The Connection Code with Rachel and Jeana

Jeana Anderson Cohen and Rachel Gillman Rischall

The Connection Code is a show about the relationships that make your life and work just a little bit better.

  1. Why Oversharing Builds Better Friendships featuring Leslie John

    3D AGO

    Why Oversharing Builds Better Friendships featuring Leslie John

    What if oversharing isn’t something to fix, but something to use? This week on The Connection Code, we’re joined by Leslie John. She's a behavioral scientist, Harvard Business School professor, and author of Revealing: The Underrated Power of Oversharing Together, we unpack one of the biggest myths about connection: that saying “too much” is a social mistake. Leslie explains why what we call oversharing is often just … sharing and why it’s one of the most powerful tools we have to build trust, deepen relationships, and move from acquaintance to real friendship. We talk about: The science behind self-disclosure and why it literally activates the brain’s pleasure centers The “overshare hangover” (and why it’s usually misleading)How to go from small talk to meaningful connection without making it weirdWhat crying at work actually communicates (and how to handle it)The difference between TMI (too much information) and TLI (too little information)Why the biggest regrets in life often come from what we didn’t say Plus, we share our own stories of oversharing gone right (and wrong), and what it really looks like to build connection in real time. If you’ve ever walked away from a conversation thinking “did I say too much?” this episode might change how you see it forever. Mentioned in this episode: Leslie John's Website: https://www.proflesliejohn.comArthur Aron’s “36 Questions That Lead to Love”Leslie's book, Revealing: The Underrated Power of Oversharing

    56 min
  2. APR 8

    FOMO, Friendships & the Feed: Navigating Social Media in Real Life

    What if social media actually made us better friends… instead of just better at watching each other live? Social media connects us, keeps us in the loop, and sometimes… makes us feel like we’re missing out on everything. In this episode of The Connection Code, Jeana Anderson Cohen and Rachel Gillman Rischall dive into the complicated role social media plays in our friendships, from the early days of Friendster and Facebook to today’s world of curated feeds and constant comparison. They explore: How social media can deepen connection (and sometimes replace it)Why FOMO hits differently at different stages of lifeThe unspoken rules of posting (and overthinking what others think)LinkedIn’s “humblebrag” culture—and how to navigate it authenticallyThe surprising power of oversharing in building real relationshipsPlus, they share thoughtful (and slightly radical) ideas for how social media could actually become a better tool for connection—from removing public likes to creating “friendship prompts” that nudge us offline. And in this week’s show & tell: a powerful story of how one vulnerable post turned into real-life community—and a reminder that sometimes, the internet gets it right. If you’ve ever questioned your relationship with social media… this one’s for you. Resources: Resource: National Domestic Violence Hotline (U.S.)Book: Revealing: The Underrated Power of OversharingExpert: Danielle Bayard Jackson

    44 min
  3. Borrowing Confidence & Building Real Connection with Laura Sanchez-Greenberg

    MAR 18

    Borrowing Confidence & Building Real Connection with Laura Sanchez-Greenberg

    What if confidence isn’t something you have, but something you can borrow? This week on The Connection Code, we’re joined by executive coach and managing partner of Verde Associates, Laura Sanchez-Greenberg. She's the kind of coach whose name gets passed quietly from founder to founder, with a simple message: “If you can get time with her, do it.” Laura has worked with some of the most respected leaders and high-growth brands, helping them navigate everything from team dynamics to personal confidence. But at the core of her work is something deeper: connection. In this episode, we talk about: Why so many high-achieving people secretly don’t feel like they’re enoughHow great leaders “lend” confidence before someone can access their ownThe difference between confidence and arrogance (and why vulnerability is power)How to navigate conflict—and what real “repair” actually looks likeWhy most people hate networking (and how to make it feel natural)The loneliness of leadership—and how to build your personal “board of directors”What we’ve lost since COVID when it comes to connection—and why it mattersLaura also shares the simple but life-changing advice she gives her clients again and again: state your intent—and name what you’re afraid of. This conversation is thoughtful, grounding, and packed with insights you’ll carry into your work, your relationships, and how you show up in the world. In this episode: Website: Verde Associates Email: Laura@verdeassociates.com The Hidden Life of Trees by Peter Wohlleben Positivity by Barbara Fredrickson Tuckman Model (Forming, Storming, Norming, Performing)Karpman Drama Triangle (Hero / Victim / Villain) Forest Bathing / Shinrin-yoku

    1h 22m
  4. MAR 4

    Reason, Season, or Lifetime: Navigating Friendship Breakups and Family Conflict

    In this capsule conversation, Rachel Gillman Rischall and Jeana Anderson Cohen explore one of the most tender and rarely discussed relationship topics: friendship breakups and estrangement. Inspired by Hillary Duff and her recent reflections on estrangement in an interview with Anthony Mason, Rachel and Jeana unpack what it means to lose someone close to you — and not know how, or whether, to repair the relationship. Together, they discuss: How to tell the difference between a friendship worth repairing and one that’s okay to let goWhy friendship breakups can hurt differently — and sometimes more deeply — than romantic onesWhether there’s a way to have a “final conversation,” and what to do when closure doesn’t comeHow to hold boundaries without abandoning compassionDrawing from personal experience, research, and insights from Platonic and For You When I Am Gone, the episode closes with a reminder that friendship isn’t “just friends,” it’s a profound form of love. And when it ends, the grief deserves to be honored. In Show & Tell, Rachel shares the connective power of live storytelling and shared vulnerability, while Jeana highlights a striking insight about emotional connection and fear of loss — adding one final layer to how deeply we’re wired for friendship. In this episode: Hillary Duff and Anthony Mason interview, referencing estrangementPlatonic by Marisa G. FrancoFor You When I Am Gone by Rabbi Steve LederJay Shetty — referenced via The New York Times

    39 min
5
out of 5
34 Ratings

About

The Connection Code is a show about the relationships that make your life and work just a little bit better.

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