The Self-Trust Project

Bradley Rausch

The podcast that helps high-functioning overthinkers rebuild their operating system to replace anxious thoughts with confident actions.

  1. 11/12/2025

    061. Why You Keep Choosing the Same Pain

    Here's what you'll learn: The Difference Between Safety, Comfort, and Growth Most people crave stability, safety, and familiarity. Familiarity often feels good, but it doesn’t always promote growth. Comfort can be mistaken for peace; familiarity for safety. The brain prioritizes survival over growth. It favors what it knows, not what helps you evolve. Anxiety and fear amplify when facing new situations because the brain confuses predictability with safety. Staying in familiar discomfort (jobs, relationships, habits) feels safer than facing the unknown. The nervous system learns through exposure, not logic. You can’t think your way into confidence; you must act. Start with small, manageable discomforts. Don’t jump to “Mount Everest” level challenges before you’re ready. Build resilience through micro-discomforts, stacking small wins to create safety in the unfamiliar. Distinguish between two types of safety: Inherited safety: What you absorbed from childhood, family, or trauma as “safe.” Earned safety: The self-trust and confidence built through exposure and evidence. Inherited and earned safety often conflict, creating tension between who you were and who you’re becoming. Growth happens when you stop obeying fear rather than trying to eliminate it. Exercise: Create two columns: “What I learned was safe” and “What I know is actually safe.” Fill them with examples from work, relationships, and personal growth. Begin retraining your nervous system: Notice when “familiar” is disguising itself as “safe.” Choose one small new action that challenges that pattern. Reassure yourself afterward: “See, we handled it.” Building earned safety is how you teach your body that change is survivable. True growth doesn’t mean destroying comfort. It means redefining what safety really is. The goal isn’t to chase discomfort endlessly but to stop confusing comfort with peace.

    8 min
  2. 11/05/2025

    060. What No One Tells You About Surviving a Breakup

    The Self-Trust Project: How to Heal After a Breakup Episode Summary Bradley shares an unfiltered reflection on the six months following his breakup Focuses on emotional recovery, nervous system regulation, and rebuilding identity Offers three mindset reframes and five tactical steps for anyone healing from a major ending Core Themes Breakups dismantle your sense of safety, self-trust, and identity Emotional chaos is part of your nervous system recalibrating Healing is non-linear and cannot be rushed 3 Mindset Shifts Nothing is wrong with you for feeling this way Pain is a natural physiological response to loss Grief has no timeline Judging your emotions slows recovery Your emotions don’t need to make sense Disorientation and contradiction mean your body is processing Feeling better or worse without reason is normal Acceptance accelerates integration Pain is proof of self-respect Leaving what doesn’t serve you is an act of self-trust The heartbreak is the cost of choosing integrity With time, pain converts to confidence and self-belief 5 Tactical Practices Conserve energy consciously Acknowledge where attention goes Let yourself ruminate, but do it intentionally Direct even 1% of leftover energy toward yourself Walk daily Movement helps regulate emotion Walking processes feelings through the body Survive the first 10 seconds of a wave Don’t resist the surge Acceptance softens intensity faster Refuse resentment Anger keeps the bond alive Respect for the other person speeds emotional detachment Abandon the idea of linear healing Some days you’ll feel free, others shattered Both are valid parts of the same process Final Message You can’t skip the pain to reach clarity You traded comfort for self-respect Keep walking, breathing, and feeling Healing isn’t about moving on, it’s about moving with yourself

    23 min
  3. 10/22/2025

    058. How to Keep Going When the Feeling’s Gone

    Here's what you'll learn: The Motivation Myth and How to Build Automatic Progress Motivation is unreliable. It keeps you dependent, not consistent. Overthinkers confuse burnout cycles with growth. Real growth happens when progress becomes automatic. You don’t need motivation. You need systems that remove negotiation with yourself. Main Ideas Motivation fades. Systems sustain progress. Build conditions where doing the right thing is easy. Make progress automatic, not emotional. Success is repetition, not perfection. 4 Reasons You Keep Starting Over You attach identity to intensity You expect 100% every day. When you miss a day or fall short, you quit. Progress comes from showing up, not from being perfect. Grace means giving yourself permission to do it badly while learning. You lack a minimum viable identity You only define success by ideal conditions. On bad days, you collapse instead of adjusting. Create a baseline version of yourself that can still execute on hard days. You chase momentum instead of maintenance You rely on dopamine instead of discipline. When excitement fades, you stop. Train for maintenance. Build consistency that feels normal, not exciting. You measure evidence, not effort You wait for proof before continuing. Progress is delayed; effort is immediate. Track the promises you keep to yourself, not external validation. Key Frameworks Self-trust grows from effort, not outcomes. Define success by daily execution, not motivation spikes. Small, consistent progress compounds faster than sporadic bursts.

    13 min

About

The podcast that helps high-functioning overthinkers rebuild their operating system to replace anxious thoughts with confident actions.