JOY Unfiltered: Joy is the strategy
Kurt Bush is a certified Internal Family Systems practitioner, trauma-informed coach, and co-founder of Brimstone Coaching Group. With a background spanning corporate leadership, pastoral ministry, and coaching, Kurt helps leaders break free from self-doubt, embrace authenticity, and lead with confidence. Having overcome his own struggles with imposter syndrome, he's passionate about guiding others through transformational growth into authentic leadership. Through Brimstone's E + R = T approach (Encounter + Reflection = Transformation), Kurt equips individuals and teams to move from exhaustion and frustration to clarity and wholeness. He's also co-host of the Brimstone Coaching Podcast and co-author of Live Fully, Lead Authentically. In This Episode: Why imposter syndrome almost always comes down to fear of a threat — one the nervous system still believes is real, even when it isn't Kurt's own "F-R-A" story: a third-grade spelling bee mishap that quietly wrote a lifelong rule — never look dumb in front of people — and still shows up at the conference table decades later How our bodies give us physical cues (hot ears, a quivering chin, a knotted stomach) before our minds catch up, and why noticing those cues is the first step to interrupting the pattern Why real-time noticing is hard at first — and why catching a reaction a day later is still meaningful growth, not failure The "prayer of examen," an early-church reflection practice Kurt and his partner draw on, adapted into simple, shame-free daily questions Brimstone's Encounter + Reflection = Transformation framework, and the exact questions to ask after a moment that surprised you: What happened? Who was there? What did I feel? What did I do? What would I do differently next time? The difference between imposter syndrome and the inner critic — and why the inner critic isn't always the enemy; sometimes it's pointing at a real growth edge The often-invisible link between performance and self-worth, and how culturally we default to "what do you do?" as a first question Naming your inner critic (Rachel's is "Gertrude") as a practical, IFS-aligned way to relate to that voice instead of being run by it Better opening questions than "what do you do?" — including "what do you do for fun?" and simply being present enough to actually listen to the answer The distinction between curiosity and wonder, and how asking "how" or "what" questions (instead of "why") can unlock more spacious thinking in coaching conversations Key Quotes: "Fear based on a threat that's not actually there — often, yes." "My nervous system doesn't know that. It's just trying to keep me safe. It's just doing what it does best." "Most of us have the agency and the empowerment then to say, I'm gonna take some steps to make that different." "There's a tendency, especially in the Midwest, to want to be tough and grind through on our own... you're not alone." Try This: The Encounter + Reflection Practice Brimstone's simple, shame-free framework for turning a hard moment into growth: Notice the encounter — any moment where you were shocked, lashed out, or showed up in a way that surprised or didn't align with how you wanted to Ask what happened — literally, pen and paper: who was there, what did you feel, what did you do (just the facts, no judgment) Look for threads — do the same people, feelings, or situations keep showing up? That's a clue to something deeper Decide what's next — ask what you'd do differently when the encounter happens again, because it will Resources & Links Mentioned: Book: Live Fully, Lead Authentically by Kurt Bush and Chris (Brimstone Coaching Group) Website: brimstonecoachinggroup.com (free, no-obligation conversations available) Podcast: The Brimstone Coaching Podcast Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
70 episodes
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