" • How praise, support, and belonging can feel uncomfortable when you've never truly experienced them • The difference between looking successful and feeling successful • Why excellence matters more than greatness Whether you're a hairstylist dreaming of bigger stages, a salon owner carrying the weight of everyone around you, or someone learning how to navigate success without abandoning yourself, this conversation is raw, funny, honest, and deeply human. Because sometimes the breakthrough isn't standing on the stage. Sometimes it's surviving what happened backstage.   follow on insta for even more behind the scenes, everyday HAIRZILLAA [http://www.instagram.com/hairzillaa]

I går55 min
episode Fight, Flight… or Let Someone In? cover

Fight, Flight… or Let Someone In?

This episode gets real. Laura opens up about something she’s dealt with since she was a teenager: panic attacks. She breaks down what they actually feel like in her body — the middle-of-the-night sweating, the racing heart, the out-of-body feeling — and how confusing it can be to have them return after years of thinking she had moved past them. But the conversation goes deeper than symptoms. Laura talks about the surprising trigger she’s started to notice: kindness and intimacy. When someone gets close, her nervous system sometimes interprets it as danger — a leftover fight-or-flight response shaped by childhood experiences. She introduces the idea of “bulkheads,” like a ship sealing off entire sections when one part floods — a metaphor for shutting down emotionally when things start to feel too intense. Instead of avoiding it, she’s choosing to face it. Along the way, the conversation wanders the way great late-night conversations do: movie obsessions, chaotic action films, gaming nostalgia, and Laura’s very honest critique of life in Charleston. Through it all, the thread remains the same — what it actually looks like to unpack old patterns, confront fear, and keep growing. Honest, a little chaotic, sometimes funny, and deeply human.

11. april 202638 min
episode Expanding Your Capacity for Life cover

Expanding Your Capacity for Life

In this episode, Laura and Chris dive into the idea of capacity—the mental and emotional bandwidth it takes to navigate trauma, stress, ambition, and relationships. Laura shares a personal realization that while she’s developed a high tolerance for difficult situations, that strength can sometimes create frustration when others struggle with the same challenges. The conversation explores how capacity is built through repetition, experience, and the creation of new neural pathways—whether that’s learning a skill, processing trauma, or expanding what you’re able to hold emotionally. Laura opens up about her interest in EMDR therapy, the complexity of being both self-aware and mentally ill, and the ongoing work of balancing personal protection with connection and leadership. Along the way, they unpack ideas around fear as a survival strategy, cultural differences in how confidence is perceived between men and women, and the strange resentment that can surface when you’ve spent years helping others while neglecting your own needs. The episode weaves between serious reflection and lighter moments—family stories about Laura’s rebellious grandmother who smoked into her late 90s, debates about technology and religion, and discussions about movies and shows that help quiet the mind during stressful travel weeks. At its core, this conversation is about what it means to expand your capacity: learning how to carry less trauma, build stronger relationships, and create the mental space needed to grow.

28. mars 202640 min
episode I’m Not Mean, I’m Just Not Performing cover

I’m Not Mean, I’m Just Not Performing

In this episode, Laura gets candid about her experience with ketamine therapy and what it’s actually been like learning how to identify emotions later in life — not dramatically, not romantically, just honestly. She talks about realizing that emotional regulation is a skill, not a personality trait, and how ketamine has helped her observe feelings without being swallowed by them. The conversation weaves through grief, fear, and attachment — including intrusive thoughts about losing her partner — alongside stories from her time contracting for banks in New Jersey, where drug testing rules felt more performative than ethical. (Yes, cocaine was fine. No, marijuana was not.) From there, Laura reflects on childhood, ADHD, school systems that failed curious kids, nostalgia for a pre-smartphone world, and the weird social expectation that work should also fulfill emotional and social needs. She shares why she doesn’t drink, why she prefers depth over small talk, and how being quiet, direct, or observant often gets misread as being “mean.” This episode isn’t political — it’s cultural. It’s about memory, technology, social norms, emotional maturity, and what happens when you stop performing and start paying attention. Thoughtful, funny, occasionally uncomfortable, and very on brand.

13. mars 202645 min