In this episode, I open up about the moments Iâve tried hardest to forget â the silence, the betrayal, and the heavy truth that I let it happen.
Itâs a raw reflection on what it means to be blamed, erased, and left behind, while still finding the courage to take back your story.
This isnât about blame. Itâs about honesty â the kind that hurts before it heals.
If youâve ever looked back at something that broke you and whispered, âHow did I let that happen?â, this episode is for you.
Life can get noisy. Between work, responsibilities, and the constant pull of the world around us, itâs easy to miss the small, quiet moments that truly matter. In this episode, I reflect on the subtle joys, fleeting connections, and overlooked experiences that often slip by when life feels overwhelming. Through personal stories, reflection, and gentle prompts for awareness, we explore how slowing down and noticing the little things can reconnect us to ourselves, others, and the world in ways we often forget.
If youâve ever felt like life is moving too fast to catch the beauty in the everyday, this episode is for you.
In this episode, I open up about something Iâve always struggled with â appearing âokayâ on the outside, even when everything inside me is falling apart. Itâs easy to convince the world that youâre fine, but behind that mask is a quiet kind of exhaustion that slowly breaks you down.
This past week has reminded me how dangerous it can be to keep everything bottled up â to tell people youâre just âunwellâ when really, youâre unravelling. I talk about how pretending to be strong can isolate us from the very people who could help us heal, and how the belief that asking for help is weakness couldnât be further from the truth.
If youâve ever felt like you have to face your battles alone, or like reaching out might be a burden, I hope this episode reminds you that you donât have to do it all on your own. Because strength isnât about surviving in silence â itâs about allowing others to stand beside you when the war gets too heavy.
đ Listen now â you never have to go to war alone.
This episode explores one of the most misunderstood parts of healing: why we grieve the very lives, loves, and routines that nearly destroyed us. Leaving a toxic relationship or life doesnât just bring freedom â it brings emptiness, loneliness, and a strange ache for what once felt familiar.
I talk about the quiet grief of walking away, the hollow space healing creates, and the temptation to mistake missing for needing. This isnât a conversation about weakness â itâs about being human, about learning to hold the ache without running back, and about making peace with the truth that we sometimes miss what hurt us most.
If youâve ever left behind a toxic life and wondered why the grief still lingers, this episode is for you.
Weâre told to âjust get on with it.â To push through. To smile, cope, and endure without complaint. But what does that actually cost us? In this episode, I explore the heavy toll of always powering through â the exhaustion, the isolation, the anger, and the invisible weight we carry when we bury our pain.
Itâs raw. Itâs honest. And itâs a reminder that real strength isnât silence â itâs allowing ourselves to feel, to speak, and to be human.
Tune in as we uncover the true price of getting on with it and why breaking the cycle is the first step toward real healing.
Sometimes, survival means keeping parts of yourself hidden. In this deeply personal episode, I explore the âart of holding backâ â a skill I learned as a teenager and carried into adulthood. From carefully edited truths to protecting others at the expense of my own wellbeing, I share what itâs like to live behind a filter, the cost of internalising pain, and the moments that remind me just how heavy silence can be.
This episode dives into real-life experiences, from school and work to life-threatening situations, and reflects on how holding back shapes our relationships, our sense of safety, and our ability to heal. Itâs raw, honest, and ultimately about the slow, difficult process of reclaiming your voice.
Trigger warning: This episode discusses trauma and emotional suppression.
Thereâs a growing misconception that ADHD in women has become a trend â a fashionable label, the âin thingâ right now. But the truth is very different. For decades, girls and women were overlooked, their symptoms masked, their struggles misunderstood. What looks like a sudden surge in diagnoses isnât about fashion â itâs about recognition.
In this episode, I share my own story of masking, self-blame, and finally finding answers. Weâll explore why women are so often diagnosed later in life, how research and awareness have caught up, and why dismissing these experiences as a trend is not only wrong, but deeply harmful.
If youâve ever wondered why you felt âdifferentâ but couldnât explain it, or if youâve carried the weight of being called lazy, disorganised, or not enough â this conversation is for you. ADHD in women isnât a trend. Itâs a truth finally being seen.
Recovery isnât always neat or Instagram-ready. In this episode, I share the messy, unseen side of healing â the setbacks, the quiet victories, and the progress that still counts even when it doesnât look like recovery.
âNature vs. nurtureâ makes it sound like thereâs a winner. In my life, both shaped meâand so did a quiet rule I learned young: donât share, just get on with it. In this episode, I tell the story of how that rule became my armour and my isolation. I carried it into every roomâfamily, friendships, workâuntil speaking up felt dangerous and staying silent felt like strength. I share the seasons where I thought Iâd been chosen, the moment that illusion cracked, and the narrowing that followed: the cold logic that convinced me nobody would care if I disappeared. This isnât a blame story. Itâs a context storyâabout longing to be wanted without being seen as a problem, and about what it costs to carry everything alone. If any part of this sounds like you, I hope you feel less alone here.
Content note: Mentions suicidal thoughts and an attempt (no graphic detail). UK support in notes.
Resources (UK): Samaritans 116 123 (24/7) ⢠Text SHOUT to 85258 (24/7) ⢠NHS 111 for urgent mental health help ⢠PAPYRUS HOPELINE247 0800 068 4141 (under 35). In an emergency, call 999.
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A reflective, no-checklist conversation about conditional approval and the ache of trying to please people who wonât be pleased. We talk about the whiplash of âIâm proud of you⌠but,â why hope keeps sending us back, and the relief of stopping the audition for love. Gentle, honest, and humanâthis oneâs about remembering you were never hard to love.
This episode sits with the uncomfortable truth: sometimes our struggles spill over and children end up standing in the puddles. We talk about the moments they shouldnât have had to know, the times we took our eye off the ball, and why âwise beyond their yearsâ isnât always a compliment. No to-do listâjust an honest, compassionate look at impact over intent, presence over perfection, and the promise to let kids be kids.
In this second episode of the Protecting Your Peace mini-series, we explore a kind of exhaustion that often goes unnoticed â the weight of emotional labour.
I share honestly about the invisible work of carrying other peopleâs feelings, always being âthe strong one,â and the way this hidden load slowly builds into burnout.
Together, weâll look at:
⨠What emotional labour really looks like â and why itâs so hard to spot
⨠How burnout creeps in quietly before you even realise itâs happening
⨠Gentle, practical steps to recognise your limits and protect your energy
⨠Why you are not failing â you may simply be emotionally exhausted
This is an episode for anyone who feels drained without knowing why, who dreads small requests, or who silently holds everything together while slowly coming undone.
Because protecting your peace isnât just about boundaries â itâs about learning to put down what was never yours to carry.
In this opening episode of the Protecting Your Peace mini-series, I explore one of the hardest but most necessary parts of healing â learning how to say no without drowning in guilt.
We start with an honest check-in about what happens when we fall back into old patterns of people-pleasing and over-giving, and how easy it is to lose ourselves while trying to be âgoodâ for everyone else.
Through gentle reflection and lived experience, I unpack why saying no can feel like rejection, how guilt shows up inside the body, and why we so often prioritise other peopleâs comfort over our own peace.
I also share practical, compassionate steps for starting to set boundaries â from asking for time before responding, to reminding yourself that ânoâ doesnât mean âI donât careâ.
This is a conversation for anyone who feels tired, stretched thin, or quietly resentful â and needs the reminder that protecting your peace is not selfish⌠itâs essential.
For so many of us, survival isnât just something we went through â itâs something our bodies learned.
Years of stress, trauma, instability or crisis can rewire the nervous system to see danger even when none exists.
In this episode, we explore what happens when life finally becomes calm⌠and it doesnât feel safe.
Why do peaceful moments feel unfamiliar?
Why do we keep searching for something to go wrong â even when everything is okay?
And how do we begin to unlearn that constant state of high alert?
Through honest reflection and gentle prompts, we talk about:
⢠Living in fight-or-flight for years
⢠The discomfort of calm after chaos
⢠How to recognise when your brain is âsearchingâ
⢠Practising safety, rest, and acceptance in real time
If youâve ever struggled to relax because things are going well â this episode is for you.
The Weight of Suicide: On Both Sides
Suicide is one of the hardest conversations weâll ever have â but itâs one we canât keep avoiding.
In this deeply personal episode, we explore the reality of suicide from both perspectives: being the one in that place, and being the one left behind. We talk about why itâs so hard to discuss, the messy truth of the aftermath, the myths that cause harm, and the moments that stay with you forever.
This is an honest, unfiltered conversation about pain, love, anger, and the complexity of healing â because the only way to break the silence is to speak.
We all have ways of getting through the hardest days â the habits, distractions, or escapes that help us survive. But what happens when the very things keeping you afloat start pulling you under?
In this episode, we explore the messy truth about coping mechanisms: how they can protect us in the moment, yet slowly hurt us over time. We talk about why itâs so hard to let go of unhealthy patterns, how to recognise when your âgo-toâ is causing more harm than good, and what it really takes to build healthier ways of managing lifeâs pain.
This isnât about shame â itâs about awareness, compassion, and small, brave steps towards change. Because your coping might have kept you alive, but you deserve tools that help you truly live.
đŹ Trigger warning: This episode discusses trauma, mental health struggles, and self-destructive behaviours. Please listen at your own pace.
Not ill enough.
Thatâs what I was told after trying to end my life.
In this deeply personal episode, I share the story behind my new campaign â Donât Make Me Prove It â and why one chance to ask for help should be enough. From being turned away in crisis to the dangerous message that ânext time, do it properly,â I talk openly about the failures in our mental health system that are costing lives every day.
This isnât just my story â itâs the story of countless people who have been told they donât qualify for urgent help until itâs nearly too late. And itâs time for that to change.
Iâll walk you through the uncomfortable truths we need to face, the three urgent demands of this campaign, and how you can be part of the fight for reform.
Because our mental health system isnât a safety net â itâs a coin toss. And too many of us are losing.
Content warning: This episode contains discussion of suicide and self-harm. Please listen with care.
In this deeply honest episode, we explore the messy, complicated reality of holding on when life feels heavy. From the quiet exhaustion that comes after crisis to the unexpected confusion of finding safety, this is a conversation about the parts of healing we donât talk about enough.
We talk about the moments when asking for help feels harder than pretending to be okay, the pull of old coping mechanisms, and the strange comfort that chaos can hold â not because it was good, but because it was familiar.
If youâve ever felt lost after leaving survival mode⌠if youâve struggled to offer yourself the same compassion youâd give someone else⌠if youâve wondered who you are without the battles youâve fought â this episode is for you.
Because even when healing feels slow, even when you canât be gentle with yourself yet, the fact that youâre still here is enough.
In this deeply personal and powerful episode, I open up about what really happened behind the scenes of my teaching career â the parts most people never saw.
This isnât just a story about burnout or leaving a job. Itâs about giving everything to a role you love⌠and still being made to feel like you didnât matter the moment you started to struggle.
I talk honestly about the years I spent fighting to become a teacher, how hard I worked to stay, and the heartbreaking way it all came to an end. But this episode isnât just about me â itâs about every person who has been made to feel replaceable, every person whoâs been punished instead of supported for being unwell, and every voice thatâs stayed silent because they were afraid no one would listen.
Because the truth is â this isnât just my fight. Itâs all of ours.
đ Tune in if youâve ever felt overlooked, broken by a system you believed in, or are ready to change how we treat mental health in the workplace.
In the final episode of the belonging mini-series, I speak directly to the ones who feel too broken, too complicated, or too much to ever truly belong.
We talk about:
đŹ Why being someone youâre proud of matters more than pleasing others
đ Making peace with your story and your scars
đą Understanding that healing doesnât make you âbelongableâ â you always were
đ¤ How belonging is often found in the quiet loyalty of the people who stay
This is your reminder that your worth has never depended on being âfixed.â You belong here. You always have.