Stop Blaming and Start Living: Reclaiming Your Power
Let me ask you something uncomfortable.
Who are you blaming?
The weather for not starting.
The economy for not growing.
Your parents for what they didn’t do.
An old boss for what they did do.
Or maybe… yourself.
Blame is subtle. It doesn’t always sound dramatic. Sometimes it sounds logical. Reasonable. Even justified.
But here’s the truth.
Blame keeps you living at effect.
And when you live at effect, you hand your power to circumstances.
The Hidden Cost of Blame
Blame feels protective. It explains why things didn’t happen. It protects your identity from feeling incapable.
But the emotional cost is heavy.
Resentment.
Frustration.
Quiet anger.
Low-level guilt.
Energy drain.
Even when the event is years old, the emotional charge can still be running in the background — shaping decisions, self-talk, and confidence.
That’s not empowerment.
That’s emotional weightlifting with no muscle gain.
Big T, Little t — and What Actually Matters
Some people have experienced trauma with a capital T. Others have smaller but significant experiences — little t moments.
And here’s what I’ve learned.
It’s not the event that keeps us stuck.
It’s the meaning we continue to attach to it.
When the lesson is learned, the emotional charge can dissolve.
The memory stays.
The weight goes.
Living at Cause
Living at cause doesn’t mean pretending the past didn’t happen.
It means asking:
“What do I choose now?”
Responsibility isn’t blame directed inward. It’s ownership of your next move.
And once you own your next move, something powerful happens.
You begin to feel free.
Two Processes for Letting Go
In this episode, I guide you through two simple but deep processes:
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Releasing resentment toward others
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Reframing the parental narrative
Not by reliving pain.
But by allowing your unconscious mind to update the meaning.
You don’t need to dive back into trauma.
You need to release the emotional charge.
When that drops:
Clarity increases.
Confidence grows.
Excuses disappear.
And action becomes easier.
The Real Shift
You are not defined by what happened.
You are defined by what you choose next.
Blame keeps you stuck in the past.
Responsibility opens the future.
And the moment you stop asking, “Who’s to blame?”
you start asking, “What’s possible now?”
That’s where your life expands.