33. The Comparison Spiral: Why Other Women's Wins Feel Like Your Loss episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 23, 2026 · 20 MIN

33. The Comparison Spiral: Why Other Women's Wins Feel Like Your Loss

from Miss Reign · host Miss Reign

You're happy for her… and you're devastated. Both at the same time. Her engagement, her promotion, her success—it feels like your loss. And then the spiral begins: "Why her and not me? What's wrong with me?"This isn't jealousy. It's neuroscience. Social comparison theory shows we compare ourselves to people similar to us—and their wins activate the same brain regions as physical pain. When she achieves what you want, your brain interprets it as injury.This episode unpacks why women are conditioned into competitive scarcity, how the comparison spiral traps you (trigger → counterfactual thinking → interrogation → evidence collection → isolation), the hidden grief beneath comparison (you're mourning your unmet longing, not envying her win), and the 7-practice framework to break free: name the grief, interrupt the interrogation, separate timelines, celebrate her without abandoning yourself, reframe abundance, redirect the energy, trust your timing.The truth: Her win is not your loss. Her blessings don't diminish yours. What's meant for you will not miss you. You're not behind—you're exactly on time.Featuring research from:1. Dr. Leon Festinger (social comparison theory)2. Dr. Naomi Eisenberger (neuroscience of social pain)3. Dr. Brené Brown (scarcity culture)4. Dr. Sonja Lyubomirsky (happiness research)5. Islamic wisdom on "Rizq" and "Qadar".Reign without competing. 👑Let's be friends!

You're happy for her… and you're devastated. Both at the same time. Her engagement, her promotion, her success—it feels like your loss. And then the spiral begins: "Why her and not me? What's wrong with me?"This isn't jealousy. It's neuroscience. Social comparison theory shows we compare ourselves to people similar to us—and their wins activate the same brain regions as physical pain. When she achieves what you want, your brain interprets it as injury.This episode unpacks why women are conditioned into competitive scarcity, how the comparison spiral traps you (trigger → counterfactual thinking → interrogation → evidence collection → isolation), the hidden grief beneath comparison (you're mourning your unmet longing, not envying her win), and the 7-practice framework to break free: name the grief, interrupt the interrogation, separate timelines, celebrate her without abandoning yourself, reframe abundance, redirect the energy, trust your timing.The truth: Her win is not your loss. Her blessings don't diminish yours. What's meant for you will not miss you. You're not behind—you're exactly on time.Featuring research from:1. Dr. Leon Festinger (social comparison theory)2. Dr. Naomi Eisenberger (neuroscience of social pain)3. Dr. Brené Brown (scarcity culture)4. Dr. Sonja Lyubomirsky (happiness research)5. Islamic wisdom on "Rizq" and "Qadar".Reign without competing. 👑Let's be friends!

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33. The Comparison Spiral: Why Other Women's Wins Feel Like Your Loss

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How long is this episode of Miss Reign?

This episode is 20 minutes long.

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This episode was published on April 23, 2026.

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You're happy for her… and you're devastated. Both at the same time. Her engagement, her promotion, her success—it feels like your loss. And then the spiral begins: "Why her and not me? What's wrong with me?"This isn't jealousy. It's neuroscience....

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