Healing Is My Hobby

Jessica Colarco

Discover what heals you—mind, body, and soul. Hosted by licensed therapist Jessica Colarco, Healing Is My Hobby is a cozy space where clinical wisdom meets real-life healing. Each week, we explore mental health topics like anxiety, stress, depression, and burnout—with simple tools and compassionate insight to help you feel better. But this isn’t just talk therapy. Jessica also takes you along on her own healing journey—whether she’s trying a salt cave, diving into a life-changing book, or experimenting with new wellness rituals. This podcast is your invitation to learn, grow, and play with what healing can look like in your own life. Because healing doesn’t have to be heavy. It can be curious. Creative. Even fun.

  1. 2d ago

    A Year of Healing: Season One Finale

    It's the Season One finale of Healing Is My Hobby! Jessica takes you on a month-by-month journey through everything we explored together this year — from grounding in October to identity in June. She revisits the biggest reframes, the healing lab experiments, and the tools that mattered most, then sends you into summer with five practical ways to carry your healing forward. Plus, a first look at what's coming next: weekly summer micro-episodes starting July 7th, and a Season Two reveal in September. In This Episode: A month-by-month recap of Season One's themes: grounding (October), burnout (November), social media and the nervous system (December), anxiety (January), regulation (February), trauma (March), grief (April), shame (May), and identity (June)The healing lab experiments that shaped the season — warm water therapy, slow crafting, and a four-day social media resetThe reframe that changed everything: "What happened to me?" instead of "What's wrong with me?"Why regulation isn't the same as being calm — and why it's not selfishThe difference between guilt and shame, and why shame heals in relationshipFive tips for carrying your healing into summer: keep one tool, regulate before the chaos hits, let grief move, protect your digital peace, and do something slow just becauseAn announcement: Healing Moments, a summer series of short weekly micro-episodes starting Monday, July 7thA tease for Season Two, launching in September Key Takeaways: Healing doesn't have to be complicated — sometimes it's a five-minute journal entry or a single boundary.Burnout recovery needs small, consistent moments of nervous system repair, not a two-week vacation.Your worth is not measured in likes. Post and leave. Share and close the app.Anxiety isn't your enemy — it's your nervous system trying to protect you.You don't have to justify your grief. If it mattered, losing it deserves space.Shame collapses inward; guilt can be a compass. Shame heals when it's witnessed.Identity is the story you carry about who you are — and you get to author it yourself.You are not a project to fix. You are a person to support. What's Next: Starting Monday, July 7th, join Jessica every week this summer for Healing Moments — short micro-episodes with a guided breathing practice, a journal prompt, or a small action step to keep you supported all summer long. Season Two begins in September. Connect with Jessica: 📩 Sign up for the newsletter at healingismyhobby.com 📷 Follow on Instagram: @healingismyhobby ▶️ Subscribe on YouTube: Healing Is My Hobby 🩺 Learn more about Jessica's clinical practice: https://jessicacolarcolcsw.com/ 📷 Follow her clinical work on Instagram: @jessicacolarcolcsw healing, season one recap, nervous system, grounding, burnout, social media detox, anxiety, regulation, trauma, disenfranchised grief, ambiguous loss, shame vs guilt, identity, self-compassion, mental health podcast, summer wellness, healing moments, micro episodes, trauma-informed, somatic healing

    12 min
  2. Jun 22

    The Healing Lab: Auditing Your Labels

    Are the stories you tell about yourself actually true — or are they ones you inherited, adapted, or took on to survive? This month's Healing Lab experiment is deceptively simple: spend seven days noticing every fixed label you use to describe yourself, and ask one question — is this true, or is this adapted? In this episode, Jessica walks you through the clinical framework behind this experiment (narrative therapy and the research of psychologist Dan McAdams), explains how repeated self-stories literally become the self we inhabit, and guides you through a small but powerful practice: catching the story, holding it up to the light, and trying a gentle rewrite when you're ready. This isn't about tearing yourself down. It's about getting intentional — keeping what's genuinely yours and loosening your grip on what was never really yours to begin with. This week's experiment: For the next seven days, notice every time you use a fixed label to describe yourself — out loud or in your head. Pause and ask: is this actually who I am, or is this who I learned to be? If the answer is adapted or inherited, try one small rewrite. Not a declaration — just something a little more honest and a little more spacious than the original. Want to stay in the know? Subscribe to our newsletter here. Contact Jessica here. Let's connect: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/healingismyhobby/ | YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@healingismyhobby | Would you like to learn more about Jessica's clinical practice? Click here. Resources & Links: Narrative therapy and the self-narrative research of Dan McAdams identity therapy, narrative therapy, fixed labels, self-concept, adapted roles, who am I, identity healing, inner narrative, self-limiting beliefs, IFS, parts work, emotional healing podcast, mental health podcast, anxiety therapy, LCSW podcast, healing podcast for women, self-awareness, internalized beliefs, identity work, Jessica Colarco LCSW

    6 min
  3. Jun 16

    This Might Be a Trauma Response: Identity Disruption and the Path to Integration

    You've been going through your life and somewhere along the way, you stopped recognizing yourself. Maybe you feel like you're watching from the outside. Maybe you wake up and wonder if this is actually your life. If that resonates, this episode is for you. In this final episode of June's Identity series, Jessica puts a clinical name to an experience so many people are quietly living: identity disruption. She breaks down what's actually happening in the brain and nervous system when trauma, chronic stress, or major life transitions crack your sense of self open, and she makes a distinction that matters deeply: identity collapse versus identity evolution. This episode is a reminder that the disorientation you're feeling isn't a breakdown. It's a becoming. What You'll Hear: What identity disruption is and why it's a recognized psychological phenomenon, not a personal failingHow the brain disconnects you from a felt sense of self as a protective response to trauma and chronic stressThe spectrum of depersonalization and derealization, including the subtle, low-grade versions most people have learned to live withWhy major life transitions (divorce, loss, parenthood, career changes, ending defining relationships) can destabilize identity at the rootThe difference between identity collapse and identity evolution, and why they can feel identical from the insideWhat integration actually means, and why it's not about going back to who you were beforeWhy the distortion isn't the problem; it's the passage Connect With Jessica: Sign up for the newsletter at healingismyhobby.comFollow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/healingismyhobby/Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@healingismyhobbyLearn about Jessica's clinical practice at jessicacolarcolcsw.com | @jessicacolarcolcsw identity disruption, trauma response, identity crisis, depersonalization, derealization, identity collapse, identity evolution, core self, adapted self, IFS therapy, chronic stress, nervous system, life transitions, grief and identity, divorce recovery, major life change, who am I, PTSD and identity, trauma and self, integration and healing, midlife identity, self-concept, psychological healing, trauma-informed therapy, anxiety and identity, healing is my hobby, Jessica Colarco LCSW

    6 min
  4. Jun 8

    Therapy Is My Cardio — Who Are You Without Your Roles?

    A guided identity workout to help you sort the roles you've chosen from the ones you've just been carrying. Episode Overview This episode is part of the June identity series and follows Episode 1's exploration of where identity comes from. In this Therapy Is My Cardio segment, Jessica guides listeners through a structured, journal-based workout to surface their roles — and honestly assess which ones were chosen, which were inherited, and which were born out of survival. Just like a real workout, this episode has a warm-up, a hard middle, and a cool-down. Listeners are invited to grab a journal or simply move through the exercise in their heads — but either way, show up ready to be honest. What You'll Explore in This Episode How to identify all the roles you currently hold — including the invisible onesA three-category sorting framework: Chosen, Inherited, and Survival rolesWhy high-achieving, high-functioning people often find their most defining roles in the Inherited and Survival categoriesHow survival roles quietly become personality — and what it costs us when we stop questioning themA closing reflection question to sit with through the week The Role-Sorting Exercise Step 1 — List Your Roles Write down every role you currently hold. Include the obvious ones (mom, partner, employee, friend) and the invisible ones — the peacemaker, the one who holds it together, the responsible one, the helper, the one who's always fine. Step 2 — Sort Into Three Categories Chosen — Roles you actively want. They feel like you. You'd choose them again. Inherited — Roles given to you by your family, culture, birth order, gender, or social expectations — already in place before you had a say. Survival — Roles you took on because you had to. They kept you safe, kept the peace, helped you belong or avoid conflict or earn love. They were never consciously chosen — they were adaptive. Step 3 — Look at the Whole Picture Where did most of your roles land? If the bulk of your most defining roles are in Inherited or Survival — that's not a weakness. It's what happens when we grow up in systems that had needs, and we were the ones who met them. This Week's Reflection Question "If you removed every role that was assigned to you, every role you took on to survive, to belong, to keep the peace — who would be left?" You don't have to answer it today. Let it sit. The blank space you feel when you try — that's not emptiness. That's possibility. That's the beginning of choosing yourself on purpose. Coming Up Next Week In Episode 3 — the Healing Lab — Jessica builds directly on this exercise. She'll try a personal practice around identity and roles and report back on what she discovered. If this episode stirred something in you, next week takes it further. Connect & Stay in the Loop Sign up for the newsletter at healingismyhobby.com Follow on Instagram: @healingismyhobby Watch on YouTube: @healingismyhobby Learn about Jessica's clinical practice: jessicacolarcolcsw.com Follow Jessica on Instagram: @jessicacolarcolcsw identity, who am I, roles and identity, survival roles, inherited roles, chosen identity, IFS parts, people pleasing, overachiever, healing your identity, therapy is my cardio, identity work, self-discovery, role sorting, anxiety and identity, PTSD and identity, trauma and self-concept, high-functioning anxiety, identity healing, personal growth podcast, mental health podcast, women and identity, healing is my hobby, Jessica Colarco LCSW Good to go, or would you like to adjust anything — episode number, title, description copy, or the keywords?

    8 min
  5. Jun 4

    Your Identity Was Never Just Yours

    Have you ever done the work — named the trauma, grieved the losses, started releasing the shame — and then looked up and thought… who am I? That disorientation isn't a problem. It's actually the beginning of something important. In this episode, Jessica opens the June identity theme by introducing one of the most foundational questions in healing: where did your sense of self actually come from? Drawing on attachment theory and her clinical experience, she walks through the difference between your core self — the parts of you that were always there — and your adapted self — the version of you that learned how to survive. Most of us have spent so long living from the adapted self that we've lost touch with the core entirely. This episode is your invitation to start noticing the difference. In This Episode Why identity doesn't form in a vacuum — and who was shaping yours before you had any sayWhat attachment theory tells us about how we learned to see (or not see) ourselvesThe clinical distinction between your core self and your adapted selfJessica's personal story of performing the "Pinterest mom" identity — and what it cost herWhy every major life transition is both disorienting and an invitationWhat's coming next in the June series Resources & Links 🌿 Free worksheet — Core Self vs. Adapted Self: healingismyhobby.com/newsletter 📬 Newsletter: healingismyhobby.com/newsletter 📩 Contact Jessica: healingismyhobby.com 📸 Instagram: @healingismyhobby ▶️ YouTube: @healingismyhobby 🛋️ Clinical practice: jessicacolarcolcsw.com | @jessicacolarcolcsw identity healing, who am I, core self vs adapted self, attachment theory, identity development, trauma and identity, adapted self, healing journey, self-worth, identity after trauma, childhood roles, people pleasing, performing identity, inner child work, IFS therapy, self-discovery, anxiety and identity, LCSW podcast, mental health podcast, therapy podcast for women, healing is my hobby, Jessica Colarco

    7 min
  6. May 25

    The Shame That Lives in Your Body

    We close out May with the deepest layer of shame work yet. In this final episode of our shame and self-worth series, Jessica reframes shame not as a character flaw or a belief system — but as a trauma response. One that lives in the body, wires itself into the nervous system, and follows us long past the environments that first created it. This episode unpacks the neurobiology of shame, the connection between early attachment wounds and the shame we carry into adulthood, and what it actually looks like to begin healing at the level where the wound lives. If you've been listening all month, this is where it all comes together. What We Cover in This Episode Why shame is one of the most overlooked trauma responses in clinical practice — and why naming it changes everythingThe developmental picture: how early environments teach the nervous system that being fully yourself is dangerousThe dorsal vagal response (freeze and collapse) and why it shows up in shame — the heat in the face, the heaviness in the chest, the urge to disappearWhy you cannot think your way out of a shame response, and why the body has to be part of healingAttachment theory and shame: how early relational wounds travel into adult relationships and show up in patterns like over-apologizing, difficulty receiving, and interpreting neutral interactions as rejectionDan Siegel's window of tolerance and what it means for trauma-informed shame workFour somatic regulation practices you can use in the moment when shame gets activated Somatic Practices Mentioned Orient to your environment — slowly look around and name five things you can see to activate the social engagement systemSlow your exhale — inhale for 4 counts, exhale for 6–8 to activate the parasympathetic nervous systemFind a point of contact — feel your feet on the floor or your body in the chair to ground yourself when shame pulls you out of the presentName what's happening without judgment — neutral observation of physical sensation creates space between you and the response Key Concepts Referenced Dorsal vagal response / freeze and collapseWindow of tolerance (Dan Siegel)Attachment theory (John Bowlby)Polyvagal theorySomatic regulationTrauma-informed shame work Closing Reflection Healing shame doesn't happen all at once. It happens in layers — in moments of being witnessed and not rejected, in the slow practice of treating yourself as worthy even when part of you doesn't believe it yet. The shame that feels like the truest thing about you is not the truest thing about you. It is a wound. And wounds, when they receive the right care, do heal. Connect + Resources 📩 Subscribe to the newsletter at healingismyhobby.com💬 Contact Jessica📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/healingismyhobby/▶️ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@healingismyhobby🩺 Learn more about Jessica's clinical practice at jessicacolarcolcsw.com shame and trauma, shame as a trauma response, dorsal vagal response, freeze and collapse, nervous system and shame, window of tolerance, attachment theory and shame, John Bowlby attachment, somatic practices for shame, trauma-informed therapy, shame in the body, healing shame, self-worth, PTSD and shame, polyvagal theory, anxiety and shame, high-functioning trauma, insecure attachment, early childhood trauma, nervous system regulation, body-based healing, self-compassion, trauma response, inner child healing, Healing Is My Hobby podcast, Jessica Colarco LCSW

    14 min
  7. May 18

    Building a Self-Worth That Isn't Conditional

    Welcome to the Healing Lab — the episode where we stop talking about the work and actually start doing it. This month’s theme is shame and self-worth, and these experiments are rooted in something deeply personal: the belief that you cannot think your way into self-worth. You have to practice it. In this episode, Jessica shares two somatic and behavioral experiments designed to interrupt the pattern of conditional worth — and invites you into the lab alongside her. What We CoverThe clinical framework behind conditional worth and why it shows up so often in high-achieving womenWhy shame lives in the body — and why that’s where healing has to beginExperiment #1: The Enough Body Scan — a daily somatic practice anchoring worthiness in physical sensationExperiment #2: The Daily Commitment — two to three things each day that are purely for youJessica’s personal experience trying both experiments — what worked, what surprised her, what she’s keepingHow these two experiments work together — inside-out and outside-in — to meet in the middle The Clinical FrameworkWhen worth becomes conditional — when we believe we are only lovable while performing, producing, or caretaking — we stop giving ourselves permission to simply exist. The absence of self-directed care isn’t laziness. It’s the behavioral fingerprint of internalized shame. These experiments work at the behavioral level because we can’t always change the belief directly — but we can change the behavior. And when we start treating ourselves as worthy of care, the belief begins slowly to shift. Experiment #1: The Enough Body ScanOnce a day for two weeks, set aside five minutes for a slow, intentional body scan from head to toe. At each body part — your head, jaw, shoulders, chest, stomach, hands, and legs — offer a single phrase: “This is enough. You are enough.” This is not a relaxation exercise. It’s not about finding tension or tracking discomfort. It’s about anchoring the message “I am enough” in physical sensation — giving it somewhere to land for those who can’t yet access it cognitively. What to track: Does the phrase feel true, hollow, or somewhere in between?Does it begin to shift over the two weeks?Where in your body does it feel most resistant — and what do you make of that? Jessica’s experience: She chose to do this experiment in the shower each morning. It was immediately impactful, helped set her intention for the day, and shifted the way she inhabits her body. She’s keeping it. Experiment #2: The Daily CommitmentEvery day for two weeks, do two to three things that are purely for you. Not for your kids, partner, clients, or boss. Just for you — without needing to earn them first. You are someone you made a commitment to. Show up for yourself the way you show up for the people you love. Ideas to spark your own list: Making yourself something you actually want to eatMoving your body in a way that feels genuinely good, not obligatorySitting outside for 10 minutes with no agendaReading something purely for pleasure, not for growth or informationDoing something creative just because it’s enjoyable — baking, painting, crafting, whatever is yoursPutting on music you love and actually sitting with itA slow bath or long, unhurried showerWatching something you enjoy without guilt or multitasking alongside itA cup of something you love, made slowly, with nowhere to be What to track: Write down your two to three things each dayAt the end of each week, ask: How hard was it to follow through? Did I negotiate with myself, minimize, or skip?What did the inner voice say when I tried to give myself something?Did that voice get any quieter by the end of the week? How These Experiments Work Together The body scan works quietly from the inside out — planting the message “I am enough” at the level of physical sensation, asking your body to practice receiving worth. The daily commitment works from the outside in — asking your behavior to demonstrate worth through concrete daily action. Together, they approach the same belief from two directions. The body scan softens the ground. The daily commitment builds the evidence. Over time, those two things meet in the middle — and that’s where the shift happens. A Note on Resistance For those who have run on conditional worth for a long time, these experiments may bring up guilt — the sense that you haven’t earned this yet, or that you’re being selfish. The voice that says: this is indulgent. That voice is not the truth. It’s the wound. The most powerful thing you can do when it shows up is not to argue with it — but to do the thing anyway. That “even when” is where the healing lives. Coming Up Next Week The final episode of May looks at shame through a trauma-informed lens — how it shows up in the body, how it lives in our nervous system, and what it actually means to heal it at that level. Connect & Stay in the Loop If you tried these experiments, Jessica wants to hear about it. Share what you noticed, what came up, and what surprised you. 📰 Newsletter: healingismyhobby.com 📸 Instagram: @healingismyhobby 🎥 YouTube: @healingismyhobby 💼 Clinical Practice: jessicacolarcolcsw.com self-worth, shame healing, conditional worth, somatic healing, body scan meditation, self-compassion practice, healing shame, worthiness, internalized shame, high-achieving women, therapy for anxiety, LCSW podcast, nervous system regulation, behavioral activation, self-care without guilt, healing is my hobby, Jessica Colarco, mental health podcast, trauma-informed therapy, inner critic, enough body scan, daily self-commitment, self-worth exercises, shame and the body, healing lab, self-worth practices, anxiety and perfectionism, people pleasing and worth, overcoming guilt, identity and self-worth

    16 min
  8. May 11

    When You're Ashamed of Your Own Feelings

    This is the Therapy Is My Cardio episode for May — which means we're not just talking about emotional shame today, we're doing the reps. If last week's episode gave you the clinical foundation (what shame is, where it comes from, and how it hides), this episode is where you put that understanding to work. Jessica walks you through the specific kind of shame that wraps itself around your feelings — the inner voice that calls you too much, too dramatic, too sensitive, or simply not allowed to feel what you feel. It's one of the quietest forms of self-abandonment there is, and today you're going to start unlearning it. In This Episode: What emotional shame actually is — and how it's different from general shameHow early experiences teach us that certain emotions are "wrong" — and what that does to a child's developing sense of selfThe clinical term for what happens next: emotional self-dismissal, and why it's so hard to recognize in yourselfWhy chronic emotional shame cuts you off from your own emotions as information — and the real consequences that has for your body, relationships, and sense of selfThe Warmup: a simple check-in practice to notice what feeling you've been pushing away before you even start the reps The Three Reps: Rep 1 — Name It: The neuroscience behind why labeling an emotion reduces its intensity, and how to create distance from shame-based thoughts using defusion language ("I am having the thought that...")Rep 2 — Reality Check the Story: A CBT-based framework using three questions to slow down the shame spiral and examine whether what you're telling yourself is actually true — or just old conditioning playing on a loopRep 3 — Self-Compassion: The rep people most want to skip, why compassion (not self-criticism) is what actually softens shame, and a short hand-on-heart practice to try right nowThe Cool Down: A simple weekly log practice — no journaling required — to track how often the inner critic is actually showing up, because you can't change a pattern you haven't seen clearly yet Mentioned or Referenced: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and shameDefusion techniques from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)The neuroscience of affect labeling ("name it to tame it")Self-compassion as a clinical intervention for shame Next Week: Jessica heads into the Healing Lab to share personal experiments around self-worth that isn't tied to production or performance. You won't want to miss it. Connect with Jessica: 📩 Newsletter & blog: healingismyhobby.com 📱 Instagram: instagram.com/healingismyhobby ▶️ YouTube: youtube.com/@healingismyhobby 🩺 Clinical practice: jessicacolarcolcsw.com emotional shame, ashamed of your feelings, too sensitive, emotional self-dismissal, inner critic, shame and emotions, healing shame, therapy for shame, self-compassion for shame, name it to tame it, affect labeling, CBT for shame, cognitive behavioral therapy shame, defusion technique, acceptance and commitment therapy, how to stop invalidating yourself, self-abandonment, self-worth, shame spiral, shame and the nervous system, emotional regulation, healing inner critic, self-compassion practice, shame and self-criticism, feelings are not wrong, Healing Is My Hobby, Therapy Is My Cardio, Jessica Colarco LCSW, mental health podcast, anxiety and shame, emotional healing podcast

    13 min

About

Discover what heals you—mind, body, and soul. Hosted by licensed therapist Jessica Colarco, Healing Is My Hobby is a cozy space where clinical wisdom meets real-life healing. Each week, we explore mental health topics like anxiety, stress, depression, and burnout—with simple tools and compassionate insight to help you feel better. But this isn’t just talk therapy. Jessica also takes you along on her own healing journey—whether she’s trying a salt cave, diving into a life-changing book, or experimenting with new wellness rituals. This podcast is your invitation to learn, grow, and play with what healing can look like in your own life. Because healing doesn’t have to be heavy. It can be curious. Creative. Even fun.

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