The Wrong Ones

An Operation Podcast original show, The Wrong Ones is an anonymous, unfiltered deep dive into the relationships that cracked us open—and the wisdom we gathered along the way. Hosted by an unnamed (but very relatable) woman who's loved, lost, healed, and repeated, this podcast explores the plot twists we never saw coming, the breakups that felt like identity crises, and the late-night epiphanies that changed everything. With new episodes weekly, we ask the uncomfortable questions, reflect with a bit of humor, and always leave room for growth. Because sometimes the wrong ones... lead you exactly where you're meant to be.

  1. 3D AGO

    A Different Way to Start the Year

    A New Year conversation about self-investment, self-trust, and why alignment—not being chosen—changes everything. In this first episode of the new year, The Wrong Ones opens with a recalibration rather than a reinvention. This is not a "new year, new me" episode. It's a grounded, psychology-forward exploration of what it actually means to choose yourself—consistently, holistically, and without turning self-care into performance. This episode unpacks one of the most misunderstood dynamics in modern dating: why emotionally healthy men tend to deeply value women who take care of themselves—not because of aesthetics or "high value" branding, but because self-investment signals self-regard, stability, competence, and agency at a nervous-system level. We move beyond surface-level advice to examine how physical, mental, emotional, and financial self-care fundamentally shift relational power dynamics, attachment patterns, and partner selection. Through psychology-backed insight and long-form reflection, this conversation reframes self-care as self-leadership. We explore how choosing yourself changes what you tolerate, who you attract, and how you move through relationships without abandoning your identity. The episode closes with a prompt to enter the year focused not on becoming more desirable—but more devoted to yourself. This episode is for anyone who's done chasing potential, confusing anxiety with chemistry, or shrinking to be chosen—and is ready to build a life where alignment, not performance, sets the tone. Reflection Prompt of the Episode: Where are you outsourcing your worth—and what would change if you became the primary investment in your own life this year? What would the self-respecting version of you stop negotiating? What would she choose on an ordinary day? Resources & Concepts Mentioned: Thin-Slice Perception (Social Psychology) Signaling Theory (Evolutionary Psychology & Economics) Nervous System Regulation & Embodiment Attachment Theory (Secure vs. Anxious Dynamics) Protest Behaviors in Attachment Social Exchange Theory Intermittent Reinforcement & Dopamine Loops Self-Determination Theory (Autonomy, Competence, Relatedness) Halo Effect in Perception Conscientiousness & Long-Term Mate Selection Self-Schema & Identity Preservation Values-Based Self-Leadership Internal vs. External Reward Systems ----- As always: if you're enjoying the show, please take a moment to follow, rate, and subscribe — it truly helps us grow and reach more listeners. Come say hi on Instagram @thewrongonespodcast An Operation Podcast production

    43 min
  2. 12/29/2025

    The Year of the Snake: Closing the Cycle, Choosing a Theme, and Entering 2026 as Your Hottest Self

    A milestone episode about endings, beginnings, and the kind of growth that doesn't show up on a highlight reel. In this episode of The Wrong Ones, we close out the year by reflecting on 2025 not through accomplishments or external milestones, but through what was integrated—emotionally, psychologically, and neurologically. Episode 30 quietly marks a milestone of its own, and instead of turning it into a performance, we use it as a grounded pause: to acknowledge what this year asked of us, what it stripped away, and what it reshaped internally. Through personal storytelling and psychology-backed insight, this conversation explores why some years feel disorienting rather than expansive—and why those years are often the ones that change us the most. We unpack 2025 as a Year 9 and the Year of the Snake, not as fate or prophecy, but as symbolic frameworks that mirror real psychological processes: closure, pattern completion, identity shedding, and nervous system recalibration. From there, we move into what it means to step into a Year 1 and Fire Horse chapter with intention rather than urgency. We talk about why New Year's resolutions fail neurologically, how identity actually changes, and why choosing a theme—instead of goals—creates sustainable momentum. The episode closes with a reflection prompt and a personal share of my 2026 theme: becoming the hottest version of myself ever—physically, mentally, emotionally, and financially—as a commitment to alignment, self-trust, and embodied living. This episode is for anyone ending the year feeling changed, but not finished. For anyone who shed something quietly. And for anyone who wants to enter the next chapter with agency—without bypassing what it took to get here. In this episode, we cover: Why Episode 30 is a milestone—and why not all milestones need to be inflated The difference between a hard year and a meaningful year Why not all growth looks impressive from the outside Year 9 numerology and the psychology of completion and closure Why the nervous system struggles with endings—even necessary ones The brain as a prediction machine and how uncertainty creates dysregulation Pattern completion and why old emotional loops resurface before a cycle closes Grief as a feature of transition—not just loss The Year of the Snake as a metaphor for shedding identities that no longer fit Why transformation feels like vulnerability before it feels like freedom Cognitive dissonance and schema disruption during identity change Why humans turn to meaning-making systems during periods of uncertainty The difference between using numerology/zodiac as reflection vs. outsourcing agency Year 1 energy as initiation: authorship, choice, and identity consolidation Neuroplasticity after disruption—and why fresh starts can be powerful or chaotic Dopamine, novelty, and why January motivation often leads to burnout Fire Horse symbolism: momentum with direction, not intensity without regulation Why New Year's resolutions fail neurologically (self-schema, identity threat, shame loops) Why themes work better than goals: values-based living and internal coherence How themes guide decisions in relationships, work, health, and boundaries My 2026 theme: being the hottest version of myself—physically, mentally, emotionally, and financially Reflection Prompt of the Week: What do you want your theme or guiding light to be for 2026? And once you name it, visualize how you'll move toward it—not all at once, but through the next few aligned steps. What does the theme-aligned version of you say yes to? What does she stop negotiating? What does she choose on an ordinary day? Resources & Concepts Mentioned: Year 9 Numerology (completion, closure, end-of-cycle integration) Year of the Snake symbolism (shedding, transformation, survival intelligence) Year 1 Numerology (initiation, authorship, new identity chapters) Fire Horse symbolism (autonomy, momentum, self-directed movement) Predictive Processing & Prediction Error (the brain's need for orientation) Pattern Completion (integration vs. repetition of unresolved loops) Cognitive Dissonance & Schemas (identity structures under strain) Neuroplasticity (rewiring during novelty and emotional salience) Dopamine & Novelty Seeking (motivation vs. impulsivity) Self-Schema & Identity-Based Change Values-Based Living (ACT-informed behavior change) Decision Fatigue & Cognitive Load ----- As always: if you're enjoying the show, please take a moment to follow, rate, and subscribe — it truly helps us grow and reach more listeners. Come say hi on Instagram @thewrongonespodcast An Operation Podcast production

    59 min
  3. 12/23/2025

    Nothing Was Wasted

    What I created, moved through, and survived—and why none of it was for nothing. In this episode of The Wrong Ones, we reflect on the year not through milestones or achievements, but through what was metabolized—emotionally, psychologically, and neurologically. Recorded during that tender in-between stretch as Hanukkah comes to a close and the holidays begin, this conversation explores what it actually means to say "nothing in life is ever wasted"—not as a platitude, but as neuroscience. Inspired by a recent conversation with peers, this episode looks at how even the years that feel messy, unresolved, or painful don't disappear. They integrate. Through personal storytelling and psychology-backed insight, we unpack how the nervous system records experience, how meaning forms after survival, and how reflection changes not just how we remember the past—but how we carry it forward. This episode is for anyone ending the year feeling changed, but not finished. For anyone who survived something quietly. And for anyone who wants to honor what they created, moved through, and survived—without forcing closure. In this episode, we cover: Why experiences don't vanish psychologically—they either integrate or repeat Hebb's Law ("neurons that fire together wire together") and how emotional patterns form The role of the amygdala and hippocampus in emotional memory and heartbreak Polyvagal Theory and why the body often senses loss before the mind does Anticipatory grief and the nervous system's early warning system Attachment theory and why honesty in relationships can feel neurologically threatening Self-determination theory and autonomy as a core psychological need Why survival mode still counts—and why meaning doesn't always arrive in real time Viktor Frankl and the difference between performing meaning and integrating it Post-traumatic growth and how reflection reshapes experience Expressive writing research and why turning pain into language is regulating Memory reconsolidation and how reflection changes emotional memory Narrative identity and the stories we tell ourselves about our lives Distress tolerance, restraint, and emotional maturity Emotional complexity: holding grief and gratitude at the same time Integration vs. closure—and why the goal isn't "moving on," but moving forward intact Reflection Question of the Week:   What did you live through this year that didn't disappear—but quietly changed the way you see, choose, or trust yourself? And if you want to go one layer deeper: What story about yourself is ready to be updated—not because you're forcing a rebrand, but because you've become someone new?   Resources & Concepts Mentioned: Hebb's Law & Neural Wiring (experience shaping the brain) Emotional Memory: Amygdala & Hippocampus Polyvagal Theory (Porges; nervous system safety & threat detection) Anticipatory Grief (pre-loss nervous system processing) Attachment Theory (Bowlby & Ainsworth; relational threat & needs) Self-Determination Theory (autonomy, alignment, psychological health) Viktor Frankl & Meaning-Making After Suffering Post-Traumatic Growth (Tedeschi & Calhoun) Expressive Writing Research (Pennebaker) Memory Reconsolidation (Nader; remembering as rewriting) Narrative Identity (McAdams; identity as story) Distress Tolerance (DBT; emotional regulation without self-abandonment) Emotional Complexity & Psychological Resilience ----- As always: if you're enjoying the show, please take a moment to follow, rate, and subscribe — it truly helps us grow and reach more listeners. Come say hi on Instagram @thewrongonespodcast An Operation Podcast production

    26 min
  4. 12/15/2025

    The Rules Are Changing—And So Am I: Rethinking Love, Identity, and What We Thought We Knew

    In this episode of The Wrong Ones, we talk about the quiet, internal moment when your relationship worldview widens—not because you've suddenly changed who you are, but because you've finally grown into someone who can hold more nuance. From matching with a trans man on a dating app to noticing how your thirties shift your sense of "never" and "always," we explore what happens when the lens you've used to understand love moves from portrait mode to landscape. Through personal storytelling and psychology-backed insight, we unpack how evolving relationship structures, therapy culture, technology, and simple lived experience stretch the edges of what feels possible. We talk about why curiosity doesn't threaten your identity, how exposure softens rigidity, and what it means to move from inherited scripts to consciously chosen beliefs. Plus, a little life update on launching Substack and returning to writing as another space to process all of this in real time. In this episode, we cover: The "soft clicks": tiny, ordinary moments that reveal big internal shifts How your thirties change your brain, your identity, and your tolerance for nuance Matching with a trans man on a dating app and what that pause of curiosity actually meant The difference between expanding your worldview and changing your orientation or desires Moving from black-and-white thinking to "Does this feel aligned for me?" Differentiation: becoming your own person outside of family, culture, and inherited rules How therapy language (attachment, boundaries, nervous system) reshapes relationship expectations The role of dating apps in norm-shifting and repeated exposure to diverse identities and structures Why monogamy isn't disappearing—just becoming a conscious choice instead of a default Psychological flexibility: holding more options in mind without feeling destabilized The emotional exhaustion of performing timelines that were never really yours Designing relationships that fit your nervous system, not just your résumé Curiosity vs. participation: understanding something without needing to live it How growing older is less about certainty and more about internal spaciousness Reflection Question of the Week: Where in your life are you being invited to loosen an old belief—not to change who you are, but to see who you've become? Resources Mentioned: Differentiation and Family Systems Theory (Bowen; self vs. system) Post-Formal Thought & Integrative Complexity (adult cognitive development and nuance) Schema Theory & Accommodation (Piaget; updating internal narratives) Psychological Flexibility (Hayes; Acceptance & Commitment Therapy) Mere Exposure Effect & Norm-Shifting Through Contact (Zajonc; familiarity reducing threat) Attachment Theory (Bowlby & Ainsworth; internal working models in relationships) Polyvagal-Informed Ideas of Safety & Regulation (Porges; nervous system and connection) Therapy Culture & Relational Self-Awareness (contemporary psychology and modern love) ----- As always: if you're enjoying the show, please take a moment to follow, rate, and subscribe — it truly helps us grow and reach more listeners. Come say hi on Instagram @thewrongonespodcast An Operation Podcast production

    51 min
  5. 12/08/2025

    What I Know Now: 35 Years, 35 Lessons

    In this episode of The Wrong Ones, we're stepping into a birthday reflection that feels tender, grounding, and quietly transformative. After celebrating my 35th with a low-key, love-filled weekend, I found myself looking back on one of the most beautiful and painful years of my life—a year that stretched me, softened me, humbled me, and rebuilt me in ways I never expected. So today, I'm sharing 35 lessons I've learned in 35 years. These are the truths that arrived through heartbreak, healing, friendships, identity shifts, inner-child work, generational patterns, nervous system regulation, and the slow process of becoming the woman I'm proud to be. Rather than treating aging or change as something to resist, this episode reframes those transitions as evidence of emotional expansion—the quiet shift from performing a life to inhabiting your own. Through psychology-backed insights and honest storytelling, we explore the moments, patterns, and realizations that shape us long after they pass In this episode, we cover: Rejection as an old story resurfacing: How most heartbreak isn't new—it's childhood pain told through a new character, and why that awareness changes how we love and heal. Losing what you thought you couldn't survive: Why the people, jobs, and identities you cling to often become the very catalysts for strength once they're gone. Being loved well vs. being loved intensely: How the right kind of love brings forward a version of you that feels safe, soft, and fully expressed. Criticism as projection: Why the traits others judge in you are often the ones they had to suppress in themselves. Believing someone's capacity the first time: Instead of hoping they'll one day become who you need—and how this applies in dating, friendship, and work. Why you cannot out-love someone's untreated trauma: The emotional, psychological, and relational cost of trying to carry what was never yours. Envy as a compass: Seeing envy not as insecurity, but as your soul pointing toward what you desire next. Healing making you harder to access: Why boundaries tighten as self-respect grows—and how the right people stay without needing convincing. Choosing your own life over the one your parents scripted: The moment adulthood actually begins. Not everyone deserves your healed self: Some relationships only earned access to earlier versions of you—not the version you've worked to become. Desire vs. destiny: Understanding that wanting something doesn't automatically make it meant for you. Healing as becoming your real self: Not the best version or the prettiest version—the truest one. Life repeating lessons until you choose differently: How one shift in behavior can end a years-long cycle. The liberation of being the version of you you recognize: Even when your family or past relationships don't. The fear of judgment disguised as fear of change: And why most people stay small because being seen evolving feels unsafe. Who you are when nothing is expected of you: What your authentic self looks like without performance. Feeling "behind" as a comparison symptom: Why your timeline is not a race, and time expands when you stop competing with everyone else. Discipline as emotional freedom: How structure supports peace, and avoidance creates chaos. The courage to disappoint people: A necessary ingredient for a calm, self-directed life. Confidence as self-trust: Not believing you're the best—but believing you'll survive if you're not. Convenience vs. alignment: The emotional debt of choosing ease over integrity. Sustainable success over fast success: Why slow growth compounds—in careers, relationships, healing, and identity. Wisdom as emotional regulation: Reacting less as a sign of nervous system maturity. Burnout as divine intervention: Life's way of slowing you down when you refuse to slow yourself. Being mislabeled by people who don't know themselves: And why their confusion is never your truth. Growth feeling more like loss than expansion: Because shedding identities is often the first step toward becoming. Shifting from "Why me?" to "What is this teaching me?": The question that transforms pain into meaning. Order as nervous system hygiene: How a clean space is a clean mind—and a form of self-respect. The power of saying no: Protecting your time, your bandwidth, and your emotional capacity. Being the right things for the right people: Instead of being everything for everyone. Slow mornings as self-regulation: A luxury you can create, not one you have to earn. Decluttering as emotional release: Letting go physically to let go mentally. Seeing your parents as people life happened to: A shift that dissolves resentment and opens the door to compassion. Loving your parents while breaking their patterns: Why choosing a healthier emotional reality is an act of honor, not betrayal. Reflection Question of the Week: Which lesson from your own life are you being asked to learn—again or for the very first time—and what small shift could you make this week to honor it? ----- As always: if you're enjoying the show, please take a moment to follow, rate, and subscribe — it truly helps us grow and reach more listeners. Come say hi on Instagram @thewrongonespodcast An Operation Podcast production

    47 min
  6. 12/01/2025

    Marriage, Motherhood, and the Lies We Tell Ourselves: Part II

    In this episode of The Wrong Ones, we dive into the psychology underneath almost every question women ask themselves in their 30s—marriage, kids, timelines, independence, desire, fear, and whether we genuinely want the things we've been told we should want. Instead of treating these questions as confusion or crisis, we explore them as evidence of emotional expansion, nervous system evolution, and the quiet shift from fear-led decisions to self-led ones. Through a blend of storytelling and psychology-backed insight, this episode unpacks attachment styles, the grief of letting go of old timelines, the freedom of rewriting your own, and the slow, sacred work of learning to trust yourself again. Because once you shift from survival mode to alignment—once your desires are no longer tangled in pressure or fear—you realize you're not behind, you're not late, and you're not lost. You're just becoming. In this episode, we cover: Attachment styles as the hidden puppeteers: How anxious, avoidant, and secure parts influence what we believe we want—and how intensity, independence, or ambivalence often trace back to our earliest emotional blueprints. Why some women rush toward marriage while others run from it: The anxious desire to feel chosen vs. the avoidant instinct to feel safe through self-sufficiency—and how both are survival strategies, not personality flaws. High standards & stretched timelines: How "waiting for the right person" isn't pickiness—it's nervous system discernment, emotional maturity, and a refusal to shrink just to stay on track. Protective pessimism: Why telling yourself "I don't want it anyway" can be a defense against disappointment—and how to distinguish genuine desire from self-protection. The grief of outgrowing your younger self's timeline: Mourning the life you imagined at 24, while honoring the woman you've become at 35—and understanding that grief doesn't only show up when things end, but also when you evolve. Desire vs. fear: How older desire is quieter, more grounded, and rooted in alignment rather than urgency—unlike the frantic, approval-driven desire of your 20s. Self-trust as the turning point: Rebuilding the inner voice that says, "I can handle the outcomes of my choices"—and unlearning the generational, cultural, and familial conditioning that taught women to distrust themselves. The intelligence of "I don't know yet": Why uncertainty in your 30s isn't confusion—it's emotional maturity. And how seasons of not knowing often precede the most aligned decisions of your life. Intentionality over default living: Choosing your life on purpose, instead of reacting to pressure, comparison, or fear—and redefining partnership, motherhood, and independence as lifestyle choices rather than obligations. Living a life that actually fits you: Using your nervous system as data—peace vs. contraction, expansion vs. anxiety—to build a future based on alignment rather than expectation. Imagining your future from abundance, not fear: Replacing timeline panic with gentle, open-handed longing—allowing yourself to envision multiple futures, each of them meaningful and full of possibility. Reflection Question of the Week: What emotion do you avoid the most, and what protective belief have you built around avoiding it? Resources Mentioned/Concepts Referenced: Adult Attachment Theory (Bowlby, Ainsworth; later Mikulincer & Shaver) How attachment shapes desire, timelines, and emotional safety. Protective Pessimism (Norem, 1989) Lowering expectations as emotional self-defense. Identity Reconciliation in Adulthood Updating the self-concept as you outgrow old timelines and internalized expectations. Differentiation of Self (Bowen, 1978) Staying connected without self-abandonment—applied to choosing partnership intentionally. Adaptive Ambivalence Why conflicting desires ("I want connection and freedom") are signs of self-awareness, not confusion. Nervous System Regulation & Desire How a regulated body wants differently than a dysregulated one—especially in love, partnership, and long-term decisions. ----- As always: if you're enjoying the show, please take a moment to follow, rate, and subscribe — it truly helps us grow and reach more listeners. Come say hi on Instagram @thewrongonespodcast An Operation Podcast production

    40 min
  7. 11/24/2025

    Marriage, Motherhood, and the Lies We Tell Ourselves: Part 1

    In this episode of The Wrong Ones, we dive into a truth that most women carry quietly: the tension between what we genuinely want, what we think we're supposed to want, and what our minds protect us from wanting at all. This conversation begins in therapy—naturally—where a single sentence cracked open an entire internal universe: "Sometimes I feel like maybe I don't even want marriage or kids… because if I did, wouldn't I have them by now?" What unfolds from that moment is a deeply human exploration of ambivalence, desire, fear, self-protection, and the emotional calculus women are forced to do in a world obsessed with timelines. We explore why turning 35 feels like a psychological checkpoint, why wanting something can feel more vulnerable than not wanting it, and how often women confuse self-protection with clarity. Because sometimes the narratives we build around "I don't want that" are trauma responses with really good PR. Through personal storytelling and psychology-backed insight, this episode unpacks the cultural scripts around marriage and motherhood, the nervous system's relationship to desire, and the quiet inner work of learning to tell the difference between genuine preference and fear-sized avoidance. Because when you finally slow down enough to separate the two, your entire relationship to your future shifts. In this episode, we cover: Why women often say "I don't want that" when the truth is "wanting it feels too vulnerable" Ambivalence as an emotionally intelligent state—not confusion, not avoidance, but honest internal conflict How turning 35 triggers identity audits, timeline reevaluations, and the emotional detangling of inherited expectations The nervous system's role in desire: why wanting something exposes you to the possibility of loss, and how your brain tries to protect you The difference between self-protection and self-awareness—and how to tell which one is speaking Sparkle Megan, Love Is Blind, and why lifestyle compatibility is as important as emotional compatibility Outgrowing the life you thought you'd have at 25 and learning to choose the life that actually fits you at 35 Why high standards lead to "late" marriages (and why that's not late—it's aligned) How childhood messages about love, safety, and identity shape adult desire The psychology of timelines: why most anxiety around partnership and motherhood comes from absorbing other people's fears The liberation of neutrality: "If it happens, beautiful. If it doesn't, my life is still beautiful." Resources Mentioned: Ambivalence & Emotional Complexity (Larsen et al., mixed-emotion theory) Self-Protection & Threat Response (nervous system avoidance patterns) Attachment & Desire (Mikulincer & Shaver, 2007; how past experiences shape current wants) Identity Development Across Adulthood (Erikson; midlife identity reevaluation) Social Clocks & Timeline Pressure (Neugarten; culturally conditioned milestones) ----- As always: if you're enjoying the show, please take a moment to follow, rate, and subscribe — it truly helps us grow and reach more listeners. Come say hi on Instagram @thewrongonespodcast An Operation Podcast production

    44 min
  8. 11/17/2025

    When Healing Means You'd Never Date Him Again

    In this episode of The Wrong Ones, we talk about what it actually looks like to come back home to yourself after a breakup—not in the TikTok "day two Pilates girl" glow-up way, but in the quiet, messy, deeply human way. We explore how heartbreak forces you to confront the version of you who tolerated crumbs, abandoned her own needs, and confused chaos for chemistry—and how healing slowly turns you into the woman your ex always wanted, who would never choose the unhealed version of him again. Through personal storytelling and psychology-backed insight, this episode unpacks identity foreclosure, nervous system healing, and why routines like movement, food, and structure become less about aesthetics and more about rebuilding self-respect. Because once you remember what safety feels like—in your body, your routines, and your life—you stop negotiating with anyone who threatens it. In this episode, we cover: How noticing "small data points" in your body (the pit in your stomach, the flinch, the fatigue) is the start of self-awareness—but honoring them is the start of self-respect Identity foreclosure: how relationships can make you shapeshift into the version of you that works for the relationship, not your soul Why post-breakup "glow-ups" aren't revenge—they're nervous system recalibrations back to who you were before you started shrinking The role of movement and working out in healing: building structure, discipline, and self-trust instead of punishing your body How changing your relationship with food is less about perfection and more about no longer using hunger, control, or chaos as coping mechanisms The lonely in-between: shedding an old identity before you fully grow into the new one—and why that discomfort is where real change happens Why, once your body remembers safety, it becomes allergic to emotional chaos, hot-and-cold behavior, and mixed signals The psychology of attraction: why grounded, regulated, self-focused women are unconsciously more attractive—and why the healed you stops wanting men who only respond once you've risen Differentiation in relationships: staying connected to someone without abandoning yourself, and how this becomes the new standard The full-circle moment when you realize you didn't actually want your ex back—you wanted the version of you who hadn't met herself yet Reflection Question of the Week: What's one practice—big or small—that will help you feel more connected to yourself this week? Resources Mentioned: Identity Status & Foreclosure (Marcia, 1966; commitment before exploration) Differentiation of Self (Bowen, 1978; staying connected without self-abandonment) Self-Expansion Theory & Growth in Relationships (Aron & Aron, 1986; attraction to evolving selves) Attachment, Regulation & Romantic Love (Mikulincer & Shaver, 2007; how security changes what we seek) Interpersonal Attraction & Value Increase (overall growth and perceived partner desirability) ----- As always: if you're enjoying the show, please take a moment to follow, rate, and subscribe — it truly helps us grow and reach more listeners. Come say hi on Instagram @thewrongonespodcast An Operation Podcast production

    46 min
4.9
out of 5
31 Ratings

About

An Operation Podcast original show, The Wrong Ones is an anonymous, unfiltered deep dive into the relationships that cracked us open—and the wisdom we gathered along the way. Hosted by an unnamed (but very relatable) woman who's loved, lost, healed, and repeated, this podcast explores the plot twists we never saw coming, the breakups that felt like identity crises, and the late-night epiphanies that changed everything. With new episodes weekly, we ask the uncomfortable questions, reflect with a bit of humor, and always leave room for growth. Because sometimes the wrong ones... lead you exactly where you're meant to be.

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