Afleveringen

  • Are patterns from your past impacting how you show up to your life and relationships today?

    How we learned to cope with childhood wounds and unmet needs often become the dysfunctional patterns that we live out in adulthood. This is one way that the impact of emotionally immature parenting can leak into our adult lives.

    Healing starts with noticing and naming these patterns. When we invite God’s spirit into this process, change begins. I talk about 2 ways that we may have reacted to emotionally immature parenting as children (internalizing or externalizing our pain), and how these childhood coping styles might be showing up in our adult lives today. In her research, psychologist Lindsey Gibson found that most children of emotionally immature parents are internalizers. I also highlight 8 common patterns of internalizers in adulthood and offer practical steps for change.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 

     

  • From the time we entered the world, we all began crafting a story that helped us make sense and give meaning to the painful things that happened to us.

    As we absorbed explicit and implicit messages from family members, authority figures, and peers about who we were and what the world expected of us, we gradually began forming a narrative that explained our lives to us
 a narrative that grooved itself deeply into our hearts. This story helped us, as children, to know what we needed to be and what we needed to do to stay safe in the world.

    However, this story becomes a broken story when lived out in adulthood. I talk about why it’s so important to get to know your childhood story, and I also offer some practical steps for exhuming the hurtful events, unchallenged, taken-for-granted beliefs, and unhelpful internalized messages from our childhoods that may still be ruling our lives today.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?

    Klik hier om de feed te vernieuwen.

  • We all need someone who reads us well and believes in us.

    This is the essence of what security feels like in a relationship: knowing that the other person sees you, understands you, and celebrates who you are. But what happens if you didn’t receive this kind of nurturing love as a child?

    There is essentially one way to provide this kind nurturing love that we all need to develop and thrive, but there are many ways to frustrate a child’s need for love. I talk about 3 things every child needs from their parents, and I also unpack 4 types of emotionally immature parents by psychologist Lindsey Gibson.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • Many of us have a confusing relationship with anger.

    Anger is a complex emotion that can create significant internal conflict, fueling both guilt and fear. Similar to anxiety, it’s a powerful force that can do great harm and also has great value. It’s such a physical emotion, and we can feel anger in our bodies with incredibly intensity. In this episode, I talk about 4 ways that that we tend to avoid anger, how we learned these strategies (and why they actually make sense), and practical ways that we can start to befriend and create space for a healthy expression of anger.

    I also talk about some common theological misconceptions about anger, and I highlight examples of Jesus expressing anger in the gospels and modeling how to speak on behalf of anger rather than from it.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • If emotional immaturity could be summed up in a sentence, it might be this: “it’s not me, it’s you.”

    People who are emotionally immature often engage in inappropriate or harmful behavior, and then revert to altering their perceptions of reality to fit what makes sense to them. They lack emotional sensitivity, are self-preoccupied, and often cause others to question reality instead of taking responsibility for their actions. In other words: “It’s your fault for what I did, not mine.”

    Personality patterns of emotional immaturity can be devastating to families and relationships. So how does emotional immaturity show up interpersonally? And how do we recognize signs of emotional immaturity? To continue our series on Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents, I highlight 15 personality traits associated with emotional immaturity. I also talk about how to know the difference between a pattern of emotional immaturity and a temporary emotional regression.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • Emotional loneliness is the kind of loneliness that you can feel even in the presence of others.

    It results from a lack of emotional connection, and it can sometimes be even more painful than being physically alone. It’s that feeling of being unseen
 a vague and private experience, not easy to recognize or find words for. While just as wounding as a physical injury, emotional loneliness is less obvious because doesn’t show on the outside.

    So many of us experience emotional loneliness. But what exactly is it? And where does it come from? To continue our series on “Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents,” I talk about what emotional loneliness is, how emotional loneliness is the result of unmet emotional needs during childhood, and some specific ways that emotionally immature parents can affect their adult children’s lives.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • Have you ever longed to be seen and known as the person you truly are? To share anything with someone and know that you’ll be understood, accepted, and validated?

    Emotional responsiveness is the single most essential ingredient of human relationships. Our relationships are built and sustained through emotional intimacy, and the feeling that someone is interested in taking time to listen and truly understand our experiences. But what happens if your parents were distant or emotionally unavailable? How did this impact you as a child? And how do these experiences continue to impact you as an adult?

    To start off our new series “Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents,” I talk about what emotionally maturity is (before talking about what it isn’t). This episodes highlights 15 characteristics of an emotionally mature person. I also talk about one possible reason why so many parents today are emotionally immature, and why emotional and spiritual maturity cannot be separated.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • Although we’re used to thinking of adults as more mature than their children, what if some children come into the world, and within a few years, are more emotionally mature than their parents? 

    In this next Faith & Feeling’s podcast series called “Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents,” we’re going to talk about the ways that emotionally immature parents impact their children’s lives. Through these episodes, you’ll discover ways to heal from the pain and confusion that come from having a parent who refuses emotional intimacy. You’ll also gain some insight into possible reasons why your parent’s emotional development stopped early.

    My hope is that these episodes will bring clarity and relief as you see that what you’ve been though has caused you to have these feelings. That you’re not the only one. And that it makes sense.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • Why does God sometimes feel so far away? The reason for this could be your attachment style.

    We all experience moments when God's love and presence are tangible. But we can also experience feeling utterly abandoned by God. Why? In this episode, I talk about how your early childhood experiences and attachment (or emotional bond) that you developed with your primary caregivers can influence your relationship with God. 

    Some of us have parents that make imagining a loving Father more difficult, and some of us have parents that make it easier. I describe each of the 4 attachment styles and explore how each style — developed from a pattern that we learned as children to maintain closeness with our primary caregivers — often translates to how we seek to maintain closeness with God. I also talk about 4 kinds of spiritually (secure, anxious, shutdown, and shame-filled) that can result from each of these 4 attachment styles. In other words, how might someone with a secure attachment experience God? How might someone with an anxious attachment experience God? 

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource emailWhen Your Spiritual Growth Feelings Frustratingly Slow with Chip Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • Do you get easily dysregulated? Or struggle to get back to a regulated state when you are dysregulated?

    There’s a reason for that. In this episode, I connect your present experiences of dysregulation to your relationship — or attachment — with your primary caregivers when you were growing up. You’ll see how the emotional environment that you were raised in, and the ways that your parents interacted with and responded to you, shaped the way your brain learned to regulate emotions. I also talk about what secure attachment is, how to know if you developed a secure attachment bond as a child, how the presence or absence of this bond is directly linked to to your ability to self-regulate (and reach out for help) today.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource emailWhen Everything Seems Out of Sorts with David Floge, LPC Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • We all have deep and inherent need for love and acceptance.

    But, as children, what happens when unconditional love and acceptance were not freely given? In small ways, many of us learn that a “packaging of self” is what is necessary to find approval and affirmation in the eyes of others. As we begin to develop and experience life in the context of our closest relationships and social circles, we learn that we are liked and accepted by constructing a version of ourselves that puts us in the most flattering light. Maybe if we help enough. Self-sacrifice enough. Do all the right things. Maybe then we will be loved. 

    In this conversation with a family friend, Ellen, she shares a recent story of dysregulation, triggered by a childhood belief that equated being perfect with being loved. She shares her own journey of growing in self-awareness, untangling this belief from her story, and learning to rest in the unmerited favor of God.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • I think everyone could testify to how imperceptibly incremental our spiritual growth can feel in some areas of our lives.

    If you’re like me, you often feel a disconnect between the theology that that you believe and the reactions that leak out of you in everyday life. Even though you know something is true in your head, it doesn’t seem to be shaping your heart or steering your hands. Sometimes you feel defeated because you don’t like how you’re acting, what your response was, or the way you sounded. But you don’t know how to change. You wonder if you’re doing something wrong. You wonder why God is working transformation into your life so frustratingly slowly.

    In this conversation with a family friend, Chip, he shares a recent story of dysregulation that puts words to all of these tensions so beautifully. We talk about what initiated a deep inner change in his life five years ago (after decades of following Jesus and years in full-time ministry), and he models how true spiritual growth and emotional maturity often begin with getting to know your story and learning to tell it more truly.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • “We all are born into the world looking for someone looking for us, and we remain in this mode of searching for the rest of our lives.” - Curt Thompson, MD

    But we all have those experiences of being unseen. Un-chosen. When care was not given. When no one came. Somewhere along the way, many of us learned to stop listening to our gut instincts. We learned to grit it out and turn off the messages of our healthy needs. We stopped crying out. We no longer asked for help because we didn’t want to be a burden on others, or we didn’t expect anyone to respond.

    This conversation with my friend Kylie is just so beautiful. Through her story, she names a deep-seated belief running throughout many of our stories: asking for help doesn’t change anything. You have to do it on your own anyway. We process the ways that not asking for help can become a learned trait, and when carried into adulthood, fuel patterns of striving, exhaustion, and inadequacy. We also talk about the ways that Kylie is learning to trust in God’s rest, responsiveness, and delight.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • What happens when the circumstances of life force you to grow up too quickly & shoulder a weight of responsibility or caretaking far beyond your developmental age? When our bodies carry the story of an interrupted adolescence into adulthood, how can this kind of trauma impact us? And how do we begin to heal?

    In this conversation, my friend Jonathan shares a recent experience of dysregulation: a chest-tightening, drowning sensation when too many people around him needed too many things. Together, Jonathan and I process how this everyday moment with his family strikingly paralleled some of his childhood experiences, and he names the longing inside so many of us with similar stories: “Can someone just take care of me?”

    We talk about what he wishes he could tell his younger self, and how the way we are in our bodies tells the story of who we’ve been up to this point in our lives.

    Check out Jonathan's book: Digging in the DirtGet Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • How we walk into a room will always carry evidence of our formation.

    The way we act, if we get big or small, whether our voices soften or louden, if our shoulders hunch or straighten, whether we anticipate acceptance or brace for unbelonging...it all tells a story. A story about something we’ve lived.

    In those moments when it feels like you don’t fit in and that shame-filled question wells up inside, “why can’t I just be normal like everyone else?”, there’s always a deeper question: what is your definition of “normal”? Where did it come from, and when did you learn that you did not meet that standard?

    This conversation with my friend Amina is just so beautiful. Through her story, she shows us that when we read rejection into a room, it’s roots can often be traced to pivotal moments of self-rejection in our childhoods that are still living inside of us today. Together, Amina and I process what it really looks like to belong, when to trust the invitation of others, and how to walk into a room as your own friend.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • We are in a series on Faith & Feelings all about emotional dysregulation. Another way to describe this term is the inability to control your insides. It’s those moments when everything seems out of sorts. All of us experience emotional dysregulation, but so many of us can get dysregulated without even realizing it. 

    Whether it looks like exploding or imploding, whether it feels like getting really angry or shutting down, dysregulating moments always point to something deeper. Something that needs to be noticed, named, and processed inside of us. How do we begin to notice & listen to what are bodies are trying to tell us?

    In this conversation with licensed therapist David Floge, we talk about what emotional dysregulation is, what it can feel like in our bodies, and practical ways to self-regulate. This conversation is such a fun combination of clinical insight and personal experience. My hope is that you’ll find it practical (and you’ll also laugh, because some of the stories that David and I share are really funny!).

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • Few things impact your minute-to-minute—life more than emotional dysregulation. 

    Another way to describe this term is the inability to control your insides. It’s that unexpected spiral into anger, anxiety, or insecurity. It’s what happening inside of you during that unsettling relational interaction.  It’s what’s going on when you burst into tears over losing your keys, or emotionally shut down when you feel like an outsider at a social gathering.

    A huge misconception about emotional dysregulation is that these overblown or shut-down reactions happen out of nowhere. When we mistake them for isolated events, we may feel embarrassed or perhaps a little perplexed, so we just keep going. We rush past them without a second thought, or we try to move on as fast as possible. 

    However, when big and seemingly illogical emotions, reactions, or behaviors come up in response to something, I’m learning that wisdom looks like slowing down and getting really curious about why we responded that way. There is always a reason why. In this episode, I highlight two key reasons why processing our own moments of dysregulation, and understanding the deeper story, is essential for our spiritual growth and emotional health.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • Have you ever walked away from a conversation or situation, feeling bewildered or embarrassed, and thought to yourself, “Why on earth did I do (or say) that?”

    We all have those disproportionate emotional responses to situations that typically wouldn’t affect us in such dramatic ways. You know in your head that your reaction was not rational, but your body was living out a different story. The counseling world has a term for these responses: emotional dysregulation. Many of us don’t realize that these revved-up reactions tell a story—a story about something we’ve lived. They point to a deep-seated something that has gone unaddressed in our hearts. 

    In our next podcast series called “Why On Earth Did I Do (Or Say) That?”, I’ll be inviting several guests to share a recent story of dysregulation
and together, we trace the deeper story. My hope is that these conversations will create a greater awareness, compassion, and curiosity about your own moments of dysregulation, and what might be underneath. 

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • Sometimes suffering lasts
and where is God in this? How do we find joy, hope, and love when life becomes undone? 

    When life doesn’t make sense, we need a theology of suffering that helps us expand to hold the brokenness & beauty of our world together. Over the last few months, we’ve been hearing from 8 wise, kind, and deeply authentic people about their stories of pain & sorrow, and what they’ve been learning about hope, lament, joy, and courage when life get really hard. In this episode, I wrap up our  “When Life Doesn’t Make Sense” series by sharing some of my reflections on the ways hardship shapes us, why the story we tell about our suffering matters, and how lament invites us back to a place of belonging in the bigger story that God is telling with our lives.

    *Some of the concepts of this episode were taken and adapted from The Theology and Psychology of Suffering by Tyler Staton.

    Last week's episode: The Things My Eating Disorder Taught MeGet Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__ 
  • Over the last 6 years of recovering from an eating disorder, I’ve known one thing to be true: mental health struggles are difficult to describe, and they can be exhausting to live with. It’s a daily waking up to an inner battle that can be overwhelmingly unnoticed by others, and there is a certain strength that is required to endure pain that lingers, especially when it’s unseen.

    As we wrap up our second podcast series “When Life Doesn’t Make Sense,” I share one of my stories when life hasn’t made sense: receiving an eating disorder diagnosis. Whether your story holds a similar diagnosis or a different kind of addiction/mental health struggle, or if you’re listening on behalf of a loved one, this episode is for you. I put some words to what mental health struggles can feel like, what my recovery journey has looked liked, and what my eating disorder has taught me along the way. I hope you’ll listen in.

    *In this episode, I mention suicide/suicidal ideation. If you’re thinking about suicide and need to talk to someone, call or text 988. If you are worried about someone, you too can call or text 988 to get resources. Remember: you matter. Please listen with care.

    Get Faith & Feeling's weekly resource email Watch this episode on YouTubeGrab a copy of my book Stop Saying I'm FineConnect with me on my website Find me on Instagram @__taylorjoy__