Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - Branding The Lie: Escaping The High-Achiever's Trap | Kendra Dahlstrom
Episode Date: October 10, 2025Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyGet the exact 5-step script that turned a broken sales process... into an 80%+ conversion rate in under 90 days: https://game.findingpeak.com/masterclose/Join our community of fearless leaders in search of unreasonable outcomes...Want to become a FEARLESS entrepreneur and leader? Go here: https://www.findingpeak.comWatch on YouTube: https://link.ryanhanley.com/youtubeWhat if the feeling of "unworthiness" that plagues so many high-achievers is actually a lie? A lie we've been conditioned to believe by a society that rewards external validation above all else.My guest this week is Kendra Dahlstrom, a transformational leadership coach who works with top executives to help them lead with authenticity, imperfection, and truth.Connect with Kendra DahlstromWebsite: https://kendradahlstrom.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kendra.dahlstrom/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@theunworthyleaderpodcastAfter 25 years in the corporate world, Kendra realized she was "branding the lie, not the truth" by focusing on unworthiness. She now helps high-achievers recognize their patterns of chronic success-seeking and find a deeper sense of fulfillment.In this incredibly vulnerable conversation, Kendra and I go deep on:Why so many high-achievers feel like frauds and imposters.The surprising link between high achievement, dopamine, and addiction.How to process past trauma and use it as a source of strength.The one question Kendra asks herself every day to stay grounded: "Will this bring me closer to peace?"Practical tools for breaking free from the cycle of external validation and leading from the heart.This isn't your typical leadership podcast. We get real about the messy, human side of success. If you're ready to stop hiding, embrace your imperfections, and lead with your whole self, this episode is for you.Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideWhisperFlow: Never waste time typing on your keyboard again: https://link.ryanhanley.com/whisperflowCaptionsApp: One app for all your social media video creation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/captionsappGoHighLevel: It's time to take your business workflow to the Next Level: https://link.ryanhanley.com/gohighlevelPerspective.co: The #1 funnel builder for lead generation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/perspective--Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideWhisperFlow: Never waste time typing on your keyboard again: https://link.ryanhanley.com/whisperflowCaptionsApp: One app for all your social media video creation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/captionsappGoHighLevel: It's time to take your business workflow to the Next Level: https://link.ryanhanley.com/gohighlevelPerspective.co: The #1 funnel builder for lead generation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/perspective--Episodes You Might Enjoy:From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9This show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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From all of us at Believe, have a Merry Christmas, everyone, and a happy holiday.
One is called The Compass Method, which is about coming back to your own core values and looking at what is your own internal compass.
Not the one that you think you need to live by because the world tells you.
But what is your own true north?
What is your own internal compass?
It's about awareness, reaching the inflection point, making a decision, what do I want to do about it?
Then you move through the transformation, write a passage, the undoing process.
My mission really hasn't changed.
It's actually quite comical.
If you look at sort of the movement of entrepreneurship and how we roll.
Some of what I help clients with, I needed, obviously, to do my own work as well and realize that the unworthy
leader podcast, what meant so much to me.
And we can talk more about it coming out of the hospital.
It really resonated with me.
And I wanted to strike like a visceral cord with people.
At the same time, I was branding the lie, not the truth, which is that they're really,
people that feel unworthy are really just high achievers that are just in the continuous
pattern of chronic success and achievements.
And a lot of it really aligns with your TEDx talks.
I'm super excited to talk with you.
Awesome.
Well, let's get right into it.
I mean, I, you know, let's start there.
I really, I'd like to start with this idea of you branded the lie.
What does that mean and maybe talk us through that?
Because that's a really heady idea.
Yeah.
Well, what I came out of, from my trauma-informed background and then some lived experiences was this idea that I was unworthy.
And, you know, as a, as a Christ follower and as somebody who's done a lot of my own healing work,
I realized, okay, I know that's not true mentally, but somewhere somatically and in my body I still felt those lies.
And so I really wanted to message to all those leaders out there and really kind of cut the crap and have this conversation around all of these high achievers out there and all of these leaders that I've worked with over my 25 years in corporate, including myself, who underlying have this sense of unworthiness and whether they identify as imposter's indomest,
or whether just selective unworthiness, maybe it's particular scenarios and situations it's contextual
or whether it's pervasive. It can really be all over the place. And so I think that I really wanted to
speak to that and have the audience have a very visceral reaction and like, oh, she's talking about
the unworthy leadership. I can relate to that. What I realized through my own journey of launching
and then publishing 26 episodes in my first season of my podcast since last February was that
I felt unworthy having a podcast because I felt everyone out there has one.
There's so many to choose from.
Why me?
I'm not famous.
I haven't written a book.
You know, I'm sort of always been known as the ghost in the boardroom because I work behind
all these really successful executives, but I'm not really a huge known name.
And I was struggling with my own feelings.
worthiness. And so as that's evolved, I realized that what I'm really looking to do is help
high achievers and really circumvent the root cause that's driving high achievers to still feel so
unfulfilled. So I can relate to this to an incredible amount. And honestly, a lot of my own work
is maybe a different angle, but a, but a similar path. I came to the realization very early in my
career that I shouldn't say really early. I came to the realization in my career after a few
major setbacks and, you know, I had, I had two jobs in a row that I loved, executive leadership
position. One was a CMO position. One was a CEO position. And I love them. And both times they
ended up in me getting fired. And in having to go back, reflect on those experiences. Your first instinct is
it's not my fault.
Why did they do this to me?
All this kind of stuff.
And that was really the moment
when I started down my own path and said,
and when I did some self-awareness stuff,
it came back to ego, right?
It was always this sense of ego.
And I think a lot of our unworthy feelings,
and I'm very interested in your take on this,
is ego.
We build up this sense of what I should be
or how people perceive me
or the status symbols that I want people to see in me.
And then we're, if, but behind that, it's all empty.
It's, it's, it's, it's, it's sticks.
It's built on cards, you know, there's nothing actually there because you're,
you're trying to prop up this vision of yourself or this image of yourself that isn't actually
you yet.
And, man, you make so many bad decisions coming from that place.
So, so do you see Eagle playing a large role in the unworthiness and maybe what other aspects of
our emotional character play a role in this sense of unworthiness that so many, you know,
of us deal with? Yeah, definitely ego is a huge part of it. I think the ego is what drives the need
to get at that external validation, that unfortunately we have a society today that is largely
driven on external validation. Think of it, and I mean, even from corporate standard,
what's your market share? You know, how are you marketing? Are you dressing appropriately? Are you,
you know, everything, I mean, you play a sport. My sons are both.
in sports. Okay, the scoreboard gives you direct feedback. How are you doing? You know? So everything
is external validation and that's why for me I find it so important to be rooted in my faith.
So I have a bigger mission and picture of sort of what my purpose is here and how I can live
my life and that my worth is identified in being a child of God and Christ. And that is my worth.
And it took me a long time to get there. I'm 51. So it took me a long time to get there. I'm 51. So it took me a long
time to get there, Ryan. But I think that ego plays a huge part of it. And I think there's a lot of
good things that ego can do too, right? It's there as a protective mechanism. There's a very long
conversation we can have around all the good things it can do. However, I think there are a lot of
lies that we end up telling ourselves in our society today around it. I think we think that proving
will finally make us free. Like, oh, if I can just get this next promotion, I'll finally feel better.
Well, guess what, Ryan? When you got that next promotion, did you finally feel better?
most maybe for a little bit right yeah um and i find it to be almost like it's very similar to
addictions so if you get that serotonin and dopamine rush every time you achieve and approve that
next thing um but just like that addict that needs the video game or more alcohol or more drugs
you need more of that achieving to actually get that same high right i think you know it's funny
I was listening to, I'm going to forget his name, but his expertise is around sugar.
And he was on the diary of his CEO podcast, Stephen Barlett's podcast, a very famous podcast,
if you guys haven't listened to it.
And he was talking about this topic from a, from a neurochemical level, right?
Why do we attach ourselves to things like sugar, right?
Why do we attach ourselves to drugs or alcohol or porn or, you know, gambling?
and it has to do with the dopamine receptors in our body.
And our dopamine receptors have a healthy amount that they can receive
and they have an unhealthy amount.
And anytime we blast them for extended periods of time
with more dopamine than those receptors can take in,
they actually shrink in size to limit the update
because we can only handle so much.
And then as they shrink and again, I'm third-partying this science here, guys.
So I'm sure there's a lot of nuance here, but essentially, we then have to chase that, right?
So whether it's the next promotion in that feeling of high that we get or that next big sale or the award or all the way down to, you know, needing to have a cocktail every night or having to get, you know, high before you go to bed because that makes you feel, you know, whatever way, these all, you would constantly have to chase more to get to that same feeling.
and his whole point is,
if you go and you actually address those root causes
and you actually don't need that initial blast of dopamine,
your dopamine receptors open back up
and then you can have a very healthy relationship with these things.
But that doesn't seem like the work that a lot of people want to do.
It seems like most people choose the path of just masking it
with insert vice or dopamine addiction.
How did you, like, have you experienced,
that in your life and how did you personally start to overcome this sense of unworthiness?
Well, for me, it was a tipping point where it became too uncomfortable to not address it,
right? So, you know, I kind of hit rock bottom and had a lot of abuse and trauma through
childhood and then kind of on and off through my teens and then into college. And then I got
into some drug use for a few years and just really realized this is not who I am. I'm not even,
I don't even recognize this person.
Like this is not who I want to be, but at work, I would show up as a high performer.
Nobody knew, like it was this closet life, right?
And as I got that all together and found Jesus, my husband had kids,
I started to really just go into that deep healing work.
I've done all of the esoteric sort of new age stuff as well as now I'm doing some really deep
reparenting therapy that deals with like inner child traumas and stuff where it gives you a chance.
as an adult self to go back and actually reparent the child the way in which he felt
it needed in the moment that it didn't get and that's been incredibly liberating and so I really just
had to get do the work like there was no clean way to do it right and I'd roll up my sleeves and
just go in and do the work and then really reconcile with myself um you know how can I get this out
of the way so I can I can actually live and feel free and not feel like I'm a victim or I'm
triggered by everything or I'm doing fine and suddenly I'm triggered by this random thing. I just
was tired of that. And so I really went in and did the work and that's why I got into this work is
because it actually keeps me in the work. It keeps me honest and grounded and I kind of feel like a
professor who's out there doing field work but also is teaching in the classroom. And I think that's
why my clients feel so safe with me and can open up and there's something in me and I don't,
it's just a gift from God, I guess, that when they get in the room with me or we're together
virtually, I'm not asking, you know, really, you know, provocative questions or anything.
I'm just having conversations with them asking open-ended, insightful questions, but there's something
in them where suddenly they give themselves permission to not, to put the peacock feathers down
and to just be seen as a human and to finally admit to themselves, maybe that one lie that
they've been telling themselves that they can feel free from. And a lot of times it ends up
being they resign, you know, and that's not my intention, but a lot of times they resign and they
realize, oh my gosh, this role is not for me. Like, I'm actually going to give myself permission to not
beat myself up over this, but I need to move on to that next thing. And so that's kind of how I got
into the work. And myself is just doing it. And then I've just found that I truly believe that God
only put me through everything he put me through in life that I could help liberate others from it, too.
Yeah, I was having a conversation the other day. My mother is very,
very devout Christian and she's actually a, she would probably hate that if I described her this
way, but I always describe her as a Bible purist, right? She's like a verbatim believer. Yes. And I'm not.
Believe her through and through. But, you know, we always have these arguments around,
I believe the words in the Bible were written by men who are fallible and she believes that they
are verbatim as described by God. And that's not the debate that we need to have.
But I was talking to her and she was asking me about some things that, you know, I've been through in my life and she's been in her life.
And she has guilt for decisions that she's made.
She has feeling, you know, she has these, these sense of doubt around some decisions that she's made earlier in her life.
And I said to her, like, and I firmly believe this, I don't think you can understand good if you haven't lived and experienced evil.
and I don't necessarily mean pressed upon you.
I mean, decisions that you've made,
actions that you've taken in your life
that were driven by the enemy.
And I think, you know,
I think some people feel like their only acceptance
will be if they live this pure life,
like if they've never made a bad decision
or they've never done something that was, you know, mean
or vengeful.
And it's like, no, that's part of,
being a human and it's very difficult and I think what I hear you saying and I'm sure this is what
your clients can can experience from being around you is that they can sense that you've lived
it so they know they can relate to you if you came in and you were pure and I've never made a
mistake and I've only ever been successful and da da da da da like so many people present themselves
you're like well wait a minute how are you going to understand this crazy shit that I'm
going through like these horrible features.
that I'm having if you've literally never experienced what that feels like.
And I honestly believe you have to go through that to be able to be in the position that
you are and help people the way that you are.
So how do you start to break that down for people?
How do you start to present yourself to them in a way where they can understand that you,
to some extent, understand where they're coming from and have experienced similar.
What you've got in the last?
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Yeah.
Such a great question.
Well, I'm a big fan of vulnerability.
You know, it needs to be selective, and I'm a big fan of it in service of, right?
So I would only share something with you that I felt would really be in service of you not to make myself not to fill that ego.
So that's a learned skill.
and it takes time to really feel into that
and make sure that you're not doing it for the wrong reasons.
But I often will share within context that, you know,
stories from other executives,
if I'm meeting in the corporate context,
so that they feel like, okay, she's worked with executives
that have felt down and out,
or it felt like they're in over their skis,
or they're not ready for this promotion,
or they signed it for this job,
and now they're realizing it's everything they didn't want.
And they've got families to feed and all these things.
So, you know,
in that context, I share it with my private clients and my practice.
I'll share some of my trauma-informed background,
whether it's sexual assault or abuse or it depends on what's appropriate,
to help them understand that, look, I've walked through the valley of shadow of death as well,
and we all have different valleys, and there's no comparison.
This is not meant to compare mine to yours, and there's not one that's better or worse.
It's all relative, but I want you to know that I've been there,
and I can hold space for that.
And there was a coach I had years ago, Steve Chandler, and I think he even wrote it in a book with Rich Living.
And I loved the quote.
It said, you can only take clients as deep as you've been willing to go yourself.
And I think you've summed that up very nicely in your question.
Yeah, I agree with you.
Someone said to me one time we were talking about how to get through to employees, team members,
who we knew had a trauma, right?
Maybe we don't know what it is
because obviously that's private
and a lot of times in that relationship
you don't necessarily want to know
the specific thing because of different reasons,
but they've been through something.
And what he said to me was
it's always whatever they went through
is the worst to them, right?
To your point on comparison of trauma,
like there is a,
there is an weird anti-side
to trauma where people will almost hold their trauma up as part of their ego, right?
Like, look at how bad this thing that I went through was and my thing was so much worse than your thing.
And, you know, that puts me at a higher level of awfulness of previous life than you.
And his point was, and I thought this was such an incredible point.
He's like, whether it's just your parents ignored you or you got the crap beat out of you
every day by your dad with a belt for the first 12 years of your life, right?
those are the worst for both those people.
That's right.
And the feelings that they have about those things are the same feelings,
even though, you know, if you were to technically stack them,
you know, most people would probably choose being ignored,
although that presents a whole slew of issues
that are also oftentimes subtle and debruted as well.
But like, I thought there was a really interesting insight
that I hadn't wrapped my head around,
that it's like no matter what they went through,
it's the worst for them, for that person.
and they're feeling that same sense of pain.
I had a question around the reparenting piece
because I'm very interested in your take on this.
So I first heard on Joe Rogan
and then read the book or technically listen to the audiobook.
I think it's Abigail Schreier's Bad Therapy,
which was the core concept of the book, broad stroking,
there was a lot in it, was that we spend too much time
looking into our past, reliving our past.
And if we spend too much time bringing up
these old things that happen that are terrible,
but if we keep bringing them up,
we end up reliving these moments over and over.
And her point was like at some point we have to move on.
So you obviously had a really powerful
and productive experience with this idea of reparenting,
which I think is really interesting.
Did you feel any of that?
do you, you know, where do you kind of stand on spending time evaluating and kind of reliving those
past moments as a way to get past them? Yeah, that's such a great question. So just to back up,
I did therapy when I was 13, 14, 15, and then I stopped. And then I got into coaching in my
20s. So I was always very much the coaching methodology of, you know, looking forward, not really
looking at causality and always moving forward. Only in the last year as my parents start to age
and, you know, it became really pressing for me, like, oh, gosh, before they pass on, I really want to heal some of this stuff.
Like, I feel like when there's things I'm not going to be able to say once they're gone, but I need to do some work before I can say them, those kinds of things.
And so I went back to therapy, and I think it's, I think Abigail's right in what she's saying.
I think it can become keeping you in the victim cycle.
It can keep you kind of beating a dead horse part in the analogy, but just really ruminating.
on something and feeling stuck and giving you an excuse to feel stuck.
I think this is where the power of slowing down really comes in
and really giving yourself enough space and time to really sit.
And this is where somatics also comes in to feel in your body.
Am I just like can be, like what am I benefiting from reliving this lie
and ruminating on this story?
Because it's benefiting you somehow because that's why you keep doing it.
Like at the end of the day, even if it's like, oh, I get.
a, you know, I get a not do as well at work or I get a claim sick all the time or whatever
the reason is, there's a benefit.
And unfortunately, that's just how things work.
Or is, are you at a point where you just really have never addressed it?
Have you stuffed it?
And what happened with me is there has been so much and then there have been so much
dissociation that I just had stuffed so much that I never really even acknowledged it.
And because my parents didn't acknowledge it, everything was swept under the road.
And then I got into life and met friends that sometimes had trauma that was, from my point of view,
much worse than mine.
So I downplayed mine.
Oh, you know, my friend saw her parents murdered in Bogota, Columbia.
Like, oh my gosh, it's awful.
What happened to me is like, ooh, you know, no big deal.
So I downplayed my own stuff.
So I never really gave my honored myself, right, in my inner child to even grieve the experience
that she had gone through. So for me, that was the telltale that like, okay, this really makes sense
for me to go back and revisit. Now, do I ruminate on it? No, but what I found through that process
was a lot of grief, a lot of grief in the childhood I wish I had had. And then a lot of gratitude
for the childhood I did have at the same time. A lot of really mixed emotions. But I will tell you,
I think it's really important to slow down and then obviously work with, you know, clinical
therapist and somebody who's trained to do this work. And that's where it gets really dicey
with coaching because sometimes I'll work with clients who have had these things. And I'll
always say, okay, you know, I advise you go see a therapist because I think as an ethical
coach, we just have to be really careful with that. Great. I get a lot of questions from some of the
people that I coach around, and this is different, different, but similar around like fitness and
health-related things. And I've had to start telling them, like, look, like, I'm happy to share
what I do, but I cannot, I cannot recommend for you different things. And I think it's really important
because I also think as a coach, that builds tremendous trust. When they know they can bring
something to you and you're not going to try to pretend like you know the solution. And I think this
is really important from a leadership perspective, from a household leadership perspective,
from a relational, whether it's a spouse, a partner, a child, even a deep friendship.
Again, going back to this idea of ego or not wanting to be seen as less than we are,
we pretend to know about things or have opinions on things that we don't actually know about.
And just go on X for like 30 seconds and you will see examples of this all over the place
where you have people commenting on world topics like the Ukraine war or,
what's going on in Israel, Gaza, or some crazy economic thing.
And you're like, there are people who've dedicated their entire lives to these topics
and still don't like know the answer.
And you're out here spouting like you do.
And granted, I will say occasionally I get sucked into that.
I try very hard not to.
It's almost like X is almost like a practice.
Like, can I not respond to this thing that I'm seeing that I believe is crazy?
And I do think that's another way we can build deeper relationships,
whether it's a coaching client or a teammate or.
or even just your spouse, like, we often,
we try to be these things that we're not.
And it's like if we were enough,
if what we actually were was enough,
so many of the emotional bullshit that we deal with would go away.
Does that make sense?
Oh, totally.
And that's why, you know, even though I label myself executive advisor
or, you know, in my work,
I'll be an executive coach or leadership.
development consultant, that's really just the nomenclature, right? That's just the container that they
understand. What I really offer is a right of passage. And for me, it's that ability to where I look at it
is where they're able to cross that threshold. They're able to either acknowledge or become aware of,
okay, yeah, you're right, there's this thing that's not, I've outgrown this life I built. It worked for me
20 years ago or 10 years ago, but guess what, I've outgrown it. And I need a new fish tank. I need a bigger
fish tank. And so I help them create the bigger fish tank and then also figure out what's,
you know, how can they live in alignment with who they are in their vision and their values
without all the things they've lost along the way trying to stuff that vision, you know,
that old vision. And so a lot of times they'll come to me and they hit an inflection point
where they're like, okay, oh crap, I get to make a choice. And then they get to make a decision
at that point. And guess what? Some of them decide, you know, like the board game.
back to start, right?
And that's okay.
They're just not ready.
But the others, I call it the threshold.
They're ready to cross that threshold.
And that's the rite of passage.
And that whole rite of passage is about undoing, unsubscribing, you know, uncorporating, I call it.
It's kind of like unschooling for kids.
And I've been going through this process myself.
And it's been fascinating because it's been everything from like the tactical things to, you know,
oh no, I'm not going to do meetings after this time or before this time, to small things.
to small things like, I can't be at a call five minutes late.
I was like, sure you can.
Like, it may not be the best thing to do, but you have agency.
You're sovereign, you can.
And the other day I was held up doing something else more important,
and I was feeling so bad about it.
And then I decided to honor myself and just do it,
and I shut up five minutes late.
And the executive was thankful because he got five minutes to do his thing.
And it totally worked out, and I just was like,
well, gosh, you know, isn't it interesting?
So there's just things that seem little,
but they're actually pretty monumental.
and how we think, as we've been programmed into this corporate and business mentality,
that have to be undone.
And as you undo those, then when you're at the other side of the threshold,
then that is obviously the embodiment face.
That's when you decide, okay, this is who I am now.
And it sounds like you kind of went through that yourself when you came to your own corporate.
And so that's really what I walk people through.
Yeah, and I think that is phenomenal because social media gets a bad rap.
Right, a lot of people, we all use it, yet everyone, there's like this, it's almost,
I'm going to try to articulate this the right way.
I feel like there are certain things that it's just like accepted to bang on without ever
positioning the other side.
And social media is one of those, right?
Everybody uses it.
Yet everyone will also go, oh, and it's also the worst and da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
And it's like, you know, I feel the opposite.
It definitely can suck some time.
and I have to be careful because I'm a voracious consumer of information.
It's just the way that my brain works.
It's like, you know how in the first matrix,
like Neo gets the thing in the back of his head and he's like,
you know, give me more and he's like learning on karate
and monkey style kung fu and all this stuff?
That is like the way my brain works.
Like if there's actually, if I ever get sucked out of the matrix
and that plug goes in the back of my head, that's like heaven for me.
Like give me all the info.
That's just the way my brain operates.
For better or for worse.
My point in saying that is, I think if you, what I do think social media and just digital communication, maybe podcast is another one that I think is very valuable is we've been able to see how people actually operate.
Because in a long form podcast in particular, you can't hide.
So all of a sudden you start to learn that Naval Ravikon, who's incredibly successful and smart, reads four hours,
a day does one hour of no more than one hour of meetings and two hours of creativity and he's
done for the day that's it that's the most he'll do and you learn that you know this other individual
works this way and all of a sudden you you start to you i think what starts to hit me at least was
i i don't just have to do it the way that business was run in the 80s and 90s i don't have to
you know just because everyone else shows up at 830 and leaves at 4 30 and you know a day is
stuffed with meetings that that's how every day has to be. And I can set my life up so that I can make
sure that I can pick my kids up from school every day, you know, and there being no issues with
wherever I work. Like, you can have that if you want it. You just have to craft your lifestyle
to get there. And it may not be the job you're currently in. It may not be the field you're
currently in. But if that's what's most important to you, that life is available to you. And it's
okay to want that life, which I think is the most important part.
Like, for so long, the idea that, look, at 3 p.m., I'm not taking a meeting at 3 because
I have to pick my kids up.
It's just not happening.
I'm good at 3.30.
I'm good at 2.30.
But at 3 p.m., I'm picking the kids up from school because my kids are 11 and 9.
I'm in the golden years.
And I don't give what you say or what your meeting is or how important it is.
I'm picking them kids up from school.
That's the like, if you don't have to work for you.
I don't have to work with you, whatever.
It took me 42 years to figure that out.
Like, but it only, I only figured it out because of conversations like this,
like these deep, long-form conversations where you get to go back and forth with people
and hear like, wait, Kendra's okay sharing her trauma with her clients?
Like, I can share more than just my surface level expertise with the people that I work with.
Like it's like it's giving there's so much permission granted if you use these resources from a positive standpoint, I think.
That's right. Yeah. Well, and a quick story on that. So last year I, we went river rafting and I ended up getting bacterial pneumonia and it turned into sepsis. And so I ended up in septic shock with respiratory failure in the beginning of liver failure. And I'm very healthy and almost died. And I had some really interesting conversations.
with God while it was in the hospital.
And one of them was actually,
I believe I was having a near-death experience
with a life review. And I sort of saw
all these things I felt that I
was like, I just remember myself talking in my sleep
and keep waking up and I was just sweating
and just please forgive me for this and this
and all these things I had done. And what was so
interesting was that the passage, Luke 1225
came forward for me.
And he said,
you know what your biggest sin is?
And I was like, no. He goes, worry.
He said,
Did you not live an hour more of your life because of all your worry?
Oh my gosh, like if I counted all that, you know, hours, I, you know, worried, fear, worry, concern, however you want to frame it.
That was way more, I guess, than all these, you know, like lying to my teacher in second grade or whatever, all these things I was thinking about.
And I thought, wow.
And so the reason I shared out with you is I came out of that experience a different person and realized because of my experience.
because of my experience
that how grateful I am for each breath.
I mean literally at that level of like second to second.
And we take so much of that for granted, Ryan.
And I think that's why it's so important
to have these conversations
because when you start to talk with leaders,
they're just doing the job.
They're just doing that thing.
And there's nothing wrong with what you're doing.
It's how we live our life.
But they take it all for granted
that they can walk and that they can bring.
breathe and all these things. And when you realize that without that breath, you're not even here.
Your vitality is number one. And if you don't have that, you're nothing. And guess what? You can't help
your kids. You can't help your wife, your husband, your spouse, your partner. So I try to kind of bring them
back to that and like how they can best honor themselves in their most authentic way. And then they
sort of start to see, oh, maybe this thing I'm doing in my life isn't really honoring myself. And
Maybe I just need to renegotiate it.
Maybe it doesn't mean I have to leave.
You know what I mean?
Maybe it's like I just have to renegotiate things.
So I always, I coined it as that you're showing up DOA,
whether you know it or not because of my near-death experience.
And that's how I was living.
And the acronym obviously stands for dead on arrival,
but for me it also stands for your doing just to do,
just to keep busy because that's how we're trained
and how we're rewarded in society.
You've outgrown the life that you're living in
and you might not even know it.
And the last one is you're achieving just for the sake of chronic achievement because you're trying to prove your way out of emptiness.
And you think that achieving equals fulfillment and business is productivity and self-sacrifice equals leadership and external validation is the measure of success.
And you think that you can outperform this unworthiness.
So I just wanted to share that quick story with you because I think that's what I try to bring people back to.
and I think that that's what's often missing is they just get caught up in the busyness.
No, I love that.
I want to unpack a couple of things there.
The first is we're not honoring ourselves, that idea.
How do you help someone find that?
Because I've found with some of the individuals that I've coached over the years,
sometimes they don't even know what they actually want.
Like they feel this sense of disconnect, frustration, pain.
anxiety, annoyance, reactivity.
So they know something's wrong.
But when you ask them, like, what do you really want out of this job even, not even going
all the way to their life?
Like, people just don't know.
Or they can't articulate it.
How do you get them to, how do you get your clients to a point where they can actually
articulate to you what their, what the life is that they would actually want?
if they could just, you know, wave a wand and craft that life for themselves.
Well, it's not, I mean, so there's not like a one solution for all because I know I was there
probably even 15 years ago.
And I remember a coach asking me, what do you want?
And I was like, I just started crying.
I'm like, I don't know.
And oh, everything that answers like, well, I want my kids.
My husband, no, what do you want?
You know, everything was about everyone else, which isn't a bad thing to want, but you also have to be clear on what you want.
you know for my own personal story this that doesn't have to be true for listeners but it sometimes can be
so just a heads up is that you know i had realized that i'd lived a very codependent life where like with a
codependent parent and so everything was always about somebody else and taking care of others and in order
to stay away from acknowledging my pain and trauma i was just always focused on everyone else and so um
that was it took me years to kind of really get to the bottom of it but i think it depends on the person but
I think a great place to start with someone who's very cerebral, Ryan, is let's start with what
you don't want.
You know, let's get really clear on what are the non-negotiables that you don't want.
And then let's go back to the non-negotiables of things that are important to you.
Because you can, because you're never going to get them away from their values, right?
If their values are family and faith and community, then that's a great place to start.
And so sometimes I'll have a values conversation with them.
and then I often tell them to visualize the values like a tree
and kind of play with putting each one is the trunk of the tree
and the roots of the tree.
And so what you'll find over time is most people,
even though family and community and prosperity or wealth
or a career, things are on their list,
there's always something that's the roots of the tree.
And so for me, it's spiritual connectedness.
For me, it's, I want to feel that everything is being done
through the purity of a spiritual connection.
And that doesn't mean my family's not important.
But if I do it through that lens,
it's so much more rich for me.
And so that's kind of an exercise I'll do
to help people visually kind of see like,
okay, I can have all these values,
but there's really one that's a core driver
that without it, the other things don't light me up as much.
Does that make sense?
It makes complete sense.
Yeah.
Oftentimes I think people give lip service
to family, community, some of these things.
because that's what they expect people to think that the answer should be, like,
good people, you know, prioritize their family.
And that's not true, but you can't be your best for them if you're not your best for you.
And that is a very difficult thing.
And I'm trying in myself, so I'm going to speak for myself,
in the times when I felt the most disconnected, the most off-kilter have been when, and I,
this is a weird, it's weird to articulate this, but it's something I've been playing within my
mind a little bit lately.
It's like, in the moments when I was afraid to shine, to, like, like, we, I feel like
we don't talk enough about, we talk about the fear of failure all the time.
Fear of failure, I don't, I have a whole diatribe that I could go on because,
I don't think failure is a real thing and it's a failure is a contrive.
It's a construct.
Totally agree.
Yeah.
And, you know, that's a whole thing.
But there's this whole other side of it, which is a fear of success.
Like, there is absolutely an unspoken, unarticulated fear that so many people live with of,
what if I was the best version of myself?
Mm-hmm.
What does that look like?
I think that is actually scarier for most people, myself included,
me too, than failure, right?
Failure, I mean, at this point also, I've had enough practice at it that, you know,
I know I'll survive for the most part.
But man, what if, what if I get that enormous speaking gig?
What if, you know, some major, you know, Joe Rogan, Diary, CEO podcast calls
and you know your life is going to change if you go, like, what if all of a sudden you do,
get to that place that you've said you wanted to get to, and now you've got to be that thing.
That, I think, is way scarier, and we do not talk about it.
One, you said you shared, so I really want to hear your feelings on this.
And two, have you experienced this with your coaching clients and how do you help them through
this?
Because there's not enough literature on this topic, in my opinion.
Yeah, I agree.
So first, I also want to tie back to what we just talked about.
because I think a lot of people are afraid to even admit that that's what they want.
So that's step one, right?
So someone's like, they're afraid to admit, well, I want to have a million-dollar company
because they think it's selfish, greedy, whatever.
So they put all these constraints on themselves, right?
And so they're afraid to even admit what they really want,
which also gets in the way of them knowing what they want, right?
Because they feel guilt or shame around it.
So that's a whole other topic we could dive into.
But I definitely have felt that because when you start to think about
the power, and I mean that from a impactful way, not a manipulative way, that one can have when they
actually are at their best and can achieve anything they want, we are really powerful human beings,
and we can do a lot and be really impactful. And so I think that can be overwhelming for our
nervous system and for us to kind of put our heads around. And so we self-sabotage,
which is a very well studied topic and whatnot.
And so I've caught myself getting in that over the years as well.
And I think even with the podcast, I had to be really careful,
like with the name change, like, okay, is this another form of doing that?
Because it was starting to get some good traction,
get some YouTube traffic and Spotify traffic.
And then I really just settled in and did some meditation and prayer on it
and realized, no, this is the direction.
I want to move in.
It feels more aligned with where I want to be.
So I think it's really, in my practice, I think it's really hard because a lot of people, first of all,
they don't necessarily know what they want outside of what they're told they want.
Well, no, I want this job.
And then they're afraid to admit it.
And so oftentimes we just have to have conversations around, well, you know, who are you outside of work?
What makes you happy?
again going back to that values conversation
I think when it comes to
working with clients
in the practice around
the scariness
we have to explore
you know and I think you said this even in your talk
like what's the worst thing that could happen
if it did happen you know what I mean
and kind of kind of play with that that mindset trick of like
okay what's the best thing that could happen
you know and what how might that scare you
And, you know, that kind of does that pattern interrupt where they're like, well, the best thing that could happen, usually I would want that to happen.
But then the fact that there's actually something there that may be holding them back is usually a big awareness for them.
Does that answer your question?
No, it does.
And I think, you know, it's funny, we have these conversations and the questions always end up being so tactical that you come out of them, right?
Like I find that when we talk about some of these really larger, more introspective topics on the show, people love them.
But then the questions are rarely about the high level ideas.
They're about like, how do you actually get there?
Right.
Like what does what do I do?
So like it's like, Kendra, what, what, I believe you?
What do I do?
Right?
Like is it, is it journal every day?
Is it my magic, you know, miracle morning?
Is it, is it a coach?
Is it, you know, do I go vegan, sober, you know, Bible beauty?
Like, like, what do I, you know, like, how do I actually get there?
Yeah.
And, you know, I know that this is probably particular to each individual, but do you have
some just common practices for people who may be listening to say, okay, if you want to,
maybe you don't spend enough time in your own mind, right?
I don't think, I think today in particular, the vast majority of our society does
not spend enough time inside themselves.
And I don't mean ruminating on the past as we discussed.
I mean, just literally, what am I feeling right now?
What am I thinking right now?
Why do I feel this way, et cetera?
To start to get in there and actually do that,
what are some common practices that you've either used yourself or coached others on
that start this conversation, that allow us to start talking or understanding
ourselves at a deeper level. Yeah, so there's three things I offer. So one is I'm actually an
emotional intelligence advisor as well. So I am a huge fan of the emotional intelligence
assessment for those that want data and are very cerebral. It's not super expensive. And what it
shows by and large is it shows not just how intelligent you would be on a scale, but we're
usually less concerned with that. What we're looking at more is how aware are you of your emotions
and how much are they getting in the way of your self-regulation?
And the thing I love about it is that unlike other psychometric assessments,
it's not behavior, which typically doesn't change.
It takes a lot of work to change it over time.
It's skills.
So you can actually take the assessment and then decide,
oh, I want to work on my emotional expression,
and then in 30 days take it again and see that number improve,
which I think is super empowering and great.
So that's a great place to start,
and what you'll find on that assessment is by and large,
most people have a pretty low emotional awareness number in comparison to their emotional expression
and assertiveness number, which means that they're speaking and acting before they really understand
what's going on.
So that's like a huge aha and a great tool just to generate that awareness and then you can
work with a coach or somebody to work through that.
The second piece is I created my two methods.
One is called the Compass Method, which is really about coming back.
to your own core values and looking at what is your own internal compass not the one that you think
you need to live by because the world tells you but what is your own true north what is your own
internal compass and then I walk you through that method as part of what I call my aim true method
which I alluded to earlier but it's really about awareness reaching that an inflection point
making a decision like okay now I really see where this one thing in my life or maybe it's more
one, aren't working, what do I want to do about it? And then you start to move through the transformation.
You start to move through that right of passage, and then you go through the undoing process as you
cross that threshold, and then you move into embodiment. And so I walk them through that in 90 days.
That's the process I've seen that's worked for me personally over and over again, so that's the one I use.
But as you said, it's very contextual. Maybe eating vegan is the right answer. Maybe
you know, Miracle Morning is the right answer. I think all these things help. However, they're not
going to get to the root cause. And I think to get to the root cause, the number one strategy
that my methods allow is giving yourself the grace of space and time, like you said, to have
some reflection and really ask yourself the tough questions. Like, what is it that I'm afraid to
see? What is it that I'm afraid to say out loud? And acknowledge what is the one truth that I'm
afraid to, you know, admit, you know, like, what's not working for me anymore in my life?
And make a list. And it doesn't have to mean it's cast in stone if you make a list.
You may realize that, okay, next week, this one went off the list, you know?
It's just start learning to have that relationship with yourself where you're taking time to
reflect and have that mental processing time like you talked about.
We're really good at talking, but we're not really good at listening, especially to ourselves.
Have you ever read the book
The Untethered Life by Michael Singer?
Yes.
I'm probably one of the top five most recommended books
on the podcast that I've talked about.
You know, if I had to put my finger on one of a few books
that has literally changed the way that I operate as a human being,
it was that book.
And if I had to broadstroke it,
essentially the voices in your head are not you.
and you have, and I'm giving you permission to not listen to them.
Mm-hmm.
Doesn't mean they're not data points, right?
But they're, but, you know, all this, the way I think of it,
just the way my brain works is like, I was like, oh, that's not me.
They're just data points.
That's just my body and my mind sending me signals to keep me alive for one more second.
Oh, that's why it tells you to stuff your face full of food because, you know, your body's going,
I need calories to survive because it could, you know,
I still think it's 150,000 years ago where I may not eat for a month, right?
Like, like, it's just, and then all sudden, I started, it was, it was a weird moment
because it was almost like I was meeting myself for the first time again when I stopped
listening to that voice because that voice was like, you're not good enough, you didn't come from
enough, you haven't done anything, all the things you said at the beginning, right?
You haven't done anything worth doing.
You didn't come from a family that.
that's worthy. You don't have any interesting, you know, you're, you're not the third generation
son of some prince from wherever that's a fun story. You weren't, like, abused as a child so badly
that that's a story worth talking, but like, you kind of had, like, this lower class, but
semi-fine upbringing in a small shitty town and kind of made your way out, right? Like, no one gives
a shit, that's not worthy. You know, like, all this stuff going on in my head every time I
wanted to do something. And when I finally just went, oh, you're kind of an asshole. I don't really
like you because you say things that don't, you know, isn't aligned with who I am. And now I have
permission not to listen to you anymore. And that may sound crazy. But like, I literally sometimes
will tell the voice in my head, you're an asshole. Like, not out loud. Like, but myself would be like,
nope, that's kind of a, that's kind of a jerky thing to say. Like, I'm not with you on now.
Like, I'm going to keep going. When I tell people sometimes about that.
book and about what I just told you, you know, articulated in different ways sometimes.
But I don't think most people know that. Like, I honestly think most people believe that voice
in their head is them, like some subconscious thing that gives a crap about them actually
speaking to them. And they don't realize that it is a selfish portion of either your brain
or your body communicating to you to literally keep you alive for another second, which is
it's their only goal. And sometimes that aligns, right? Like jump out of the way of the bus.
And but most of the time it does not align with your long term goals. And like I guess through
your experience, I'm going to assume you've had different moments like this. Like when you have
these moments of clarity, like for me, when I kind of learn this, I turned to journaling for,
that was my tactic, right? And I just started writing and things came out of me that I had never
thought, written, or certainly not articulated before. When you've experienced these moments
of clarity, how do you, how do you solidify them in your life? Because I think they can be blips,
right? You have this moment where you're like, oh, wow, that's not who I want to be. Like,
I actually want to live this life. I'm okay making a little less money to have a little more
freedom to be with my, because that's what actually aligns. And then we forget and we go right back
to doing what we've always done and we never put it into practice. So how when we have these moments,
we find something about ourselves or we are like we really lock in on a value that we would like
to live by how do we make sure that we keep doing that thing that we lock that into our
lifestyle that we don't backtrack to the person that we were before that was creating the
frustration pain etc yeah I love that question so first of all there's one core question I
ask myself every day and now I ask myself probably hundreds of times a day I'm not always
perfect at it, but it's, will this bring me closer to peace? And what I find is if the answer is no,
then the answer is no. Now, if it's like a business decision, let's say there's like a contract
or something I'm in, right? And I'm like starting to realize I'm halfway through the contract,
and it's not bringing me closer to peace anymore. It's bringing me closer to fear.
Then that's when you start to negotiate and start to bifurcate and say, okay, what part of it
is fear? And maybe I exercise a 30-day rule.
or find another advertiser or do you know what what are the options here and then you've honored your
integrity right you've honored that peace and then you get a sense of peace because you've done the thing that
you know you needed your soul knows you needed to do if that makes sense so i just wanted to share
because that's my one question i ask myself about everything does this is bring me closer or further away from
peace because i believe that's our natural state that's how god wants us and that's how we need to operate
and then we can save those amygdala moments for when we really need them not be firing
on it all day long like most of us do, myself included, up until now. So that's step one.
Step two is I'm a huge, I love journaling, but I'm also because I'm a mom on the go and doing things,
I'm a huge fan of I do voice notes. So I'll do memos on the phone or I'll even do the notepad
and then I'll just voice to text in there and I'll just say insights from walk on Friday, October 3rd,
and I'll just start talking. I find that I like writing, but,
things come out me a little more prophetically if I speak it.
So I tend to do it with my speaking.
And that's how I kind of anchor it.
And then if I want to take that further, I'll come back in journal.
And then if I want to take it even further, I'll copy and paste it into chat GPT
and kind of say, like, in my own little private Jeep chat that I've created with my own
rules and guidelines.
So it sounds like me and saying, okay, like, how might this work into my current method
or into my coaching methodology to get ideas on how to actually bring it out into the world.
Because I really feel strongly when I get those clarity and insight that there are things that need to be shared.
I completely agree.
Yeah.
I love that you took it all the way to publishing because I think that's, to me, that's the piece that locks it into my brain.
I completely agree.
My way is slightly different, but exactly the same in the same regard.
I tend to, for me, writing locks it in a little better, but that's just me.
But I will agree, less articulate.
and but I find sometimes when I write weird things come out of me that don't come out of me
when I'm talking and again this is just me that that's that's not a judgment but like the other
day I was journaling and I tried a journal in the morning every day one page it's it's not a big
page just so everyone knows this isn't like some crazy thing I I started doing it um during a very
rough time in my life uh because I read um the artist's way uh by Julia Cameron and I did the
morning pages and that was very, very helpful, but I found three full pages every day as a dad and
and now as a single dad, like was too much. But, so I have this one little, I think it's probably
six by eight notebook and I just do one page at max. If I get a page, I'm done. Sometimes I will
at night. I always date and time them just so I know. But the other day it was funny. I was,
I was writing and, you know, I've been struggling with a few things lately. Just, just different business
stuff and where do I want to go with this and different stuff. And all the sudden, I just wrote
stop hiding. And like, I don't know where that came from. I hadn't had that thought, right? But for
me, again, again, this is just my way that this is not a better or worse in any regard.
When I write weird things like that happen, just these all of a sudden, I'll be like,
and then I'll just stop hiding. And I'm like, I literally stop and I looked at it and I was like,
one it like gave me chills i just got chills saying it to you again and i was and i and i
i don't know that i fully this was like four days ago by the way so i have not completely figured out
exactly what that thought meant but there is something inside me that feels like i'm hiding
from something and that came out and and whether it's through voice notes or it's through
whatever your method is writing etc you know typing whatever whatever your method is
I feel like we have to get it out of our brain.
But the part that I love that you brought up
that I think is the linchpin to this
that locks it in is the publishing piece.
And the publishing doesn't have to be public,
but I do think you need to publish it.
It needs, even if it's a personal Apple notes folder
where you work out the thoughts a little more, right?
Not just the voice note or the journal entry,
but like you actually kind of go,
what does this actually mean to me and start to build it out?
That really locks it in, I think.
I think you have to take that next step.
Just capturing it is enough because how many amazing things have we captured
and never gone back to?
Like it's somewhere in some folder on something,
but we've never gone back to it.
But when you publish it, it's like now it's a real,
now it's an archive kind of that is now part of your brain,
which I think is wonderful.
I have a few more questions.
if you have a few more minutes,
I know we're starting to get up to the time.
I just have a few more questions.
And this is going to be slightly out of context,
but I want to come back to it.
How do you know when to transition from like dealing with your shit to like suck it up
and just go get it done?
Right?
Because there is another side to this sometimes too.
That's like you can almost be too introspective sometimes.
And sometimes it's like, look, like,
everything's not perfect.
Yeah, you got this pain.
You're frustrated by this,
but you also got to go get some shit done.
Like, how for you do you, like, compartmentalize that shift?
Or how do you know when it's time to go like,
okay, I've thought about this enough.
Now it's time to go execute.
Or is that not a decision?
It is at all part of the process.
Like, I'm just, I'm interested in that for you.
No, I love that because I, as a ruminator and a thinker,
I have spent a lot of my life overthinking on things.
I think for me, the way I do it now,
at least at this season is my body.
So for instance, if I am like really tired
and just feeling like I'm hitting a point of like a day or two
where I'm really just exhausted kind of out of nowhere,
but my brain is like, no, you need to do all these things.
I listen to my body.
Like my body's like, nope, like trust the process, take your time, you know.
If my body is energy but my head is like, no, stop, this and that, you know,
so I find that my head, my body tends to be more at the truth.
teller than my head a lot because of the conversation we had earlier around
voice. So just getting really clear on that voice and whose it is,
is it yours? Is it, you know, gods? Is it a higher self? Is it
your, you know, angry stepped out? Is it, you know, whose voice are you hearing
and what are their intentions for you? So I think that's
really an important part of it. I think
I think, you know, for me,
this may not work for everybody but I usually have like it's usually like a 24 hour rule sometimes
it can be 48 or 12 it kind of it has a standard deviation there a little bit um depending on what it is
but like for instance if like something bad happens like let's say I lose a client or something
I'll give myself 24 hours to feel bad about it and then say after that Kendra you know you're done
so here's your 24 hours you know and so I try to kind of put rules on it um obviously if it's like a death of a
of a friend or family member or something,
you need more time than that.
But what I do is try to give myself time to grieve each day, you know.
So, like, you're going to be grieving through a whole,
out the whole day, but like deliberate grieving time.
Like, these two hours, I'm going to go on a walk.
And if I cry, I'm just going to cry.
And actually build that space into your life for these things
so that you can move through and move on.
And so, you know, for me, those tools and tips work for me.
What's work for you, Ryan?
I'm curious.
Yeah, I'll tell you the second.
The second one that you talked about, just letting yourself experience it was huge for me.
You know, I was raised by a good father, but a very kind of traditional men, you know, are strong shoulders back, don't show emotion kind of thing.
And, you know, when different very negative things happened to me in my life, especially early on, I would push down and repress and hold.
hold in and and it never, well, it rarely then presents itself in any kind of positive way.
Maybe as aggression on a football field as a child, but certainly not in any kind of real
positive way. However, as I grew up and actually my dad ended up going to prison at one point
in my life and I got space from that mentality. And again, I don't, my dad was a tremendous dad.
he's a great-grandfather.
He made some bad decisions that he paid for and has changed his lifestyle and it's all good.
But that space, I spent more time with my mom and more time.
And she's, as I mentioned earlier, very biblical, very, very dialed into Christianity.
And I got a little more taste of acceptance of understanding.
and now just recently I had a guy that I know locally in my town.
Unfortunately, he's getting a divorce.
And his wife initiated the divorce.
He's very upset.
You know, he did not want it, does not want it.
And he's experiencing these emotions.
And I said to him, the worst thing you can do is not allow yourself to go through it.
And now, like you, 24, 40, whatever the appropriate amount of time is, an appropriate amount of time,
I give myself permission to let that bad thing wash through me
and experience all the negative emotion, right?
Like you said, if it's crying, if it's anger,
if it's, you know, shouting in a controlled appropriate way,
not at other humans, you know what I mean?
Like if it's whatever you got to do
to let that emotion wash through you,
it's the only way to get past it.
It's, there's just no other way.
And if you bottle it, if you don't deal with it,
if you think that somehow being,
you can be stoic in public and still let something wash through you
if that stoicism is what is needed, right?
Like there's, Jordan Peterson says,
be the strongest man at your dad's funeral.
And I think that's a wonderful,
I do think there's a lot of merit,
and I think it's a wonderful idea
because other people may need your strength, right?
But that does not mean, nor is he advocating for you to not deal with that
trauma. So even if you, for whatever reason, need to be stoic in your public facing life,
you have to let that shit wash through you or it will literally eat you from the inside
out. And that has been one of the, the biggest lessons and one of something I will carry
with me forever and I advocate for it. And anybody who brings up trauma, my first thing I say
to them is experience it. Experience that you're mad as hell. Be mad as hell. Be mad as hell.
You're sad.
You just want to cry and shout and curse and do it.
Like let that out because the only way to repair is on the other side of that.
If you're holding it, it's just a cancer.
It's just eating you from the inside out.
So I completely agree with that 100%.
And it's funny how we almost need, it's why I think coaches, counselors,
you know, why I think these roles are so important is oftentimes it's simply permission.
It's someone who's having this terrible experience sitting down with you and you saying,
you know what, it's okay for you to feel that way.
Like you're not wrong, you're not bad, you're not whatever because you're all you want to do
is cry for 10 hours today because of this horrible thing that happened.
That's not wrong.
Go do it.
Like it's just that little bit of permission.
that people need. And I just think it's a wonderful profession. I'm so glad that you are out there.
I love your methodology. I love the way that you approach it. I mean, I feel like people are
lucky to be able to spend time with you. I certainly have an art time together here.
If someone does want to get deeper into your world, if they want to listen to your podcast,
you know, how do people get deeper into your world, your work, your ideas? Yeah. What's funny,
I kind of joke that I'm the hitch of executive coaching because it's always
been like secret and word of mouth kind of, you know, so now I'm doing podcasts, so putting myself
out there a little more. But they can find me at Kendra Dahlstrom.com. They can find my podcast,
which will be the high-achuting leader podcast.com. They can find it on that alias as well as on
Spotify or on YouTube, a YouTube channel. And reach out to me. I do work with only five or six
clients a year. So I work with, you know, it's very curated, cultivated, very high-touch
experiences as I work through the year just to keep it, the quality. Quality is really important
to me. So I want to have quality and attention to detail. And a lot of what these people
are going through, as you've mentioned, are intense moments and life transformations. So whether it's
career or personal, it's just important that they have the support they need. And I want to be,
to your earlier point, I need to be at my best self in order to do that.
So that means I only can take so many people a year.
So that's how they reach out to me.
And it's been a pleasure talking to you.
I think you and I are aligned on so many things.
And I love reading your substack and following your work.
Well, thank you so much.
When you do write the book, you call me, text me.
I want you back on the show because there's like a million more things we can talk about.
I had a lot more.
So open invitation to come back.
So please reach out because I know the audience is going to love this conversation
because I certainly did.
So thank you so much.
Thank you.
It's been a pleasure.
Happy holidays.
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