Shift With Beth

Beth Schild

Change is inevitable, but a "shift" is intentional. Welcome to Shift with Beth, a podcast dedicated to helping you navigate life’s transitions with clarity and confidence. Whether you’re looking to overhaul your career, improve your mental well-being, or simply see the world through a different lens, Beth explores the psychology and practical steps behind meaningful change. Each episode features solo deep-dives and expert interviews designed to help you stop overthinking and start shifting.

  1. Blending Families After Divorce: Creating Safety, Connection & New Traditions

    1 day ago

    Blending Families After Divorce: Creating Safety, Connection & New Traditions

    Blending families after divorce is one of the most emotionally complex experiences a family can go through. It can bring connection, love, healing, and beautiful new beginnings, but it can also bring grief, discomfort, nervous system overwhelm, and unexpected emotional challenges. What many people don’t talk about is that even when a blended family is built from love, the adjustment still impacts everyone involved. Children are navigating change. Parents are navigating guilt, fear, and responsibility. And underneath it all, multiple nervous systems are learning how to feel safe together. In a recent episode of The Shift with Beth podcast, Beth and her partner Randy shared their experience of blending their families together. Between the two of them, they’re raising seven children and learning in real time what it means to create connection, boundaries, emotional safety, and new traditions. Connection Cannot Be Forced One of the biggest lessons they shared is that connection takes time. When families blend, there can be pressure to make everyone instantly feel close, connected, and comfortable. Parents often want reassurance that the new family dynamic is “working.” But emotional safety doesn’t happen overnight. Kids need time. Relationships need time. Nervous systems need time. Instead of forcing closeness, Beth and Randy focused on creating opportunities for connection without pressure. During trips, shared meals, and family activities, they allowed relationships between the children to develop naturally. That approach created space for authentic connection instead of performative bonding. This is such an important reminder for blended families because children often feel overwhelmed by rapid change. Even positive change can feel dysregulating to the nervous system when routines, environments, and family structures suddenly shift. Why One-on-One Time Matters Another important part of blending families after divorce is maintaining individual relationships with your children. Many parents feel guilty wanting separate time with their own kids after remarrying or blending households. But children often need reassurance that they haven’t lost their parent in the process of gaining a new family. Beth and Randy talked about the importance of creating intentional one-on-one time with their children. Separate conversations, outings, and moments of connection help kids feel emotionally secure during major transitions. This doesn’t weaken the blended family dynamic. It strengthens it. Children who feel emotionally safe and connected individually are often more capable of building healthy connections within the larger family unit. Grief Can Exist Alongside Gratitude One of the most meaningful parts of the conversation was their openness around grief. Even in happy relationships, grief can still exist. Parents and children may grieve old traditions, previous family routines, holiday dynamics, or simply the familiarity of how life used to feel. That grief doesn’t mean someone regrets moving forward. It simply means change is emotional. Beth shared how difficult it initially felt to admit grief because she worried it might me...

    39 min
  2. Self-Abandonment Healing: How to Stop Losing Yourself in Relationships with Kendra Allen

    26 May

    Self-Abandonment Healing: How to Stop Losing Yourself in Relationships with Kendra Allen

    There comes a point in healing where you realize the deepest pain was never only about the relationship itself. It was about how much of yourself you lost inside of it. In this week’s podcast episode, Beth sat down with Kendra Allen from Heal Your Heartbreak for a powerful conversation about addiction recovery, heartbreak, nervous system healing, emotionally unavailable relationships, and self-abandonment. One of the most impactful moments in the conversation came when Kendra shared this: “If you ignore your inner compass long enough, you lose your true north.” That is exactly what self-abandonment feels like. It’s slowly disconnecting from yourself in order to maintain connection with someone else. And so many people do it without even realizing it. What Is Self-Abandonment? Self-abandonment happens when you consistently ignore your own needs, feelings, boundaries, truth, or intuition in order to feel accepted, loved, safe, or chosen. It can look like: Saying yes when you want to say no Avoiding difficult conversations Suppressing your emotions Over-functioning in relationships People pleasing Ignoring red flags Staying in emotionally unhealthy dynamics Shape-shifting to avoid rejection Prioritizing everyone else’s needs over your own Over time, this disconnects you from your authentic self. And eventually, many people wake up feeling emotionally exhausted, resentful, anxious, disconnected, or unsure of who they really are. Why We Learn to Abandon Ourselves Most self-abandonment patterns begin long before adult relationships. They usually develop as survival strategies. For many people, being agreeable, emotionally easy, hyper-independent, helpful, or low maintenance became the safest way to maintain connection growing up. The nervous system learns: “If I become who other people need me to be, I’ll stay safe.” These patterns often continue into adult relationships without conscious awareness. That’s why emotionally unavailable relationships can feel so addictive. They activate old survival patterns that feel familiar to the nervous system. As Beth and Kendra discussed in the episode, healing is not only about finding healthier relationships. It’s about becoming aware of the ways you disconnect from yourself inside relationships. The Link Between Heartbreak and Healing One of the most powerful parts of the conversation was hearing Kendra share how heartbreak became the catalyst for her healing journey. After years of unhealthy relationship dynamics, she realized that even sobriety had not automatically healed her relationship patterns. She spoke openly about people pleasing, chasing emotionally unavailable partners, and learning how to stop abandoning herself for connection. This is something so many people experience after heartbreak. A breakup often forces us to...

    1hr 4min
  3. Part 2: Finding Love Later in Life

    14 Apr

    Part 2: Finding Love Later in Life

    Most people believe relationships begin with a single moment—a first conversation, a spark, or an instant connection that feels like everything just clicked. But what often gets overlooked is everything that came before that moment. The healing, the endings, and the quiet internal shifts that changed who you are. The truth is, relationships don’t just begin when you meet someone. They begin in the seasons where you are learning how to come back to yourself. Timing Isn’t Random When something feels aligned, it’s easy to think it simply happened at the right time. But timing is rarely accidental. It’s often the result of who you’ve become. The boundaries you’ve learned to hold, the patterns you’ve started to recognize, and the ways you’ve begun choosing yourself differently all shape what you are available for. They also influence what feels right to you. Something that once felt exciting may no longer feel aligned, while something that once felt unfamiliar may now feel safe. This is why timing matters so much in relationships. You don’t just meet people based on chance. You meet them based on where you are. Healing Changes What You Accept As you grow, your relationships naturally begin to shift. Sometimes that means outgrowing people. Not because anyone did anything wrong, but because you’re no longer the same version of yourself. This can feel uncomfortable, and there can be grief in letting go of what once felt normal. But it also creates space—space for something that reflects who you are now, not who you used to be. That’s often where more aligned relationships begin. Why Vulnerability Feels So Hard One of the biggest challenges in relationships isn’t connection. It’s vulnerability. For many people, vulnerability doesn’t feel natural. It can feel exposed, unfamiliar, and even unsafe. And that’s usually because, at some point, it was. Maybe your emotions weren’t fully received. Maybe being open led to rejection or misunderstanding. Maybe you learned that being “too much” created distance instead of connection. So your system adapted. It learned to protect you by staying guarded, holding back, and only revealing parts of yourself that felt safe enough. This isn’t a flaw. It’s a response. It’s how your nervous system learned to keep you safe. When Healthy Feels Unfamiliar One of the most unexpected parts of healing is how different healthy relationships can feel. There’s often less anxiety, less guessing, and less emotional intensity. Instead, there is steadiness, clarity, and consistency. But because it’s different from what you’re used to, it can feel uncertain at first. You might question it or wonder if something is missing. Often, what feels unfamiliar isn’t wrong. It’s simply new. Emotional Safety Changes Everything Vulnerability becomes possible when there is emotional safety—not just with another person, but within yourself. When you trust yourself to handle your emotions, set boundaries, and stay connected to your truth even in discomfort, something shifts. You begin to open in a different way. Not from pressure or the need to prove anything, but from a grounded place of self-trust. The Moments That Quietly Shape Everything When you look back on your life, it’s often not the big moments that changed everything. It’s the small ones. A conversation you almost didn’t have. A decision that didn’t feel significant at the time. A moment where you chose yourself in a new way. These are the moments that quietly shift your direction. Over time, they lead you somewhere different—somewhere more aligned.

    1hr 4min

About

Change is inevitable, but a "shift" is intentional. Welcome to Shift with Beth, a podcast dedicated to helping you navigate life’s transitions with clarity and confidence. Whether you’re looking to overhaul your career, improve your mental well-being, or simply see the world through a different lens, Beth explores the psychology and practical steps behind meaningful change. Each episode features solo deep-dives and expert interviews designed to help you stop overthinking and start shifting.

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