Holistic Trauma Healing with Lindsey Lockett podcast

Episode 139: "Seeing Someone Cry Over Something I Wish I Knew How to Cry About" — Suit Lin's Feel Without Fear Story

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Show Notes:

  • Suit Lin's story: high-functioning, cerebral, armored — smiling on the outside while feeling dead inside for years, and the 2020 collapse that cracked her open.
  • The healing hamster wheel: therapy since 2018, trauma books, Instagram mental health content, Christianity — all head knowledge, no embodiment. "I could explain and write a PhD about my childhood and how it affected me. But then what?"
  • The missing piece: "Once you figure it out, the problem will go away" — except it doesn't. Understanding the pattern doesn't change what the body does in a real moment of activation.
  • The car-crying video: seeing Lindsey cry on Instagram over something Suit Lin wished she knew how to cry about — and recognizing that as desire, not weakness.
  • Armor vs. boundaries: "I don't draw boundaries, Lindsey. I build walls and fortresses." The difference between protection that keeps you safe and protection that keeps you alone.
  • Watching big anger be held: witnessing Lindsey facilitate another woman's rage with both compassion and boundaries — and sleeping through the night for the first time after witnessing that kind of activation.
  • The good student trap: realizing she was taking notes to distract herself from actually experiencing the container — and performing for the teacher instead of being present for herself.
  • Saying no without a story: learning that "no" doesn't need justification, and "yes" doesn't need to be earned. "No story necessary."
  • The relational dance: Feel Without Fear as emotional dancing — trusting your body in the hands of another person, noticing when someone doesn't respect your body the way you respect your own, and withdrawing without making it mean something about either of you.
  • Gaps aren't yours to fix: "My inner child can see the gaps, but I can help her not fall in the gaps. It's not my job to fix the gaps of my parents' parenting."
  • From fixing to feeling: "I went from 'let's fix this so we don't feel this anymore' to 'it's okay to feel. It's okay if we feel this until we die and we don't have to like it. And sometimes we will struggle. And all of it is allowed.'"
  • Letting good things in: the hardest part of Feel Without Fear wasn't the pain — it was receiving a compliment without deflecting it. "I can sit with despair. I'm so well versed in the language of despair. To hear someone say that they enjoy my presence has been quite difficult."
  • Sovereignty in heartbreak: "I can't control my friend's decision, but I can control how I show up. And I can help myself through the heartbreak." — "So I learned to feel without fear."
  • "I can be lonely and not die, not collapse. I can do brave things, I can do sad things, I can do tender things, and I won't collapse. That's the part that I'm the most proud of. It's not a single relationship. It's really the way I interface with the world."
  • "Then why did you click on the landing page?" — what Suit Lin would say to someone who thinks they should be able to figure it out on their own.

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