Settle and Source Sourel

Angela M Carter

Welcome to Settle and Source Sourel, a sacred listening space for women who are ready to rise from the heaviness they have carried and return to the wisdom within. Each episode is a Sourel, a short voiced transmission set to sound, created from the work of Angela M. Carter, founder of Trauma Release Centre. A Sourel is a bridge between the nervous system and the soul, between survival and source, between the woman who has been holding everything together and the deeper feminine wisdom that has been waiting beneath the noise. These reflections are created for the woman who may have felt buried beneath old patterns, silenced by fear, dimmed by exhaustion, or held back by energies that were never truly hers to carry. Through words, sound and sacred presence, each Sourel offers an invitation to soften, awaken and begin moving out of the darkness that has kept her disconnected from her own light. The divine feminine is woven through every Sourel as nurture, protection, intuition, truth, creation and inner knowing. These are feminine light codes for the woman who is ready to remember herself. Not as something to force. Not as something to perform. But as something that may begin to rise from within when the system feels safe enough to listen. Every Sourel carries Angela’s words, Angela’s message and Angela’s thirty years of clinical and spiritual practice. Her work brings together trauma-informed therapy, Internal Family Systems, nervous system wisdom, somatic awareness and the sacred understanding that healing is not only about recovery. It is also about return. The voice is delivered by an assistant on Angela’s behalf, allowing her work to reach more women while honouring the very message she teaches, that women do not need to burn themselves out in order to serve, create, love or lead. A Sourel does not tell a woman who she is. It does not tell her what she must become. It opens a doorway. It offers a frequency. It creates a bridge back to the source within her. Settle in. Let the sound meet you gently. Let the light find what has been hidden. This is where the remembering begins. Find out more about creating a Sourel at www.traumareleasecentre.com

Episodes

  1. For the Woman Who Earns Everything She Gets

    1 day ago

    For the Woman Who Earns Everything She Gets

    Send us Fan Mail There is a kind of tiredness that has nothing to do with how much sleep you got. It comes from being always on. Always producing. Always monitoring how you are being received, whether you are doing enough, whether the people around you are satisfied, whether you have given sufficient evidence that you deserve to be here, to be loved, to be valued, to take up the space you are taking up. If that sounds familiar, this episode is for you. You are probably someone who works hard. Who follows through. Who shows up? Who delivers. And on the surface, that looks like ambition or dedication or simply being a responsible person. But underneath it, for many women, there is something else driving all of that effort. Something quieter and older and more personal than professional standards or high expectations. A belief that love has to be earned. Not a belief you would necessarily name out loud. Not something you would write down or admit to in conversation. But a belief that lives in the body. In the way you feel when you rest without producing anything. In the discomfort of receiving a compliment without immediately deflecting it. In the anxiety that arises when you disappoint someone. In the quiet, persistent sense that your worth is located not in who you are, but in what you do. This episode sits with that belief. Where it came from. Why it made sense. And what it is costing you to maintain it. For many women, this pattern has its roots in early experience. In homes where love was present but conditional. Where warmth arrived most reliably when you were good, helpful, easy, and impressive. Where the adults around you responded best to effort and achievement, and not making too much trouble. And where you, being perceptive and deeply wanting to be loved, learned very quickly what was required. You learned to perform. Not in a dramatic or conscious way. Simply in the ordinary, daily way of a child who is learning what keeps the people she loves close. What earns their warmth. What produces the response she is longing for? And you became very, very good at it. So good that the performance stopped feeling like a performance and started feeling like who you are. That is how deeply this pattern can run. Not as a choice you are making. As an identity you have inhabited for so long that it has become indistinguishable from your sense of self. And it follows you everywhere. Into your work, where resting feels like falling behind and doing enough is never quite enough. Into your relationships, where you give generously but find receiving complicated, where being needed feels safer than being loved, where the thought of someone being disappointed in you can produce a response that feels wildly disproportionate to the situation. Into your own relationship with yourself, where self-criticism arrives quickly after any mistake and where the standards you hold yourself to are ones you would never dream of applying to anyone else. Because here is the thing about performing for love. It never quite arrives at the feeling it is looking for. You can achieve enormously and still not feel enough. You can be deeply loved by people around you and still carry a private sense that it is conditional, that it is based on what you do rather than who you are, that it would shift if you stopped delivering. The performance never reaches a point where it is finished. Where you can finally rest and feel certain that you are loved simply for existing. That is the particular exhaustion of this pattern. It is not the exhaustion of having worked too hard this week. It is the exhaustion of a nervous system that has been running on the belief that love is something to be earned, for years, perhaps for decades. A nervous system that has never quite been given permission to stop proving. This episode does not offer a solution to that. What it offers is something quieter and perhaps more useful than a solution. It offers a space to sit with the pattern. To understand where it came from. To feel it acknowledged, not as a flaw to be corrected but as something that made complete sense given what you learned about love early in your life. Because you were not wrong to learn it. You were responding to the environment you were in. You were doing what any perceptive, sensitive child does, finding the behaviour that kept connection available, and repeating it until it became automatic. The question this episode gently invites you to sit with is simply this. What if that was never the only way? What if love, real love, the kind your nervous system has been working so hard to secure, was never actually contingent on your performance? What if you were already worthy of it, not because of what you do, but simply because you are here? That is not a simple question to sit with. For a woman who has spent years earning everything she gets, the idea of simply being enough, without the doing, can feel almost incomprehensible. Like a concept that applies to other people but not to her. This episode makes space for that complexity. It does not ask you to believe something you don't yet believe. It simply invites you to consider the possibility. To let the question land, however tentatively, and to notice what it feels like when it does. At the close of this episode, you will receive a quiet somatic invitation and one small practice. Not a task. Not homework. Just a single, gentle moment of letting yourself be received, without earning it, without offering anything in return. That is enough. That has always been enough. This is the first episode in Week Two of Settle and Source. Each week explores one pattern across three episodes, Tuesday, Thursday, and Sunday, moving from recognition through acknowledgement to invitation. You can listen to this episode on its own, or follow the full week as it unfolds. If something in this description has already found you, come in. Settle wherever you are. Let this one be for you. A Sourel from Angela M. Carter. Find more at traumareleasecentre.com. Settle and Source: The Podcast is created by Angela M. Carter, founder of Trauma Release Centre and a trained IFS therapist with over thirty years of clinical experience. Each episode is a Sourel: a short voiced reflection set to sound. Designed for the small pauses of a full life. Find Angela and more of her work at www.traumareleasecentre.com. If today’s reflection landed for you, share it with someone who needs it. That’s how a quiet message travels in a loud world.

    10 min
  2. Permission to Put One Thing Down

    3 days ago

    Permission to Put One Thing Down

    Send us Fan Mail There is something most people never say to the woman who holds it all together. You are allowed to put some of it down. Not all of it. Not through a dramatic overhaul or a difficult conversation or a plan for doing things differently. Just one thing. One small thing that was perhaps never entirely yours to carry in the first place. That is the invitation this episode offers. If you are someone who has spent years being the capable one, the reliable one, the one everyone turns to, this one is for you. Not because there is anything wrong with being that person. But because that way of living comes with a cost that rarely gets named. A quiet exhaustion that sleep doesn't quite fix. A rest that doesn't fully restore. A sense of going it alone, even in a room full of people who love you. For many women who carry a great deal, the weight has simply become so familiar that it no longer feels like something that was picked up. It feels like something they were born with. Like who they are, rather than how they learned to survive. This episode gently invites you to question that. Not to dismantle anything. Not to stop caring about the people and things you care about. Simply consider whether everything you are currently carrying was ever yours to carry. And whether one small thing, just one, might be possible to set down. There is something that happens to a woman when she begins to loosen her grip, even slightly. Something that opens up where the weight used to be. This episode is an invitation to begin finding out what that might feel like for you. Through a quiet somatic practice, you'll be invited to bring one thing to mind. Something you have been holding. Something that might not be entirely yours. And you'll be offered a small, physical gesture, nothing dramatic, nothing requiring anything other than a moment of willingness, that begins to practise the experience of having open hands. Not giving up. Not walking away from your responsibilities. Simply discovering that open hands can hold something new. That you can be loved, valued, and needed even when you are not carrying everything. That your worth was never located in what you were holding. This is a Sourel. A short, voiced reflection set to ambient sound, created by Angela M. Carter, a trauma therapist with thirty years of clinical practice. Sourels are designed to be listened to wherever you are. In the car. On a walk. In the five minutes before the day begins. They ask nothing of you except a moment of willingness to let something land. If something in this description has already found you, come in. Settle wherever you are. Let this one be for you. A Sourel from Angela M. Carter. Find more at traumareleasecentre.com. Settle and Source: The Podcast is created by Angela M. Carter, founder of Trauma Release Centre and a trained IFS therapist with over thirty years of clinical experience. Each episode is a Sourel: a short voiced reflection set to sound. Designed for the small pauses of a full life. Find Angela and more of her work at www.traumareleasecentre.com. If today’s reflection landed for you, share it with someone who needs it. That’s how a quiet message travels in a loud world.

    10 min
  3. The Cost of Being Strong

    6 days ago

    The Cost of Being Strong

    Send us Fan Mail There is a particular kind of exhaustion that doesn't show up on the outside. It isn't the tiredness that comes from a hard week, a late night, or a season of too much. It's something quieter than that. Something that has become the background of daily life. A low hum of readiness that never quite switches off. A rest that looks like rest from the outside but doesn't actually restore anything. A morning that begins already carrying the weight of everything that needs to be held together today. If you know that feeling, if something in you just quietly said yes to that description, this episode is for you. You are probably someone other people would describe as strong. Capable. Reliable. The one who holds it together. The one who figures it out. The one people turn to when things get difficult, because they know you will handle it. And you do handle it. You always handle it. That is not in question. What this episode is interested in is something that rarely gets named alongside all of that—the cost. Not as a criticism. Not as a reason to stop being who you are. Simply as an acknowledgement that strength built on self-sufficiency, on always being the capable one, on never quite needing anything, on managing everything yourself, comes with a price. And that price is worth naming out loud, perhaps for the first time. Because here is what tends to happen for women who carry a great deal for a long time. The exhaustion becomes structural. It stops being something that arrives after a hard day and lifts after a good night's sleep. It becomes the baseline. A low-level vigilance that the body maintains as a matter of course. Not acute stress. Just a quality of never being fully off. Never completely still. Never quite safe enough to fully exhale. The ability to receive quietly diminishes not all at once, and not through any conscious decision. But gradually, over time, the direction of giving becomes more familiar than the direction of receiving. An offer of help starts to feel uncomfortable rather than welcome. A moment of genuine care becomes something to deflect, minimise, or immediately reciprocate, so the balance is restored, and the discomfort passes. Being needed starts to feel more familiar than being loved. And the loneliness, the particular loneliness of always being the capable one, goes unnamed. Because from the outside, everything looks fine. Full life. Full diary. People who rely on you. And yet there is something quietly isolating about being the one who holds it all. About being so practised at giving that no one quite thinks to ask what you might need. About being so reliably strong that your own exhaustion becomes invisible, even to yourself. This is not a character flaw. This is not evidence that something is wrong with you. This is the shape of what it costs a person to adapt the way many women adapt. To become as capable, self-sufficient, and reliable as you have become. The adaptation made sense. It may have been exactly what your environment called for at the time. It may have protected you in ways that were real and significant. It may still be serving you in some areas of your life. It is simply that it came with a price. And that price deserves acknowledgement. Not fixed and not immediately acted upon. Just seen, clearly, and with some compassion. That is what this episode offers. Not a strategy. Not a list of things to change. Not a new system for doing less or setting better boundaries or finally putting yourself first, whatever that is supposed to mean for someone who has spent years making sure everyone else is taken care of first. Just a space. A quiet, unhurried space to sit with what carrying all of this has actually cost you. To let it be named. To let it be witnessed. And to perhaps begin to wonder, very gently, whether it still needs to work quite this hard. This is the second episode in Week One of Settle and Source. If you haven't yet listened to Tuesday's episode, This One's for the Woman Who Figures It All Out, you might want to start there. This episode goes deeper into what we named on Tuesday, and the two sit well together. On Sunday, we'll offer you something to try. Something very small. One thing, not everything, not a plan, just one thing, that you might be able to set down. But today, we're here to name the cost. If you're ready, come in. Settle wherever you are. And let this one find you. A Sourel from Angela M. Carter. Find more at traumareleasecentre.com. Settle and Source: The Podcast is created by Angela M. Carter, founder of Trauma Release Centre and a trained IFS therapist with over thirty years of clinical experience. Each episode is a Sourel: a short voiced reflection set to sound. Designed for the small pauses of a full life. Find Angela and more of her work at www.traumareleasecentre.com. If today’s reflection landed for you, share it with someone who needs it. That’s how a quiet message travels in a loud world.

    10 min
  4. This One's for the Woman Who Figures It All Out

    15 June

    This One's for the Woman Who Figures It All Out

    Send us Fan Mail Episode 1: For the Women Who Carry Too Much This first episode is for you if you’ve ever been the strong one, the steady one, the one everyone leans on. The one who keeps it together for everyone else and quietly wonders who holds it together for her. It’s for you if you’ve ever given too much. Achieved too much. Kept going when your body was asking for less. If you’ve ever stood in your own kitchen at the end of a long day and not been able to name what’s wrong, only that something is. If you’ve started to suspect that the way you’ve been living isn’t working, even though, by every external measure, it looks like it is. This episode is the doorway in. A note before you press play. Each episode of Settle and Source is what we call a Sourel. A Sourel is a short voiced reflection set to sound. A different kind of listening, designed to be received rather than consumed. You’ll notice it doesn’t sound like a typical podcast. That’s intentional. It’s quieter, slower, and built to land in the body, not just the mind. Settle in, and let it do what it’s meant to do. In the reflection that follows, we’ll sit with what it actually means to carry too much. Not the kind of carrying that makes the news. The quieter kind. The kind that lives in the shoulders, in the jaw, in the sleep that never quite restores. The kind that makes you efficient and successful and steady, while something inside you is asking for permission to put it down. We’ll name what so many high-functioning women already know but rarely say out loud: That being capable has become a cage. That the parts of you that work hardest are often the most tired. That somewhere along the way, you confused being needed with being valued, and being strong with being safe. We’ll also begin to gesture at something else. Not a fix. Not a five-step plan. Something quieter. The possibility that there’s another way to live, to work, and to give. A way that doesn’t ask you to abandon yourself to be of use. A way that starts not with doing more, but with finally stopping. If you’ve ever felt the pull to do it all and the cost of doing it all in the same breath, you’re in the right place. This is an invitation to listen differently. To take less from yourself, even just for the length of this reflection. To begin a conversation with the part of you that has been working overtime to keep you safe, and to consider, gently, that she might be ready to put some of it down. You don’t need to take notes. You don’t need to do anything with this. You just need to settle in. This is where the conversation begins. Settle and Source: The Podcast is created by Angela M. Carter, founder of Trauma Release Centre and a trained IFS therapist with over thirty years of clinical experience. Each episode is a Sourel: a short voiced reflection set to sound. Designed for the small pauses of a full life. Find Angela and more of her work at www.traumareleasecentre.com. If today’s reflection landed for you, share it with someone who needs it. That’s how a quiet message travels in a loud world.

    10 min

About

Welcome to Settle and Source Sourel, a sacred listening space for women who are ready to rise from the heaviness they have carried and return to the wisdom within. Each episode is a Sourel, a short voiced transmission set to sound, created from the work of Angela M. Carter, founder of Trauma Release Centre. A Sourel is a bridge between the nervous system and the soul, between survival and source, between the woman who has been holding everything together and the deeper feminine wisdom that has been waiting beneath the noise. These reflections are created for the woman who may have felt buried beneath old patterns, silenced by fear, dimmed by exhaustion, or held back by energies that were never truly hers to carry. Through words, sound and sacred presence, each Sourel offers an invitation to soften, awaken and begin moving out of the darkness that has kept her disconnected from her own light. The divine feminine is woven through every Sourel as nurture, protection, intuition, truth, creation and inner knowing. These are feminine light codes for the woman who is ready to remember herself. Not as something to force. Not as something to perform. But as something that may begin to rise from within when the system feels safe enough to listen. Every Sourel carries Angela’s words, Angela’s message and Angela’s thirty years of clinical and spiritual practice. Her work brings together trauma-informed therapy, Internal Family Systems, nervous system wisdom, somatic awareness and the sacred understanding that healing is not only about recovery. It is also about return. The voice is delivered by an assistant on Angela’s behalf, allowing her work to reach more women while honouring the very message she teaches, that women do not need to burn themselves out in order to serve, create, love or lead. A Sourel does not tell a woman who she is. It does not tell her what she must become. It opens a doorway. It offers a frequency. It creates a bridge back to the source within her. Settle in. Let the sound meet you gently. Let the light find what has been hidden. This is where the remembering begins. Find out more about creating a Sourel at www.traumareleasecentre.com