This Is Woman's Work with Nicole Kalil - Grown-Up Goals: The 5 Pillars Of Being A Healthy Adult with Michelle Chalfant | 317
Episode Date: June 11, 2025Let’s talk about adulting—actual adulting. Not just paying bills or keeping a houseplant alive, but the kind that involves emotional maturity, healthy boundaries, and conscious self-leadership. Be...cause let’s be honest, most of us weren’t taught how to be fully functioning adults… and it shows. Joining us is Michelle Chalfant, licensed therapist turned holistic life coach, creator of The Adult Chair® model, and author of the new book The Adult Chair: Get Unstuck, Claim Your Power, and Transform Your Life. With millions reached through her podcast, coaching programs, and retreats, she’s here to walk us through the five pillars of being a healthy, grounded adult. Here’s the truth: being an adult isn’t about checking boxes or pretending you’re fine. It’s about owning your truth. Feeling your feelings. Practicing compassion without letting yourself off the hook. It’s about setting firm boundaries—with no need for justification—and recognizing that your triggers are not flaws, they’re clues. None of us were handed a guidebook for how to grow up emotionally. We inherited patterns from people who were figuring it out as they went. But what Michelle shares today is empowering: it’s never too late to unlearn what no longer serves you and become the adult you were meant to be. Whether you’re starting this work or knee-deep in your personal development era, this episode will meet you where you are—and help you move forward with clarity, self-trust, and strength. Connect with Michelle: Website: https://theadultchair.com/ Book: https://theadultchair.com/book IG: https://www.instagram.com/themichellechalfant/?hl=en FB: https://www.facebook.com/@TheMichelleChalfant/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/michellechalfant Related Podcast Episodes: How To Build Emotionally Mature Leaders with Dr. Christie Smith | 272 Boundaries vs. Ultimatums with Jan & Jillian Yuhas | 297 Gentleness: Cultivating Compassion for Yourself and Others with Courtney Carver | 282 Share the Love: If you found this episode insightful, please share it with a friend, tag us on social media, and leave a review on your favorite podcast platform! 🔗 Subscribe & Review:Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I am Nicole Kalil and you're listening to the This Is Woman's Work podcast.
And today, well today we're going to talk about being an adult.
Because friend, I say this with love, but I am not sure that we're doing or demonstrating
it all that well.
Let's face it, we're taught how to solve for X in math class,
but not how to speak up in a toxic relationship.
We memorized the periodic table, but never learned how to feel our feelings
without shame or judgment and without giving away responsibility.
And most of us were raised by adults who are just like us,
wildly imperfect humans and grownup bodies
figuring it out or not as we go.
So no surprise that being an adult
often feels more like improvising than arriving.
And that's why I'm gonna keep this intro really brief
because I wanna make sure we have time to talk about
all of the five pillars of being a healthy adult
with our guest.
Michelle Chalfant is a licensed therapist
turned holistic life coach,
the creator of the Adult Share Model
and the author of the brand new book, The Adult Share,
Get Unstuck, Claim Your Power and Transform Your Life.
She's helped millions through her top-ranked podcast,
her coaching certification program
and her retreats and trainings.
And she's here to walk us through the five pillars of a healthy adult self.
Michelle, thank you for being here and for writing this book that I hope will be
taught in high school and college and all of the places.
And I'd love if you could start us off with the first pillar.
And if you're okay with it, I'll just jump in with questions along the way.
Does that work?
Yeah, Nicole, I love it. Thank you.
Awesome. Thanks for having me. Oh, my? Yeah, Nicole, I love it. Thank you.
Thanks for having me.
Oh my gosh, my pleasure.
I'm so excited.
Okay, so let's jump in.
If I may just explain where the pillars even came from.
That'd be great.
It's a good kind of a, and by the way,
even before I say that, I have said for years
that we need to get the adult chair in schools.
So we're working on it because we don't even know,
we don't know how to feel our emotions. We don't know what to do if we have anxiety, like all these things, it's necessary. So just want to say that.
If you need a champion or an endorser, I'm your girl.
Yes, yes.
I'll be talking to you after the show about that for sure.
Good.
Okay. So as a therapist and a coach for over 20 years, you know, like you said, I've worked with individual clients.
I don't see individual clients anymore,
but I've worked, I have a coaching business
and a membership and all the things.
When I was writing the book,
I literally looked back over 20 years
and I said to myself,
what is it that I have taught more than anything
over the course of 20 some years?
And I reflected on it and these are the five pillars.
And these are the things that clients or people,
if I'm doing a live event up on stage, like it didn't matter.
That's what was interesting to me,
whether I was on a stage and I'd pull people out
of the audience to come work with me,
or I'm in my private office one-on-one,
it's the same thing.
And what I realized is that as humans, we all have this stuff.
Like we've all got these issues.
Not that they're issues, but we need to strengthen these pillars in order to be healthy adults,
in order to have the healthiest relationship with ourselves and healthy self-worth,
and then with others, exactly like you just said.
So here we go.
Number one, I own my reality.
So again, when I when I was working
with people in my office, I would find these people would just sort of like dance around
the elephant in the room. Let me let me give you some examples of what the elephant in
the room might be things like this. I'm drinking too much. That's owning your reality. It's
like I'm coming home. I had so many people that would come in and say, Okay, okay, Michelle, I got to tell you this. I got to tell you, I don't want to say this to
anybody else, but it's quite obvious. I'm coming up from work and I realized by the time I go to
bed and I put the kids to bed, I've had a whole bottle of wine. Something's not right. And I've
been doing this for about a year. Can you help me? So it's that it's, I think something might be
going on with my child, maybe they're ADHD,
maybe there's something else,
but I don't want to look at it, but I know I need to.
So this is what I mean by owning your reality.
Or another example would be,
I think I'm in a relationship with my partner
that I don't love or that I don't wanna be in.
And again, it's the things that are right
in front of our face,
and we live with these things every single day,
and we want them to change, but we don't know how.
So we ignore one of the things that I realized happens
when we own our reality.
It's not inviting in blame or judgment.
It is to say, okay, this is part of my life. This is something I'm struggling with whether it's I'm drinking too much
I don't want to be in this relationship or whatever the heck is going on and then here's what's fascinating Nicole
The next thing that happens is everything starts to change. It's when we resist owning
That creates the stuckness. So when people say I'm stuck, I don't know why I'm stuck
I'm like, well, what are you not owning?
You gotta look at your life and say, what's not?
And it's not to say if you're in a relationship
with someone and you have to end it,
but it is to say, I think we're having problems
and I don't wanna tell anybody.
I'm not inviting anyone to put it on social.
This is for yourself.
You've gotta own it and say, okay, you know what?
I think I'm struggling with love addiction
or I think I've got a lot of codependency tendencies
That might be what's going on and I also say to people
We are the common denominator in every single relationship and in our lives like it's us
So if your life isn't working out
We've got to look inside and ask what the heck is going on here. What do might I need to change?
and ask, what the heck is going on here? What do might I need to change?
The word responsibility keeps popping into my head.
And I think we all do this, but maybe more so as women,
when we hear the word responsible,
we think more along the lines of burden or even blame,
as opposed to I'm 100% responsible for my life
and my relationships and what's in it.
And that doesn't change that someone else
is 100% responsible and all that.
Well, I guess let me ask how important you think it is
that we put words on it.
Like you said, it doesn't need to be public,
it doesn't need to be on social media,
but how important is it that we speak these truths?
Because I've found every time I say something out loud,
even if it's just with one other person it
Loses some of its power
Yeah, yeah, yeah it almost when we speak it
This is why go find a coach go find a therapist go find a best friend go find somebody that can just listen without
Correcting without fixing it starts the process of change. It gets the energy moving
You know, this is about this is how we get
unstuck. People say I'm stuck. I'm stuck. Well, what aren't you saying? What's what's really
happening here? What aren't you owning? Why don't you take it? And the other way I say
it is you have to take responsibility for your life without blaming anybody.
Yeah, as you were talking, and this topic is about being and becoming an adult, I always
try to tell myself,
because it's hard sometimes to not point the finger,
or to, is it's like my parents, my childhood,
my experience, they explain a lot of things,
but being an adult is no longer allowing those experiences
and those to excuse a lot of things.
It's part of my story, but at some point in time, being an adult is being responsible
and almost parenting yourself at a certain point.
Oh, not almost, 100%.
And that's a big part of what I talk about in the adult share model itself, but in the
book specifically, I mean, this is what people have told me for years and practicing this
model is there is an actual re-parenting that does happen.
Like I teach people how do you connect to your inner child?
How do you work with the inner critic
and all the voices in your head and the ego part?
Yeah, so you definitely do.
It's sort of like the parts that we might have missed
when we were growing up, we're able to fill in now
and reprogram ourselves.
Because let's face it, we're almost like computers. What we learn when we're able to fill in now and reprogram ourselves. Because let's face it, we're almost like computers.
What we learn when we're growing up
becomes programs that we live off of.
It just is.
It's just how the brain and our consciousness works.
So yeah, so we were able to update all that programming.
So you mentioned the inner critic.
I call it head trash,
because I want it to sound as dirty and disgusting
as it actually is, these things that run through my brain. And I bring it up because because I want it to sound as dirty and disgusting as it actually is these things that run through my
Brain and I bring it up because I know the second pillar is
Practicing self-compassion. Let's talk about that
Yeah, I was someone in my teens and 20s. That was very hard on myself. I hated myself
I felt like I was damaged. I I had a very very very loud inner critic and
What I came up with in my early
twenties that was the antidote for that was to love myself. What I found was self-compassion.
And again, and then when I started seeing clients and working with others, I'm like,
oh, I guess I'm not alone in this. You know, and some people have a louder inner critic
and blamer and judger and all those parts. And some people, it's not so loud. Or some people, it gets loud when you make a mistake. Or we have a louder perfectionist or a louder inner critic and blamer and judger and all those parts. And some people, it's not so loud.
Or some people, it gets loud when you make a mistake.
Or we have a louder perfectionist or a louder controller, whatever it might be.
Or we really have all those parts.
Some of them are louder than others.
We all need healthier self-worth.
Who can't use more of that?
Who can't use more self-love?
And that's not to say I'm better than anybody.
It's a private thing almost.
And self-compassion, when we create that voice,
which again comes from our adult chair,
that's what it's about, our healthy adult self
actually is self-compassionate.
It's got a compassionate voice toward other and self.
And when I learned how to create and cultivate
and grow that inner voice,
my anxiety started to go down,
my depression started to fade and take a step back,
my self-love started,
it's like my bucket of self-love, if you will,
started to get fuller and fuller.
And I was like, oh, this is pretty cool.
But it was the conscious voice.
I had to develop that conscious voice
versus the unconscious voice,
which was the automatic just programming.
And I was in this rut of like beating up
on myself constantly.
I would venture a guess most people can wrap their head
around that logically.
Like it makes more sense to love ourselves
than it does to hate ourselves.
Any tips on the how?
Like how do we reprogram or change the narrative that runs in our head? Any tips
on like the how-to part of it? I'm so glad you said that. For those interested in the
adult chair book, it does, it takes you on this transformational journey. I wrote it
in a way, there are examples and exercises and it is the how-to. So you will walk through
and go, oh, this is how I do it.
But to give you an example of what that would be like
with self-compassion, think about,
you can know this person or not.
It can be a grandmother, it can be a mother,
it can be a father, what figure,
what would they say to you, right, when you make a mistake?
Like that loving grandmother,
picture Jesus, Buddha, it doesn't matter, pick a voice.
And if they loved you unconditionally
and had so much compassion for you,
when you make that next mistake, what would they say?
So in the beginning, you can adopt someone else's voice
and you have to consciously reach for and go,
okay, what would Jennifer Aniston say?
Or what would so-and-so say to me right now?
What would Michelle Obama say?
OK, she'd say this.
Pick a voice.
It doesn't matter.
And start reaching for that voice
to come in and speak to you when you're having a bad day,
when you're beating up on yourself.
That's one beautiful way to start doing this work.
And you will find, it's like, as you know, like when we
in the brain, we have these ruts and these ruts form the neural pathways form, we have to create
new pathways. This is one way to do that. This is one way to bring in that self compassion.
I love that I often one of the things I do is I think what would I say to my daughter in the
situation or if my daughter made this mistake or is experiencing this think, what would I say to my daughter in this situation? Or if my daughter made this mistake
or is experiencing this thing, what would I say to her?
Because I find we are so much more gracious
and generous and compassionate with the people we love,
especially the younger people that we love,
and then try to turn that back on me.
But I'm telling you,
Michelle Obama was in my head all the time,
I would have a much happier world.
So I love this idea.
Okay.
So pillar number one is I own my reality.
Pillar number two is I practice self-compassion.
Talk to us about pillar number three.
I feel my emotions.
If I had a dollar for every person that I worked with when I said, okay, how does that
make you feel?
And they go, what?
I don't do emotions.
It was shocking.
It was really shocking to me over the years
to hear that response from people, or I don't know.
And I was one of those people.
So I'm not excluding myself at all.
And I had to learn, it's like a muscle.
When you go to the gym and you start working out,
it's starting to flex that muscle
of how do I feel my emotions?
When we learned how to feel our emotions,
I found it again as an antidote to so many things.
Specifically, one of them is anxiety.
So the way that I define anxiety
is it's the physical manifestation of unfelt emotions.
Think about what anxiety is.
How do you know you have anxiety?
I always would ask my clients that,
or again, people I'm working with,
they say, oh, how do you know you have anxiety?
Oh, shortness of breath, I can't breathe,
knots in my stomach, my throat's tight,
my shoulders are tight, yada yada yada, all the things.
And I realized, God, these are all physical symptoms.
Like these are all physical.
And I'd sit with people in my office and I'd say,
all right, let's go there.
I want you to turn toward that thing inside of you
that feels so uncomfortable.
And they would turn toward, I have knots in my stomach,
go be with those knots, like draw your attention,
bring your awareness down to your knots.
What's in there?
What's going on?
And then they'd start to,
and let's breathe slowly and really get in touch with that.
People would be in shock over
what would happen when we would do this together and they would say, oh my God, I feel sadness.
I didn't know I felt sad. Oh my God, my anxiety is starting to melt. What's going on? Like, yeah.
Or if they don't feel the sadness, go be with the knots in your stomach. Be with them. Be with them.
It's just like holding them or just being,
taking your awareness into those knots.
Even if you don't know, oh, it's sadness
or it's I hate myself or whatever it might be,
just being with the physical sensation
starts to melt the physical sensation.
So feeling your emotions again, that's gosh,
that's such a route to so many different things.
It's why we're emotionally dysregulated.
It has so much to do with depression and anxiety
and love addiction, love avoid, I mean, codependency.
We don't know how to feel our emotions.
We're not good at it.
We weren't trained how to do it.
Most of our parents, I mean,
that's why I don't blame anybody.
Who the heck taught us how to do this stuff?
Nobody.
Well, if anything, I think we've been programmed
away from it.
We've been either consciously or unconsciously taught that some emotions are bad or should
be avoided or reflect negatively on us, whereas others, I often think as a parent, we say
things like, I only want you to be happy.
And I often worry if that's an unconsciously dangerous message to send, A, because it's not an available option for any of us.
Nobody's ever going to only feel happy.
And B, are we unconsciously telling our children
or the people that we love that any other emotion
doesn't fit or isn't good?
My question is, how do we... I don't know if acknowledging the programming of certain emotions
are bad, how do we deal with emotions?
We've shoved aside for so long, like any tips for recognizing and sitting with our emotion.
But then my second part of the question is, I'm a big proponent all of our emotions matter.
But I also am a big proponent of,
it doesn't seem like mature adulthood
to be run by your emotions.
Mm-hmm. Yep.
My coach, Lisa Kalman, that I worked with for many years,
she said, it's okay to have your emotions,
your emotions just can't have you.
It's sort of this, like, your emotions just can't have you. It's sort of this like,
my emotions don't give me a license to behave
in any way that I want.
So how do we navigate through this?
My emotions are all good,
and yet they can't all be demonstrated
without some sort of filtering or dealing with it.
Is my question making any sense at all?
No, no, it does.
Emotions are our superpower. They really are. And again, we weren't trained
how to, we weren't modeled, is a better way of saying that, but we weren't modeled how
to feel them well. So when we have an emotion, we want to fix it. In fact, if you look at
little kids and they fall down and they get hurt or their goldfish dies,
what do we do?
We go, oh, come on over here.
Let's have some chocolate cake or let's have some candy or let me distract you from that.
It's like, no, I'm in grief.
Sit with me.
I am in grief.
And I reference this in the book.
Emotions are felt for 90 seconds when we let them go through without building a story around
why I'm having the emotion
So I'm in the deeper we can go into I don't even like to call them emotions
Good or bad, but they're more of a spectrum thing about a ruler right a long ruler over here
We have love and over here we have fear
So everything in between are all of the different emotions that we can have
Well the further down into the fear end
of the spectrum we can go and feel
and let them flow through, just like you process food,
you process emotions, they metabolize through you
in 90 seconds.
The further I can step into my shame, guess what?
The further I can stretch myself into love,
in bliss and excitement, enthusiasm and passion
and all those things.
But we're very narrow with our emotions.
We wanna feel love, joy, happiness, that's it.
It's too narrow.
We're meant to feel everything.
We're energy beings.
Like then we're energy beings in human suits,
basically, is what we're doing.
So the emotions come through, so it's just an energy.
I can't hold an emotion in my hand, it's an energy.
So I understand your question about
we don't want our emotions to rule us and
that's someone that doesn't have a container around their emotions. I'm
exploding. That was me in my teens and 20s. I would just have high emotions or
low emotions. They're all over everybody else and it's like that's not healthy.
Healthy emotions are, it gives, when someone is healthy with their emotions
they have the ability to sit in the uncomfortableness
of their emotions and breathe and allow them through
and recognize, wow, I'm sad.
Oh, I'm in grief.
I've broken up with my partner.
Really sad.
That's healthy.
That's not bad.
And the other problem is, is we have other humans
that don't know how to sit with us when we are sad.
What do people typically say? We need to go out for a drink. Let's go, let's go have something to
eat. Let's go do this. Let's go dancing. Let's know. Just sit. Even like you're so strong,
you're going to get through this. We, we tend to. Let's muscle through it. Exactly. Yeah.
No, what we need to do for other humans is to be with them in their emotions, whatever
those emotions are, not say a word, but be fully present, not take on someone else's
emotions, but just be really present and grounded while you're having your emotion.
That's the greatest healing gift we can give to anybody.
It feels so good to feel witnessed and not judged, not fixed.
Just be with me.
And that gives that other person permission to feel
and they can drop vulnerably inside of the body fully
and let that emotion flow through.
That's what we wanna practice, practice doing it for others
and then practice doing it within ourselves too.
Sometimes journaling is a great way to feel emotions.
Journal it out, just get it, it's an energy.
We wanna get it moving through you.
And I give you all kinds of examples in the book on how to do that, but those are two ways.
But the first step is curiosity. Get really curious. Like, why do I, why have I had a knot
in my stomach? Why am I anxious for the last two days? I want to sit and go inside and ask myself,
what is this about? And then quiet and listen and feel and notice what happens next.
We've got every human has the ability to feel their emotions.
Yeah. Everyone does.
Well, and noticing if you're resisting or fighting it, right?
Yes, we need to see think of we need to think of ourselves like rivers, a very slow moving river.
And sometimes when we get upset, it's like a current, the current gets faster.
We are energy beings first. And this is not woo-woo it's quantum
physics has proven this so the emotions that are coming through us are moving
it's like a log trying to move down your river are you creating a log jam or you
letting the log come through I just hadn't had anxiety the other day I'm
human I still have anxiety sometimes. And I sat with it.
It's like, what is this?
It was in my heart.
It felt like something was suffocating me.
And I let myself breathe.
I just sat there and said, body, what do you want?
Put my hand on my chest, on my heart, and I closed my eyes.
I started rocking to the left and the right.
What do you know?
In four minutes, it was moved through.
I don't even know what it was.
It was gone. I don't even know what it was. It was gone.
I didn't name it.
It was tight and then it wasn't and I was fine.
That's what happens now, but you've got to be willing to turn towards self and get curious.
Okay.
Then I know the fourth pillar is owning your triggers.
Give us an example of what you mean by triggers and how it might be different or tied to emotions
and then owning them.
Yeah, this is definitely tied to emotions tied to all of them, honestly, but let's just
tie it to the biggest one, of course, would be emotions.
So let's talk about what a trigger is.
When I am trigger when someone is triggered, okay, again, it's a physical response to something happening inside the body.
When I'm triggered, so let's just say,
Nicole, you say something to me,
and I am so furious at what you say.
Like, Michelle, your hair looks horrible today.
I don't know why you got it colored or cut like that,
whatever, let's just pretend you make a comment
like that to me.
And I hear that, and I feel knots in my stomach
and I am angry, immediately I'm angry.
And I hang up the phone on you, I tell you off,
whatever I do, there's like a knee jerk reaction, right?
That's a trigger.
There's a physical sensation and then I wanna lash out.
Or I wanna, here's the thing though,
with people that are triggered, we either wanna lash,
we push our energy out,
or what do we do?
We shrink down and we get tight and small.
We do one or the other.
Either way, we're triggered.
But what's actually happening is an unconscious,
buried, if you will, emotion, here's what's crazy.
That was created when you were before the age of six, okay, is rising up within you.
So it's a belief or an emotion, same kind of thing. I'm not lovable, I'm not wanted,
I hate myself, you're bad, I'm bad, fill in the blank. We all have, every human has these.
Some have deeper ones than others, but every human has these. And they don't feel good,
so we shove them down when we're little
kids down into the unconscious mind. But when we're triggered, what's happening is you out there
outside of me are doing or saying something or I could be watching a movie or I'm watching something
on social or whatever it might be brings up that belief actually about myself. That's what's so
beautiful about triggers. This is why I say triggers are a gift, because they help us to not to transform
these old programs slash beliefs
that we've had since we were zero to six.
Like we literally make a roadmap that we live off of,
that we created from zero to six years old.
Everybody like think about what year it was
when you were six. And then think about what year it was when you were six.
And then think about grabbing a paper roadmap
and trying to drive around based on that year,
whatever that map was, it's like it's so outdated.
So that's why I love triggers
because when we're triggered, it's an opportunity.
These beliefs rise up on a silver platter
they're right in front of me.
The question is, am I going to go ahead
and look at that
belief or I'm going to lash out and blame you for making me feel that way?
So here's the thing though, Nicole, nobody can make us feel anything that we don't already
feel about ourselves.
Right.
You can't make me feel something that's not inside of me.
If you were to say to me, for example, today, Michelle, your hair looks so stupid it's blue.
I'd look at you and go, it's not.
Like it doesn't trigger me.
Nothing at all, right?
Nothing, because it's not true.
So unless you're saying something that is true,
nothing's gonna rise up and make me upset with you.
So what we wanna do though when we're triggered,
instead of calling other people,
your mother, your sister, your friends, your whomever and go,
can you believe so and so said this to me?
They're such a bitch, I can't believe it.
What happens when we do that?
Again, the trigger, the belief tucks back down
in the unconscious.
Instead of what we want to ask ourselves is,
hmm, I'm curious what's happening here for me.
Could this be an old program or belief?
And if so, I'm curious what it is.
So we, and again, in the book,
I go through the six or seven stages
of how we work with triggers.
It's so simple.
It's the how-to, like you were saying,
like how do you work with your triggers?
I've got you.
Like, it's like, you do this, you do this,
you do this, you do this, and then it becomes automatic.
And it starts moving through you very quickly.
But we've got to be willing to start pointing the finger,
and I don't like to point the finger out actually or in,
instead it's like getting curious.
I wonder why this is coming up,
there must be something inside of me.
So we might say, I hate you, or Nicole's such a bitch,
I'm so angry at her, and then I ask if you're my client,
I'd say, okay, great, thank you. I love anger.
What's under it?
Well, you made me feel like I'm not wanted.
Great, what's under that?
And you just keep going under, under, under.
You will find that root belief
that then says something like,
I'm not valuable, nobody cares about me.
Oh, feel that.
And then that's where we tie in.
I feel my emotions, which would be,
ah, feel that.
When you feel the root of that belief,
it just transforms it.
And then you put a new belief in on top of it.
It's just like updating your phone.
Everybody updates their phones.
We have to have an updated program or app
inside of our heads,
because that's what's running the show for us as adults.
Okay. Yeah.
So pillar number five, I set healthy boundaries. Ooh, this one feels
like a big one. Oh my God, it's such a big one because God knows who can set healthy
boundaries. You know, we didn't grow up, most of us learning how to set. Now some people,
yes, but most of us don't know how to set healthy boundaries. You have to have self-worth.
I have this whole process of like what's going on on the inside of
self and when you build that up your inner value, your ideas, your beliefs,
your morals, you have to get to know that. Then setting boundaries becomes almost
automatic. I can tell you right now like my tolerance for other people infringing
on my boundaries is very very low. I don't, I don't, I just, I'm very quick now.
I can say, hey, that doesn't feel good.
Can you stop that please?
Or that's not okay with me or whatever it might be.
But I couldn't do that before people would just walk all over me
because I didn't know what to say.
I felt guilty.
I felt bad.
I felt like I was being mean.
I didn't, I couldn't come up with the words.
That's because I had to do inner,
you have to build up your inner world.
If you don't feel valuable,
you're not gonna set a boundary.
Right.
Think about it.
The most precious diamonds in the jewelry store,
they're in the back, what's around them?
An alarm.
It's a boundary, because they're the most precious.
If you don't feel that you're precious and valuable, like diamond, like a precious stone, you ain't going to set a
boundary. You're not going to do it. Not going to happen.
I think that's such a good point because I think we often go to wanting to say it and
I put in air quotes the right way. But what we really mean is we want to say it in a way
that doesn't hurt or offend to the other person. And ultimately what we're doing is we're prioritizing their feelings over our boundary,
which goes right back to what you were saying
about self-worth.
Absolutely.
Oh, Michelle. Yeah, you've gotta have self-worth.
I could ask you one million more questions.
I know we are out of time.
So I just wanna remind the listener
to go to theadultshare.com.
Forward slash book is where you can find the book,
but theadultshare.com has all the things you would want
to know about Michelle and her incredible work.
Go get the book, also called The Adult Share.
And Michelle, thank you for an incredible
and important conversation.
Let's get this out in schools.
Yes.
Thank you, Nicole, for having me.
I appreciate it.
My absolute pleasure.
Okay, friend, so it turns out that being an adult
isn't just about having a mortgage, knowing how to cook,
or pretending you're fine with things
you're absolutely not fine with.
It's about owning your reality, feeling your feelings,
practicing compassion without letting yourself off the hook,
setting boundaries that don't require justification,
and knowing that your triggers aren't a sign of weakness.
They're neon arrows
pointing to where the work still gets to be done.
None of us had a class in adulting.
Most of us learned from people doing their best with what they had, which is both wonderfully
human and also not always that helpful.
But that's the beauty of what Michelle shared today.
It's never too late to do it differently, to become the adult you want and choose to be.
So whether you're just beginning this work
or deep in the process of untangling old patterns,
keep going.
This is the kind of adulting that actually transforms lives,
yours for sure and everyone else around you.
And being a healthy adult also happens to be woman's work.