The Wired for Well-Being Podcast

Shame Is Keeping You Exhausted and Burned Out

45 min · 16 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Shame Is Keeping You Exhausted and Burned Out

Descripción

Get your free gift from Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein — visit drjeffreyrutstein.com/links [http://drjeffreyrutstein.com/links] Want to leave a question? Call 866-357-5156 Most of us have been running on exhaustion for so long, we've stopped asking if there's another way. We get home, we put on something to watch, we scroll, we call it rest. But your nervous system knows the difference. And somewhere in the gap between what we think we're doing and what our bodies actually need, shame is quietly running the show. In this episode of Wired for Well-Being, Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein — psychologist, trauma expert, and nervous system specialist — goes straight to the heart of why burnout and exhaustion are so hard to recover from. Not because rest is complicated, but because for many of us — especially trauma survivors — slowing down never felt safe to begin with. The nervous system learned early that being busy was the price of staying okay. And it hasn't forgotten. Drawing on polyvagal theory, trauma recovery research, and decades of emotional healing and nervous system work, Jeffrey and Steve explore what's actually happening beneath the push-collapse-push cycle, why nervous system regulation requires more than a day off, and what genuine rest looks and feels like when shame finally gets out of the way. If rest has always felt like something you had to earn first — this one is going to matter to you. 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]. Get your free gift from Dr. Rutstein — a 20-minute video on nervous system states and the practices that support regulation and healing. Visit drjeffreyrutstein.com/links [http://drjeffreyrutstein.com/links] and look for the free gift link. 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.

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36 episodios

episode The Decision You Still Regret Was Saving You artwork

The Decision You Still Regret Was Saving You

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 There's a decision you keep replaying. The turn you took, the path you walked away from, the version of yourself you left behind. It feels like proof you made the wrong call — and the longer you live with it, the heavier it gets. But what if the regret isn't actually regret? What if it's a nervous system in shutdown, telling you a story you've started to believe? In this episode of Wired for Well-Being, Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein — psychologist, trauma expert, and nervous system specialist — explores what he calls "regret in the rearview mirror." Together with Steve, he traces how the choices we punish ourselves for were almost always acts of self-protection, not failure. He reframes regret as an offshoot of shame, and shows how state drives story: the same decision looks different depending on whether your nervous system is regulated or dysregulated. Drawing on polyvagal theory, nervous system regulation, and trauma-informed clinical work, Jeffrey unpacks the shame-blame-regret triangle that keeps so many of us stuck looking backward. He explores how nervous system dysregulation colors our memories with a quality of negativity that has nothing to do with reality — and why what once felt like quitting was often the body's way of returning you to yourself. 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.

Ayer41 min
episode Your Body Holds the Relief You've Been Searching For artwork

Your Body Holds the Relief You've Been Searching For

Discover your free gift from Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein at drjeffreyrutstein.com/links [http://drjeffreyrutstein.com/links] Want to leave a question? Call 866-357-5156 Most of us have spent years trying to think our way to peace — through therapy, reflection, emotional healing work. And still we find ourselves circling the same stuck places, the same invisible ceiling on how much ease, love, or freedom we seem to be allowed to have. For trauma survivors especially, nervous system dysregulation quietly shapes what we can feel and how fully we inhabit our own lives — showing up as shame, disconnection, or a persistent sense that something is still in the way. The body's nervous system patterns hold more of the answer than most of us have been taught to look for. In this episode of Wired for Well-Being, Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein — psychologist, trauma expert, and nervous system specialist — explores interoception and the body as a portal to trauma recovery and lasting nervous system regulation. Drawing on polyvagal theory and decades of somatic, trauma-informed clinical work, Jeffrey unpacks how unresolved experiences live as physical constrictions in the body — and how inhabiting the body more fully can release them without needing to excavate the past. 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]. Get Jeffrey's free gift — a video on nervous system states and regulation practices — 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.

30 de may de 202644 min
episode Your Kids Learn From Your Nervous System artwork

Your Kids Learn From Your Nervous System

Get your free gift on the nervous system at drjeffreyrutstein.com/links [http://drjeffreyrutstein.com/links] Want to leave a question? Call 866-357-5156 You want to raise a child whose nervous system is a resource, not a battlefield. A child who recognizes their own dysregulation, reaches for regulation instead of shame, and learns emotional healing from the inside out. But children's nervous system development doesn't come with a manual — and most of us never got one ourselves. So where do you actually begin? In this episode of Wired for Well-Being, Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein — psychologist, trauma expert, and nervous system specialist — responds to a listener asking exactly that: how do I build nervous system regulation in my children before the world makes it harder? Jeffrey reframes what parenting for nervous system health actually looks like — and why it starts with the parent's own emotional healing, not the child's. Drawing on polyvagal theory, nervous system science, and decades of trauma-informed clinical work, Jeffrey and Steve unpack the three nervous system states every parent needs to understand, why children experience dysregulation so much more intensely than adults, and how co-regulation — not perfect technique — is the real foundation. They also explore the zones of regulation, how to build a calm corner that works, what nervous system modeling looks like in real daily moments, and what the research says about "good enough" parenting. This one is for any parent or caregiver who wants to give their children what they didn't get — or who's quietly wondering if what they have is already enough. 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]. Claim your free 20-minute video on the three nervous system states and practices for moving from dysregulation back to regulation 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.

23 de may de 202641 min
episode Shame Is Keeping You Exhausted and Burned Out artwork

Shame Is Keeping You Exhausted and Burned Out

Get your free gift from Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein — visit drjeffreyrutstein.com/links [http://drjeffreyrutstein.com/links] Want to leave a question? Call 866-357-5156 Most of us have been running on exhaustion for so long, we've stopped asking if there's another way. We get home, we put on something to watch, we scroll, we call it rest. But your nervous system knows the difference. And somewhere in the gap between what we think we're doing and what our bodies actually need, shame is quietly running the show. In this episode of Wired for Well-Being, Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein — psychologist, trauma expert, and nervous system specialist — goes straight to the heart of why burnout and exhaustion are so hard to recover from. Not because rest is complicated, but because for many of us — especially trauma survivors — slowing down never felt safe to begin with. The nervous system learned early that being busy was the price of staying okay. And it hasn't forgotten. Drawing on polyvagal theory, trauma recovery research, and decades of emotional healing and nervous system work, Jeffrey and Steve explore what's actually happening beneath the push-collapse-push cycle, why nervous system regulation requires more than a day off, and what genuine rest looks and feels like when shame finally gets out of the way. If rest has always felt like something you had to earn first — this one is going to matter to you. 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]. Get your free gift from Dr. Rutstein — a 20-minute video on nervous system states and the practices that support regulation and healing. Visit drjeffreyrutstein.com/links [http://drjeffreyrutstein.com/links] and look for the free gift link. 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.

16 de may de 202645 min
episode Spiraling After a Trigger: How Shame Makes It Worse artwork

Spiraling After a Trigger: How Shame Makes It Worse

Interested in the Professional Presence Masterclass? Visit drjeffreyrutstein.com/links  [http://drjeffreyrutstein.com/links] Want to leave a question? Call 866-357-5156  After a major trigger, the trauma survivor's nervous system doesn't just reset. It can cycle through fight/flight and collapse. And inside that state of nervous system dysregulation, something insidious happens: shame moves in and blocks access to the very thing that could help. The result is an emotional and physiological hangover that can feel completely inescapable.  In this episode of Wired for Well-Being, Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein — psychologist, trauma expert, and nervous system specialist — explores why trauma recovery stalls in the aftermath of a trigger. Drawing on polyvagal theory and emotional healing research, Jeffrey and Steve unpack why nervous system regulation feels out of reach when shame is running the show, and how to find what Jeffrey calls the "back door" into self-compassion when the obvious route is blocked.  For anyone who has ever felt certain that nothing will work — this conversation explains why, and offers a real way through.  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].  Learn more about the Professional Presence Masterclass for therapists. Find the details 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.

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