『Episode 30: Who Do You Trust?』のカバーアート

Episode 30: Who Do You Trust?

Episode 30: Who Do You Trust?

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

WHO DO YOU TRUST?Support and Kindness PodcastHosts: Greg Shaw, Rich, Derek, Liam, SarahTrust is something we all rely on, yet many of us struggle to define, build, or rebuild it—especially after being hurt. In Episode 30, the Support and Kindness team has an honest, personal, and sometimes raw conversation about what trust really means, how it breaks, and how we live with the consequences when it does.Greg opens the episode by grounding trust as a choice to be vulnerable based on reliability, honesty, and genuine care. The group explores why trust matters so deeply to our mental health, relationships, and sense of safety—and why so many people feel guarded today.Core themes exploredTrust as reliability, honesty, and benevolence—not perfectionWhy trust breaks through small patterns, not just major betrayalsThe link between trust, vulnerability, and emotional safetyTrust issues as protection, not personal failureRebuilding trust without shutting down or becoming cynicalNavigating trust online, at work, and in personal relationshipsWhy trusting someone with a pet feels deeply personalCo‑Host Insights & Noteworthy MomentsGregGreg reflects openly on how repeated betrayals—especially by people who should have been safe—can make trust feel lonely.“Trust can be lonely. I don’t know if being quick to forgive is a strength or something that gets you hurt again.”Key takeaway: Trust is layered. You may trust different people with different parts of your life—and that’s okay.RichRich shares how trust loss often shows up as emotional vigilance rather than anger.“When I stop asking myself what someone wants from me, that’s when trust starts.”He also reflects on how childhood experiences shaped his instincts to guard information.“I was indoctrinated into trust issues early in life.”Key takeaway: Trust can disappear quickly, but it takes time and consistency to rebuild—and sometimes the work starts within ourselves.DerekDerek emphasizes intuition and context.“You can trust different people with different parts of your life.”He notes that trust grows through experience, not certainty.“You know when you know. It’s case by case.”Key takeaway: Trust is not all‑or‑nothing. It evolves through observation and lived experience.LiamLiam offers some of the most vulnerable reflections of the episode, sharing deep betrayals by close family and a spouse.“How do you recover when the most important people in your life betray you?”He also questions whether pain was worth the love that came before.“Right now, I’d say the pain makes me wish I’d never had it at all.”Key takeaway: Betrayal can damage not only trust in others, but trust in yourself—and rebuilding often starts there.SarahSarah focuses on accountability and hope.“If someone doesn’t take accountability, that can be a relationship ender.”She also reminds listeners not to give up on people.“If you keep trusting people, you will find the good ones.”Key takeaway: Trust can be rebuilt with honesty, boundaries, and time—and new connections are possible at any stage of life.Episode TakeawaysTrust requires vulnerability, and vulnerability always carries riskTrust issues often come from wisdom gained through painHealing trust means balancing protection with opennessYou can rebuild trust without ignoring red flagsFinding safe people is still possible—even after deep hurtFree Peer‑Led Support GroupsYou don’t have to figure this out alone. We host free, live, online weekly peer‑led support groups, and you are warmly invited:Mondays at 1:00 PM EasternBrain Injury Support GroupTuesdays at 12:00 PM EasternChronic Pain Support GroupWednesdays at 7:30 PM EasternMental Health Support Group👉 Sign‑up Click HereChallenge for the week: Think of one person who has shown up for you. Tell them. Trust grows when it’s acknowledged.Connection is worth the risk.
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