The Self-Edit: Why You Downplay What You Do episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 16, 2026 · 13 MIN

The Self-Edit: Why You Downplay What You Do

from The Alli Worthington Show · host Alli Worthington

Join Alli on Substack – https://wisewoman/ method.substack.com   You’re at your kid’s school event, paper plate in hand, fluorescent lights buzzing loudly overhead. Someone asks what you do. You managed a whole department that morning. You built something real. And somehow the words that come out of your mouth are, “Oh, I just have this little side project I’m figuring out.” That’s the self‑edit. You’ve done it before. You know it well. You just can’t seem to stop. In this episode, I’m naming a pattern most women never get language for. It’s the reflex we have to shrink our work, soften our accomplishments, and add qualifiers until the thing we built sounds like something we barely touch on weekends. It isn’t a confidence problem. It’s wiring. And it can be changed only if you start noticing it and stop doing it.   What You'll Learn in This Episode: What the self-edit is and why your brain does it automatically, even when you know better The specific way women raised in faith communities learn to confuse smallness with holiness (and what biblical humility actually looks like) Why the story you tell about yourself out loud becomes the story your brain files as true How to say what you do in one clear sentence and let it land without the qualifier that comes out of nowhere to soften it The real cost of self-editing over time: how it quietly reshapes your identity until the small version feels like the accurate one   Timestamps: (01:40) — What the self-edit is and why smart women do it constantly  (03:00) — Why your brain learned to flag visibility as a social threat  (04:54) — What biblical humility actually is (Deborah led a nation)  (05:27) — The woman three steps behind you is watching how you carry your calling (06:32) — Why your nervous system starts believing the edited version if you're not careful  (08:32) — What actually changed for Rachel (hint: not her resume or her revenue) (09:03) — How identity works: you become what you practice  (10:03) — The one practical thing to do the next time someone asks what you do (12:29) — Closing: You can stop self-editing now. This is your moment.    Links to great things we discussed:  Alli’s Product Recommendation - Shuttle Art Dry Erase Markers Function Health - Use code AWORTHINGTON10 for a discount on comprehensive lab testing Wise Woman Method on Substack Take the Secret Superpower Quiz Join the Uplift Community Follow Alli on Instagram Don’t forget to watch Alli Worthington on YouTube!    I hope you loved this episode! 🎉 Don't forget to hit that subscribe button on Apple Podcasts and Spotify so you’re always in the loop. And hey, while you're at it, why not pop over to our YouTube channel and check us out? If you're feeling the love, leave a review and sprinkle some stars because your support truly means the world to me! Take care, and keep shining bright!    xo, Alli

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Jul 16, 2026

Join Alli on Substack – https://wisewoman/ method.substack.com   You’re at your kid’s school event, paper plate in hand, fluorescent lights buzzing loudly overhead. Someone asks what you do. You managed a whole department that morning. You built something real. And somehow the words that come out of your mouth are, “Oh, I just have this little side project I’m figuring out.” That’s the self‑edit. You’ve done it before. You know it well. You just can’t seem to stop. In this episode, I’m naming a pattern most women never get language for. It’s the reflex we have to shrink our work, soften our accomplishments, and add qualifiers until the thing we built sounds like something we barely touch on weekends. It isn’t a confidence problem. It’s wiring. And it can be changed only if you start noticing it and stop doing it.   What You'll Learn in This Episode: What the self-edit is and why your brain does it automatically, even when you know better The specific way women raised in faith communities learn to confuse smallness with holiness (and what biblical humility actually looks like) Why the story you tell about yourself out loud becomes the story your brain files as true How to say what you do in one clear sentence and let it land without the qualifier that comes out of nowhere to soften it The real cost of self-editing over time: how it quietly reshapes your identity until the small version feels like the accurate one   Timestamps: (01:40) — What the self-edit is and why smart women do it constantly  (03:00) — Why your brain learned to flag visibility as a social threat  (04:54) — What biblical humility actually is (Deborah led a nation)  (05:27) — The woman three steps behind you is watching how you carry your calling (06:32) — Why your nervous system starts believing the edited version if you're not careful  (08:32) — What actually changed for Rachel (hint: not her resume or her revenue) (09:03) — How identity works: you become what you practice  (10:03) — The one practical thing to do the next time someone asks what you do (12:29) — Closing: You can stop self-editing now. This is your moment.    Links to great things we discussed:  Alli’s Product Recommendation - Shuttle Art Dry Erase Markers Function Health - Use code AWORTHINGTON10 for a discount on comprehensive lab testing Wise Woman Method on Substack Take the Secret Superpower Quiz Join the Uplift Community Follow Alli on Instagram Don’t forget to watch Alli Worthington on YouTube!    I hope you loved this episode! 🎉 Don't forget to hit that subscribe button on Apple Podcasts and Spotify so you’re always in the loop. And hey, while you're at it, why not pop over to our YouTube channel and check us out? If you're feeling the love, leave a review and sprinkle some stars because your support truly means the world to me! Take care, and keep shining bright!    xo, Alli

PodParley-generated summary based on available episode metadata and transcript content.

NOW PLAYING

The Self-Edit: Why You Downplay What You Do

0:00 13:22

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of The Alli Worthington Show?

This episode is 13 minutes long.

When was this The Alli Worthington Show episode published?

This episode was published on July 16, 2026.

What is this episode about?

Join Alli on Substack – https://wisewoman/ method.substack.com   You’re at your kid’s school event, paper plate in hand, fluorescent lights buzzing loudly overhead. Someone asks what you do. You managed a whole department that morning. You built...

Can I download this The Alli Worthington Show episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!