• Secret #77: The Paradox of the Overwhelmed with Dr. Kerry Makin-Byrd
    Apr 9 2026

    Recommended Episodes

    • Secret #76: Ageism
    • Secret #75: Impossible Masculinity
    • Secret #72: Transforming Guilt and Shame

    Why does it feel like no matter how much we do, it’s never enough?

    In this episode, Kerry Makin-Byrd breaks down the paradox of overwhelm and why so many of us feel stuck between doing too much and still feeling like we’re falling behind. We explore the difference between stress, burnout, and overwhelm, and why overwhelm isn’t just about having too much to do.

    Kerry introduces a practical framework to navigate overwhelm in real time, helping us understand how our nervous system, environment, and expectations all contribute to feeling overloaded. This conversation is both deeply validating and immediately actionable for anyone feeling stretched too thin.

    Key Takeaways

    • What overwhelm actually feels like in the body and mind
    • The difference between overwhelm, burnout, and stress
    • Why burnout is often driven by systems not individuals
    • How to soothe, transcend, and move through overwhelm
    • Why doing more is often the trap that keeps us stuck

    View extended shownotes here

    • ORDER Max Cross Gets Unstuck from Anger: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook series for kids)
    • ORDER Justin Case Sits with Anxiety: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    • ORDER The Glumm Twins Unhook from Sadness: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
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    45 m
  • Secret #76: Ageism wtih Claudia Drossel
    Mar 26 2026

    Recommended Episodes

    • Secret #72: Transforming Guilt and Shame
    • Secret #74: The Cost of Pretending
    • Secret #75: Impossible Masculinity

    What if aging isn’t the problem—but our beliefs about aging are?

    In this episode, we discuss ageism with Dr. Claudia Drossel. Together, we explore how aging is often misunderstood as decline, when in reality many of the challenges we associate with aging are shaped by cultural bias, environment, and access to support.

    This conversation reframes aging as a form of diversity, challenges common myths about loneliness, health, and capability, and explores how our environments, relationships, and societal structures influence quality of life across the lifespan.

    We also examine how subtle forms of ageism show up in everyday language, healthcare, and social systems—and what we can do to change them.

    Key Takeaways

    • Why ageism is one of the most overlooked forms of bias
    • The difference between aging and disease
    • How culture shapes our experience of getting older
    • Why quality of relationships matters more than quantity
    • How to create more inclusive, intergenerational communities

    View extended shownotes here

    • ORDER Max Cross Gets Unstuck from Anger: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook series for kids)
    • ORDER Justin Case Sits with Anxiety: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    • ORDER The Glumm Twins Unhook from Sadness: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
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    48 m
  • Secret #75: Impossible Masculinity with Ruth Whippman
    Mar 12 2026

    Recommended Episodes

    • Secret #73: The Confidence Paradox
    • Secret #72: Transforming Guilt and Shame
    • Secret #74: The Cost of Pretending

    What does it actually mean to raise boys in a culture that both expects masculinity and criticizes it?

    In this episode, journalist and author Ruth Whippman joins Chris McCurry and Emma Waddington to explore the pressures boys face in the age of “impossible masculinity.” Drawing from her book BoyMom, Ruth explains how cultural narratives about masculinity shape boys’ emotional lives, relationships, and sense of identity.

    The conversation explores the surprising science of boys’ emotional development, the cultural contradictions boys must navigate today, and why many young men feel lost when it comes to friendship, vulnerability, and connection. Ruth also shares practical guidance for parents raising boys today and introduces her framework of curiosity, critical thinking, and connection.

    Key Takeaways
    • Raising boys in the age of impossible masculinity
    • Why boys may be more emotionally vulnerable than we assume
    • How cultural stereotypes shape boys’ emotional lives
    • The importance of curiosity and connection when raising boys

    View extended shownotes here

    • ORDER Max Cross Gets Unstuck from Anger: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook series for kids)
    • ORDER Justin Case Sits with Anxiety: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    • ORDER The Glumm Twins Unhook from Sadness: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
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    50 m
  • Secret #74: ⁠The Cost of Pretending with Jonathan Kanter
    Feb 26 2026

    Recommended Episodes

    • Secret #62: The Connection Paradox with James Cordova
    • Secret #64: Moral Outrage with Kurt Gray
    • Secret #70: So Many Paradoxes with Dr. Emma Waddington and Dr. Chris McCurry

    Many of us are going about our daily lives while quietly feeling that something is deeply wrong in the world. We say we are fine. We scroll. We joke. We compartmentalize. And yet there is a sinking feeling that things are not normal.

    In this conversation, Jonathan Kanter explores the disconnection paradox and the concept of hypernormalization. Why do we pretend everything is okay when it is not? When does normalcy protect us, and when does it shrink our lives? Together, we unpack avoidance, helplessness, activism, values, and what it means to pivot toward action without collapsing into hopelessness.

    Topics Discussed:

    • hypernormalization and pretending everything is fine
    • emotional avoidance and shrinking behavioral repertoires
    • accept, grieve, and pivot toward new goals
    • values based action in times of social crisis

    View extended shownotes here

    • ORDER Max Cross Gets Unstuck from Anger: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook series for kids)
    • ORDER Justin Case Sits with Anxiety: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    • ORDER The Glumm Twins Unhook from Sadness: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    Más Menos
    47 m
  • Secret #73: The Confidence Lie with Michael Herold
    Feb 12 2026

    Recommended Episodes:

    • Secret #58: Raising a Self-Driven Child with Dr. William Stixrud & Ned Johnson
    • Secret #61: Reimagining Anger with Russell Kolts
    • Secret #70: So Many Paradoxes with Dr. Emma Waddington and Dr. Chris McCurry

    Most people believe confidence is something you either have or don’t have. In this episode, confidence coach Michael Herold explains why confidence is actually built by doing hard things while anxiety is present — not after it disappears.

    Key Takeaways

    • confidence grows through action, not mindset
    • anxiety signals what matters, not what must be avoided
    • competence follows confidence, not the other way around
    • values-based action builds real psychological flexibility

    View extended shownotes here

    • ORDER Max Cross Gets Unstuck from Anger: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook series for kids)
    • ORDER Justin Case Sits with Anxiety: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    • ORDER The Glumm Twins Unhook from Sadness: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    Más Menos
    51 m
  • Secret #72: Transforming Guilt and Shame with Dr. Carolyn Allard
    Jan 29 2026

    Recommended Episodes

    • Secret #5: Body Shame with Emily Sandoz
    • Secret #7: Parental Guilt with Dr. Yael Schonbrun
    • Secret #26: Victim Blame with Dr. Amy Beddows

    Guilt and shame often linger long after trauma, quietly shaping how we see ourselves and our relationships. In this episode, clinical psychologist Dr. Carolyn Allard explains why guilt and shame can be adaptive—and how they become harmful when they overstay their welcome.

    Key Takeaways

    • Trauma-related guilt and shame can begin as survival strategies but become non-adaptive over time
    • Non-adaptive guilt and shame (NAGS) fuel avoidance, people-pleasing, and self-blame
    • Hindsight bias intensifies guilt by judging past actions with information we didn’t have at the time
    • Values-based decision making helps replace guilt-driven choices with intentional living

    View extended shownotes here

    • ORDER Max Cross Gets Unstuck from Anger: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook series for kids)
    • ORDER Justin Case Sits with Anxiety: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    • ORDER The Glumm Twins Unhook from Sadness: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
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    46 m
  • Secret #71: What a Terminal Diagnosis Taught Me About Living with Dr. Ray Owen and Sam Stroud
    Jan 15 2026

    Recommended Episodes:

    Secret #68 — Secrets of Rest with Alex Soojung-Kim Pang

    Secret #30 — Wise Effort with Dr. Diana Hill

    Secret #69 — No One Is “Self-Made” with Dr. Lakeysha Hallmon

    A tender, practical conversation about how a terminal diagnosis can sharpen priorities, deepen connection, and teach the rest of us how to live on purpose—today.

    Psychologist Dr. Ray Owen and Sam Stroud, recently diagnosed with MND/ALS, join Emma and Chris to talk about presence, priorities, and building a life that stays wide—even when options narrow. Sam shares what helped in the first weeks after diagnosis (stay engaged with life, ask for real support), while Ray maps compassionate skills for meeting pain without letting it shrink your world. Together, they show how practices like meditation can hold difficulty and meaning at the same time, and why honest community is a lifeline for patients and families alike. You’ll leave with grounded tools for navigating illness—and for living more fully even if you’re well.

    Topics Discussed in this Episode:

    • Staying engaged with life after diagnosis
    • First-person stories as antidotes to fear
    • Meditation as capacity-building (not escape)
    • Compassion skills for making room for pain
    • Community and honest conversation as lifelines
    • Mortality as a focusing practice for priorities

    View extended shownotes here

    • ORDER Max Cross Gets Unstuck from Anger: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook series for kids)
    • ORDER Justin Case Sits with Anxiety: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    • ORDER The Glumm Twins Unhook from Sadness: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    Más Menos
    52 m
  • Secret #70: So Many Paradoxes with Dr. Emma Waddington and Dr. Chris McCurry
    Jan 1 2026

    Recommended Episodes:

    • Secret #68: Secrets of Rest with Alex Soojung-Kim Pang
    • Secret #61: Reimagining Anger with Russell Kolts
    • Secret #62: The Connection Paradox with James Cordova
    • Secret #69: No One is "Self-Made" with Dr. Lakeysha Hallmon
    • Secret #55: Belonging with Meg McKelvie
    • Secret #48: The Tree That Bends with Ross White
    • Secret #60: There is No Normal with Dr. Steven C. Hayes
    • Secret #54: The Reign of Pain with Howard Schubiner
    • Secret #67: Living with Death with Dr. Robyn Walser and Dr. Manuela O'Connell

    What happens when we look back on a year of conversations and discover the recurring themes that shape our lives? In this special year-in-review episode, hosts Chris McCurry and Emma Waddington reflect on the surprising paradoxes they've encountered throughout their podcast journey—the uncomfortable truths that keep emerging despite our best efforts to avoid them.

    Topics Discussed:

    • Why the harder we try to fix ourselves, the more stuck we get
    • How the emotions we push away become the things that ruin our lives
    • Why the "self-made" myth keeps us isolated when we need connection most
    • How fighting what we can't change only deepens our suffering

    • ORDER Max Cross Gets Unstuck from Anger: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook series for kids)
    • ORDER Justin Case Sits with Anxiety: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    • ORDER The Glumm Twins Unhook from Sadness: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Workbook for Ages 8-12 (ACT Workbook Series for Kids)
    Más Menos
    45 m