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The Original Self Podcast

The Original Self Podcast explores the psychology of resilience, identity, and meaningful personal change. Hosted by life coach Evet DeCota, a psychology-informed life coach, each episode blends real-life insight, coaching perspective, and practical mindset shifts that help you reconnect with who you truly are. Through honest conversations and reflections about confidence, habits, self-doubt, and growth, this podcast invites you to return to the version of yourself that has always been there beneath the noise.

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    Episode 9: Why You Feel Disconnected from Your Life and How to Come Back to It

    Have you ever looked at your life and thought: Everything is fine, so why doesn’t it feel like me?That low, steady sense of disconnection — when nothing is obviously wrong, but something still feels off — is one of the most common and least talked-about experiences there is. And in this episode, we finally name it.In Episode 9, we explore the hidden pattern of performing your life instead of actually living it: where it comes from, what it quietly costs you, and how to begin finding your way back to yourself — without blowing up everything you’ve built.I cover:• Why disconnection hides behind a life that looks completely fine• The psychology of identity performance, and the work of Erving Goffman, Carl Rogers, and John Bowlby• The three drivers that shape a performed identity: adaptation, approval, and safety• Four signs you may be living a performed life• What the turning point actually looks like — and why it’s rarely a breakdown• How Carl Jung’s concept of individuation explains those moments of noticing• Why therapist Hillary McBride says envy is self-knowledge in disguise• A simple question that can help you start coming back to yourselfThis episode is for you. If you’ve been going through the motions, feeling like a version of yourself rather than the whole thing, or quietly wondering why a life that works still doesn’t feel like yours.

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    Are You Self-Aware or Self Absorbed: The Truth About Why We See Ourselves the Way We Do

    Most of us have been around someone who makes every conversation about themselves, reacts before thinking, and never seems to notice the effect they have on others. And most of us have, at some point, been that person without realizing it. In this episode, I draw a clear line between self-absorption and self-awareness, and I want to be upfront about what this episode is not. It is not about narcissism. Narcissism is a clinical personality disorder. This is about the rest of us, the patterns we fall into, the blind spots we carry, and whether we have the capacity to change them. I open with an overheard conversation at a golf course, where four men declared that women need therapy more than men, right before revealing they had all been in therapy themselves. That contradiction is exactly where this episode begins. We cover the psychology of self-absorption and self-awareness, what each one looks like in practice, and the paradox between them. How can a person be constantly looking inward and still never actually see themselves? We explore nature versus nurture, Alfred Adler's superiority and inferiority complexes, and Dr. William Van Gordon's Ontological Addiction Theory, which argues that the real addiction is to your own sense of importance. We then go deeper into what makes change possible and what keeps the wall up. Julian Rotter's locus of control theory connects directly to whether self-awareness is even attainable, and research by Ferdi Botha and Sarah Dahmann confirms that believing you have agency over your life doesn't just correlate with better outcomes. It amplifies them. Finally, we look at why taking things personally is its own form of self-absorption, what productive versus maladaptive rumination looks like, and how a daily practice of honesty, reframing, and laughter can become your most powerful tool for self-awareness. Self-awareness is not a destination. It's a discipline. And you don't have to do it perfectly. You just have to keep doing it.

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    Episode 7-Toxic Positivity vs. Real Resilience: Why Hope Without Action Is a Trap

    Toxic positivity doesn't feel like positivity when you're on the receiving end. It feels like shame. In this episode of The Original Self Podcast, Evet DeCota explores the real difference between toxic positivity and genuine resilience — and why hope without action becomes one of the most seductive traps we fall into.From the phrases we reach for without thinking — look on the bright side, at least you have your health, you're fine, everything happens for a reason — to the deeper cost of invalidating the people we love, this episode unpacks what toxic positivity actually does, why it creates shame even when it comes from love, and where genuine resilience really comes from.Evet shares the personal story of the years she cared for her mother on dialysis, the moment at the elevator she has never been able to undo, and what real resilience looked like when she finally stopped reaching for a phrase and sat on the arm of the chair with her mom instead.You'll also hear about the difference between hope that fuels action and hope used as avoidance — with honest examples including Evet's own relationship with the scale, the friend whose body collapsed under years of unopened bills, and Nelson Mandela's twenty-seven-year practice of disciplined hope.Grounded in the work of Susan David, Whitney Goodman, Brené Brown, and Nelson Mandela, this episode offers a framework for the kind of resilience that acknowledges pain without drowning in it — and the kind of hope that holds reality while still looking straight at it.If you have ever been told your feelings were too much, too sensitive, or not valid — this episode is for you.⏱ Chapters: 00:00 Introduction 02:15 The phrases that shut us down 05:30 What toxic positivity actually is 09:00 Susan David and the tyranny of positivity 12:00 The shame underneath 15:30 The elevator — a personal story about my mom 22:00 Where real resilience actually comes from 28:00 Hope as avoidance: the scale, the bills, the body 32:30 Nelson Mandela and disciplined hope 36:00 The you're fine reflection 39:30 What to do instead — five practices for this week 43:00 Closing reflection(timestamps to be adjusted after final edit)🔗 Connect with Evet: 🌐 decotalifecoaching.com 🎙 The Original Self Podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTubeNew episodes drop every other week. Subscribe so you don't miss the next one.Helping women reflect deeper, grow stronger, and walk confidently back to themselves — through coaching, podcasts, and blog posts.

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    Episode 6: The Ego Trap: What Happens When Self-Focus Disconnects You From Everyone Else

    In Episode 6, Evet opens with a simple observation from a friend that raises a bigger question: when did kindness become remarkable? From there, the episode moves through the psychology of hyper-individualism and its three measurable costs — loneliness, polarization, and empathy erosion — tracing how each generation is living them out differently. Gen Z, Millennials, and Gen X each get an honest and unflinching look, including Evet's own generation and her own blind spots. The episode draws on the work of psychologists Jean Twenge and W. Keith Campbell, former Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, and scholar john a. powell of the Othering and Belonging Institute, whose framework of othering and belonging gives language to what many are witnessing but struggling to name. The episode closes with five concrete entry points toward change: presence, extending the circle, seeking discomfort, accountability, and small acts of kindness — and a reflection question for the listener to sit with.

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    Episode 5: Why You Procrastinate: The Emotional Pattern Keeping You Stuck in Your Comfort Zone

    The Original Self Podcast Episode 5: The Hidden Pattern Behind Procrastination: How Your Brain Turns Discomfort into DelayIf you have ever cleaned your entire kitchen, reorganized a drawer for the third time, or started a four-season show instead of the one task that has been sitting at the top of your list for weeks, this episode is for you.Most of us have been taught that procrastination is a discipline problem. A time management issue. A character flaw. But that understanding is incomplete. And in this episode, I want to give you something more accurate — and more useful — than shame.What we cover:We start by getting precise about what procrastination actually is — and what it is not. Not all delay is procrastination, and collapsing them into the same category is part of why we end up punishing ourselves for situations that were never in our control. I break down the difference between purposeful delay, inevitable delay, and emotional delay, and why each one deserves a different response.From there, we explore the four distinct types of procrastination — hedonistic, arousal, irrational, and psychological distress delay — because recognizing which one you are dealing with changes how you respond to it.At the center of this episode is the work of Dr. Timothy Pychyl, whose research makes one thing clear: procrastination is not about time. It is about emotion. We are not avoiding the task. We are avoiding the feeling attached to the task. And avoidance works — which is exactly what makes it so hard to break. I also explore the neuroscience behind why the brain chooses avoidance, and what it takes to override a nervous system that has learned to treat your most meaningful work as a threat.We then look at what actually gets us unstuck, drawing on David Allen's Getting Things Done methodology and James Clear's argument that action comes before motivation — not the other way around.The conversation deepens with Self-Determination Theory from psychologists Edward Deci and Richard Ryan, whose three basic psychological needs — autonomy, competence, and relatedness — reveal exactly why certain tasks feel nearly impossible to approach. I also bring in Dr. Kristin Neff's research on self-compassion and why self-judgment does not correct the pattern of procrastination. It reinforces it.I share a personal story about a period in my own life when procrastination had less to do with laziness and everything to do with shame — and the moment I realized the shame did not belong to me.We close with the identity connection: how repeated avoidance builds a story about who we are, and how the Pygmalion and Golem Effects — the psychology of high and low expectations — shape not just what others believe about us, but what we have quietly come to believe about ourselves.The reflection question to sit with:What is the one thing you have been putting off that, if you are being honest with yourself, matters to you more than almost anything else on your list? And what is the very first physical step — not the whole thing, just the first movement — that you could take toward it this week?DeCota Life Coaching helps you reflect deeper, grow stronger, and walk confidently back to yourself — through coaching, podcasts, and blogs. Learn more at decotalifecoaching.com.

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    Episode 4: What Grief Does to Your Identity: Who You Become After Loss

    Every loss changes the shape of the life around it. Some losses are announced with funerals and flowers. Others happen quietly, without ceremony, and nobody thinks to ask how you are doing.In this episode of The Original Self Podcast, Evet DeCota is joined by her brother Stefan DeCota for an honest and deeply personal conversation about grief, identity, and who we become when someone or something we love is gone. Stefan is a strategic business advisor with twenty-five years of experience inside large startups and data companies, but what he brings to this conversation has nothing to do with business. It has everything to do with having loved deeply, lost significantly, and still standing.Together, they explore five dimensions of loss that rarely get the attention they deserve. The grief of losing a friendship that ends without a conversation. The identity crisis that follows the end of a significant relationship. The particular absence left by losing a parent — the people who knew you longest, the witnesses to your own story. The quiet grief of outgrowing people you love. And the loss of the version of yourself that existed before all of it.Woven throughout the conversation are three psychological frameworks that give language to what so many people carry silently. Dr. Pauline Boss's Ambiguous Loss Theory describes the grief that lacks ceremony and social recognition. Research from Nature Reviews Neuroscience and from Duke and Yale Universities confirms that social loss registers in the brain as genuine physical pain. And Continuing Bonds Theory, developed by Klass, Silverman, and Nickman, challenges the idea that healthy grieving means letting go — suggesting instead that we carry those we have lost forward into who we are becoming.As C.S. Lewis wrote, grief is like a long valley, a winding valley where any bend may reveal a totally new landscape. That is loss. That is life.This episode is for anyone who is carrying a loss that the world never permitted them to grieve. You are not alone in what you are holding.Evet DeCota is an ICF-certified life coach and psychology-informed thinker. To learn more or work with Evet directly, visit decotalifecoaching.com. New episodes of The Original Self Podcast drop weekly.

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    Episode 3: The Authentic Algorithm-Can AI Enhance or Destroy Who You Really Are?

    You are using AI right now. Maybe to search, to write, to plan, or to process. But here is the question nobody is asking loudly enough: what is it doing to who you actually are?In this episode of The Original Self Podcast, Evet DeCota takes an honest look at one of the most pressing questions of our time. AI is reshaping advertising, music, news, jobs, and human connection — and most of us are participating in that reshaping without ever deciding to. Drawing on her own evolving relationship with AI, a deep dive into research on empathy and technology, and candid conversations with an insider at a major AI safety company and her brother Stefan, a strategic business advisor with 25 years of experience in data and tech, Evet explores both sides of the question with the honesty her listeners have come to expect.In this episode:• Why deepfakes and AI-generated content are widening the chasm between people, viewpoints, and feelings.• What AI actually is — and the critical distinction between learning from it and letting it reason and communicate for you.• The research of Victor Frimpong and Empathy Displacement Theory — how simulated empathy doesn't just fill the gap where real empathy used to be, but gradually retrains us to accept the imitation as the real thing.• What an AI safety insider and a strategic business advisor both warn is coming — and why it deserves our attention now.• A client story that shows what it looks like when AI is used as a tool for self-discovery rather than a substitute for it.• The difference between intention and abdication — and the one question that will tell you which side you are on. AI can hold the ladder. But you have to do the climbing.This episode is for anyone who uses AI and wonders whether it is helping them become more themselves — or quietly less.Research Referenced:Frimpong, V. (2025). Empathy and the Human-Moment Gaps of AI Chatbots: Insights from Empathy Displacement Theory.Evet DeCota is an ICF-certified life coach and psychology-informed thinker. To learn more or work with Evet directly, visit decotalifecoaching.com. New episodes of The Original Self Podcast drop weekly.

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    Episode 2: Small Shifts, Big Identity Change: How Tiny Choices Quietly Reshape Who You Are

    What if the change you have been waiting to make doesn't require a dramatic overhaul, a perfect plan, or even the right amount of motivation? What if it only requires one small decision, made quietly, on an ordinary day?In this episode, Evet DeCota explores the psychology behind why big changes so often fail and why the smallest, most consistent actions are actually the most powerful agents of lasting transformation. Drawing from personal experience with significant weight gain, a brittle bone disease, and the overwhelm of building a coaching business from scratch, Evet shares the real and unglamorous story of what change actually looks like from the inside.This episode covers the neuroscience of habit formation, including why the brain resists dramatic change and how micro-habits slip past that resistance almost undetected. Evet also explores the difference between consistency and motivation, and why behavioral psychology tells us we have the relationship between the two completely backwards. Motivation does not create action. Action creates motivation.Topics explored in this episode include why the brain interprets dramatic lifestyle overhauls as a potential threat, how the basal ganglia automates repeated behavior over time, the one percent principle from James Clear's Atomic Habits, the difference between identity-based change and behavior-based change, why perfection is just procrastination in disguise, and what consistency actually looks like on the ordinary, uninspired days.This episode closes with three reflection questions designed to help you identify where small changes could quietly begin to shift everything.Reflection Questions from this episode: What is one habit you have tried to build before that faded out, and looking back, was too big to stick? What is one change so small it almost feels too easy that you could begin tomorrow? Where in your life are you still standing at the bottom of the staircase, waiting to see the top, when all you really need to do is take one step?If this episode resonated with you and you are ready to explore your own growth, visit decotalifecoaching.com to learn more about working with Evet.

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    Episode 1: Who You Were Before the World Told You Who To Be | Authenticity & Identity

    Before the expectations. Before the corrections. Before you learned which parts of yourself were acceptable and which ones needed to be managed, there was a version of you that was simply, completely, yourself. This episode is about that person, and what it means to find your way back.In this first episode of The Original Self Podcast, life coach, creator of DeCota Life Coaching, and psychology-informed thinker, Evet DeCota, explores one of the most quietly urgent questions a person can ask: who were you before the world told you who to be? Drawing on decades of listening to real people in unguarded moments, her own journey through loss, reinvention, and the slow work of coming back to herself, and the psychology of Donald Winnicott's concept of the True Self, Evet walks through the forces that shape us away from our original selves and what it takes to find our way back.In this episode:• Why even infants begin adapting before they have words — and what that means for the self we carry into adulthood.• How family, culture, and fear do their deepest shaping work before we are old enough to question them.• The messages many women absorb early about who they are supposed to be, and the cost of carrying them quietly for decades.• What children and the elderly have in common — and what the rest of us are trying to find in the middle of our lives.• The mindset shifts that change everything: that everything you have survived has been leading you back to the most capable version of yourself.• A closing question to carry with you: what part of you have you quieted to belong? This episode is for anyone who has ever felt like the life they are living doesn't quite fit, who has wondered where they went somewhere along the way, or who is ready to stop performing a version of themselves and start inhabiting the real one.The Original Self Podcast is a space for honest conversations about identity, growth, and the quiet courage it takes to return to who you have always been. New episodes drop weekly.Evet DeCota is an ICF-certified life coach and psychology-informed thinker based in the United States. To learn more or work with Evet directly, visit decotalifecoaching.com.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

The Original Self Podcast explores the psychology of resilience, identity, and meaningful personal change. Hosted by life coach Evet DeCota, a psychology-informed life coach, each episode blends real-life insight, coaching perspective, and practical mindset shifts that help you reconnect with who you truly are. Through honest conversations and reflections about confidence, habits, self-doubt, and growth, this podcast invites you to return to the version of yourself that has always been there beneath the noise.

HOSTED BY

Evet DeCota

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does The Original Self Podcast have?

The Original Self Podcast currently has 9 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is The Original Self Podcast about?

The Original Self Podcast explores the psychology of resilience, identity, and meaningful personal change. Hosted by life coach Evet DeCota, a psychology-informed life coach, each episode blends real-life insight, coaching perspective, and practical mindset shifts that help you reconnect with who...

How often does The Original Self Podcast release new episodes?

The Original Self Podcast has 9 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to The Original Self Podcast?

You can listen to The Original Self Podcast on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts The Original Self Podcast?

The Original Self Podcast is created and hosted by Evet DeCota.
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