
In this episode, Patrick Teahan, MSW, dives into the complex world of intuition and safety: how childhood trauma can break our internal radar and how to tell the difference between a safe person and an unsafe one. He introduces a framework centered on Authenticity, moving beyond simple checklists of red flags to focus on the gut-level ick that signals when a person’s public performance doesn't match their private motives.
The episode begins with a nuanced workplace hypothetical: a new coworker who is "extra"—personable and welcoming, yet intense and slightly "performative."
Patrick uses this scenario to illustrate how trauma survivors often struggle with the "was it me or was it them?" dilemma, feeling triggered by the very people who claim to be helpful.
Listeners will learn:
- The Broken Radar System: Why trauma symptoms like shame, self-doubt, and attachment wounds act like high-CPU applications, slowing down and overriding your natural intuition.
- The "Car Without a Driver" Metaphor: How unsafe people often operate unconsciously, lacking the self-awareness to steer their own triggers and accountability.
- The Authenticity Framework: A deep dive into the three main signs of inauthenticity: moving too fast to bond, hiding motives/feelings, and an intense or provocative relational style.
- The Power of the "Ick": Why reconnecting with the emotion of disgust is a vital survival tool for those who were taught to ignore their boundaries.
- Deficit-Based Cues: How low self-worth, fear of abandonment, and naivety can lead survivors to mislabel foes as friends or overlook blatant warnings.
- Vulnerability vs. Performance: The difference between a truly authentic person who can risk disappointing you and a "performative" person who uses niceness to sell a false image.
Patrick also provides practical recovery insights, encouraging listeners to stop asking "Are they nice?" and start asking "Are they real?" By understanding how trauma hijacks our "audio preferences" (like the Zoom vs. Music Software analogy), survivors can begin to clear the "CPU" and trust their internal protective systems once again.
Keywords: childhood trauma, trauma recovery, intuition, red flags, authenticity, boundaries, attachment wounds, gaslighting, safe people, people pleasing, self-worth, emotional regulation, internal radar.
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