エピソード

  • The Small Wins That Actually Matter (When Nothing Feels Like Progress)
    2026/03/12

    EPISODE SUMMARY

    You're in the messy middle of transition. You've applied to 50 jobs with no offers. You've tried multiple activities and nothing has clicked yet. You're learning a new role but still feel behind. And it feels like nothing is happening.

    But here's the truth: Progress isn't always visible. That doesn't mean it's not happening.

    This episode is about recognizing the small wins you've been dismissing. Because small wins aren't consolation prizes—they're how real progress happens. They rebuild confidence. They create momentum. They sustain you when the big win hasn't come yet.

    Jessica shares her story of cleaning out a garage in 115-degree Phoenix heat—where some days, getting one bin sorted was a win. After the tenth trip to donation, she finally saw the progress. But if she'd waited for the "after" to feel good about it, she would have missed the small wins that kept her going.

    You've been building capacity this whole time. You've navigated extended transitions, rebuilt routine, addressed financial anxiety, broken the comparison noise, and shown up day after day even when nothing felt like it was working. That's not nothing. That's everything.

    And now you're ready for Phase 3: Designing What's Next.

    RESEARCH & RESOURCES MENTIONED

    1. Teresa Amabile (Harvard Business School): The Progress Principle - Single most powerful motivator is progress (even small, incremental). When people feel they're making progress (even small ways), motivation/creativity/engagement increase. When stuck, everything declines. To sustain motivation during difficult uncertain work, make progress visible—notice it, name it, celebrate it.
    2. BJ Fogg: Tiny Habits - Small actions compound over time. Success breeds success. Small wins create momentum. Make it easy to win early and often—every small win builds belief (self-efficacy) that you CAN do this. That belief carries you through hard middle.
    3. Albert Bandura: Self-Efficacy Research - Self-efficacy = belief in your ability to succeed. Most powerful way to build it: mastery experiences (small successes proving you're capable). In transition, self-efficacy takes hit. Only way to rebuild: small wins—noticing small actions where you showed up, tried, learned, did something hard.
    4. The Momentum Principle (Physics) - Objects in motion stay in motion. When stuck, even small movement matters. Small actions break paralysis. Once in motion, staying in motion easier than starting from stillness. Small wins create momentum that carries you forward when motivation fails.

    THIS WEEK'S REFLECTION ACTIVITY

    Download the Small Wins Tracker & Progress Recognition worksheet

    CONNECT WITH JESSICA

    If you're navigating an extended transition and need support redefining what progress actually looks like, visit Asbatra.com to learn about one-on-one coaching. We don't just talk about patience—we set micro-milestones, experiment, and build tolerance for the timeline without the guilt.

    Website: https://www.asbatra.com/

    Substack: https://asbatracoaching.substack.com/- Join the community for deeper discussions and downloadable worksheets

    Leave feedback: Use the thumbs up/down button in your podcast app or comment on Substack

    EPISODE CREDITS

    Host & Producer: Asbatra Coaching

    Episode Length: 26 minutes

    続きを読む 一部表示
    27 分
  • When Everyone Else Has Moved On (But You're Still Here)
    2026/03/05

    EPISODE SUMMARY

    You're in transition. And everyone else keeps moving. Former colleagues get promoted. Peers land new roles. LinkedIn is full of announcements—new jobs, six-figure consulting businesses, speaking engagements, awards. And you're still here. Still looking. Still figuring it out. Still in the middle.

    Every time you see someone else's win, a voice in your head asks: "What's wrong with me? Why is everyone else figuring this out except me?"

    Here's the truth you need to hear: Their timeline isn't your timeline. You're comparing your messy middle to their curated highlight reel. And that comparison is stealing energy you need to actually move forward.

    This episode is about breaking the noise. The LinkedIn comparison spiral. The family and friends who mean well but contribute to comparison. The constant pressure to perform like everyone else is thriving while you're struggling. It's about knowing when to engage and when to step back. And it's about focusing on YOUR circle of control instead of everyone else's highlight reel.

    Because comparison during transition is toxic. And you can't move forward while you're constantly looking sideways at everyone else's path.

    RESEARCH & RESOURCES MENTIONED

    1. Leon Festinger: Social Comparison Theory - Humans have inherent drive to evaluate ourselves; when we lack objective measures, we compare to others. Upward comparison (to people "ahead") can motivate or destroy depending on whether you believe you can reach their level. Downward comparison (to people "behind") temporarily boosts self-esteem but doesn't help you move forward.
    2. Temporal Comparison Research - Comparing current self to past self (rather than to others) is associated with higher wellbeing, lower anxiety, and more sustainable motivation. Keeps you focused on your own trajectory instead of everyone else's timeline.
    3. Reference Group Theory - Who you compare to matters enormously. Comparing to immediate circle (former colleagues, peers) feels personal. Comparing to strangers broadcasting wins on LinkedIn—you're comparing to a curated performance designed to impress.
    4. Social Media and Wellbeing Research - More time on social media during transition = worse feelings. Constant exposure to others' highlight reels while living in your messy middle creates toxic comparison cycle.

    THIS WEEK'S REFLECTION ACTIVITY

    Download the Comparison Audit & Circle of Control worksheet

    CONNECT WITH JESSICA

    If you're navigating an extended transition and need support redefining what progress actually looks like, visit Asbatra.com to learn about one-on-one coaching. We don't just talk about patience—we set micro-milestones, experiment, and build tolerance for the timeline without the guilt.

    Website: https://www.asbatra.com/

    Substack: https://asbatracoaching.substack.com/- Join the community for deeper discussions and downloadable worksheets

    Leave feedback: Use the thumbs up/down button in your podcast app or comment on Substack

    EPISODE CREDITS

    Host & Producer: Asbatra Coaching

    Episode Length: 33 minutes

    続きを読む 一部表示
    34 分
  • The Financial Anxiety That's Keeping You Up at Night
    2026/02/26

    EPISODE SUMMARY

    Financial anxiety during transition is real. When your income changes—whether you planned for it or not—everything shifts. For a majority of Americans, basic needs suddenly feel unaffordable. Housing. Food. Healthcare. The things you used to take for granted now keep you up at night.

    And here's what nobody tells you: There are plenty of resources out there about how to save money, create budgets, and plan financially. But almost no one tells you how to deal with the emotions during the transition—the fear, the shame, the constant mental calculation of "Can I afford this?" The anxiety that wakes you up at 3am doing math in your head.

    This episode isn't about teaching you to budget. It's about identifying what makes YOU feel financially secure so you can focus on those things during transition. It's about asking what you're actually willing to do. It's about separating scarcity thinking from strategic thinking. And it's about making financial decisions from strategy—not panic.

    Because financial anxiety and financial reality aren't always the same thing. And when you can separate fear from facts, you can think clearly instead of just reacting.

    RESEARCH & RESOURCES MENTIONED

    1. Morgan Housel: "The Psychology of Money" - Financial decisions are based on psychology, not spreadsheets. Your relationship with money is shaped by background, experiences, and fears. What feels secure varies by person—you must understand YOUR psychology to make strategic decisions.
    2. Sendhil Mullainathan & Eldar Shafir: "Scarcity: Why Having Too Little Means So Much" - Scarcity limits mental bandwidth through "scarcity capture"—constant worry creates cognitive load that prevents strategic thinking. Financial anxiety depletes your ability to make good decisions.
    3. Mike Michalowicz: "Profit First" - Business financial strategy adapted for personal use: create separate accounts for different purposes (rent, basic needs, flexible spending). Physical separation reduces anxiety and prevents constant mental math.
    4. Wallace Wattles: "The Science of Getting Rich" - Abundance thinking vs. scarcity thinking. Shift from "There's not enough" to "What resources can I create or reallocate?" Not toxic positivity—strategic questioning.
    5. Annie Duke: "Quit: The Power of Knowing When to Walk Away" - Strategic resource reallocation. Calculate expected value going forward, not backward. Moving to cheaper location, taking interim work, or changing lifestyle isn't failure—it's smart strategy.

    THIS WEEK'S REFLECTION ACTIVITY

    Download the Financial Security Inventory worksheet

    CONNECT WITH JESSICA

    If you need support navigating financial anxiety and making strategic decisions under pressure, visit Asbatra.comto explore one-on-one coaching. We separate fear from facts, identify what actually creates security for you, and build strategic plans that give you runway without compromising what matters. It's for people who want to make financial decisions from strategy, not panic.

    Website: www.asbatra.com

    Substack: https://asbatracoaching.substack.com/ - Join the community for deeper discussions and downloadable worksheets

    Leave feedback: Use the thumbs up/down button in your podcast app or comment on Substack

    EPISODE CREDITS

    Host & Producer: Asbatra Coaching

    Episode Length: 33 minutes

    続きを読む 一部表示
    42 分
  • Rebuilding Routine and Rituals When Your Days Have No Structure
    2026/02/19

    EPISODE SUMMARY

    When you lose the external structure of work, role, or identity, your days can feel formless. And formless days lead to anxiety, low motivation, and the feeling that you're wasting time—even when you're technically "free."

    Jessica experienced this twice: once in January 2025 when federal contracting changes collapsed her business structure overnight, leaving her in crisis with no sleep, negative thoughts, and paralysis. And again in September 2025 when she intentionally chose a six-month sabbatical in Costa Rica—same loss of structure, completely different experience. The first felt like failure. The second felt like permission, recovery, and the restoration of creativity she thought she'd lost.

    This episode is about the difference between those two experiences—and how to rebuild routine that serves you instead of constrains you. Because structure isn't the enemy. Rigidity is. You need anchors, not schedules. Rituals, not routines. Rhythm, not rules.

    If you're newly unemployed with empty days, retired without knowing what to do with unscheduled time, or between roles and can't seem to get anything done—this episode will show you how to create meaningful structure without replicating the old job.

    RESEARCH & RESOURCES MENTIONED

    1. Wendy Wood - Habits research and why losing external structure removes behavioral triggers
    2. Francesca Gino & Michael Norton - The psychological power of rituals vs. routines; how rituals reduce anxiety and create meaning
    3. University of Pennsylvania Study - Temporal structure and wellbeing; predictable patterns reduce anxiety and increase life satisfaction
    4. Retirement Adjustment Research - Bridge activities that create structure and meaning without performance pressure

    THIS WEEK'S REFLECTION ACTIVITY

    Download the Building Your Daily Anchors worksheet

    CONNECT WITH JESSICA

    If you're realizing you need support rebuilding structure that serves you instead of constrains you, visit Asbatra.com to explore one-on-one coaching. We design anchors, create rituals, and build rhythm that reduces anxiety without creating rigidity. It's for people who want days that feel meaningful—not just productive.

    Website: www.asbatra.com

    Substack: https://asbatracoaching.substack.com/ - Join the community for deeper discussions and downloadable worksheets

    Leave feedback: Use the thumbs up/down button in your podcast app or comment on Substack

    EPISODE CREDITS

    Host & Producer: Asbatra Coaching

    Episode Length: 34 minutes

    続きを読む 一部表示
    31 分
  • When the Transition Takes Longer Than You Thought (And You're Still Waiting)
    2026/02/12

    EPISODE SUMMARY

    You thought this transition would take three months. Maybe six. But here you are—eight months in, twelve months in, maybe longer—and you're still in the middle. You're starting to wonder: What's wrong with me? Why is this taking so long? Why can't I just figure it out?

    Here's the truth: You're not failing. Extended transitions are normal. Most transitions take 18-24 months to fully stabilize—not the three to six months we expect. This episode is about surviving the extended timeline without losing yourself, redefining what progress actually looks like, and building the resilience to stay in the middle without collapsing back to the old or forcing a premature new.

    If you're laid off and still looking, retired and still aimless, or in a new role that still doesn't feel right—this one's for you.

    RESEARCH & RESOURCES MENTIONED

    1. Nancy Schlossberg's Transition Theory - Framework for understanding transitions through the 4 S's: Situation, Self, Support, and Strategies
    2. Harvard Business Review (2023): "Why Career Transition Is So Hard" - Research showing career transitions typically take 18-24 months to stabilize because they involve identity work, not just job search
    3. Annie Duke: "Quit: The Power of Knowing When to Walk Away" - Strategic resource reallocation and why taking interim roles can be the smartest move during extended transitions

    THIS WEEK'S REFLECTION ACTIVITY

    Download the Redefining Progress worksheet

    CONNECT WITH JESSICA

    If you're navigating an extended transition and need support redefining what progress actually looks like, visit Asbatra.com to learn about one-on-one coaching. We don't just talk about patience—we set micro-milestones, experiment, and build tolerance for the timeline without the guilt.

    Website: https://www.asbatra.com/

    Substack: https://asbatracoaching.substack.com/- Join the community for deeper discussions and downloadable worksheets

    Leave feedback: Use the thumbs up/down button in your podcast app or comment on Substack


    EPISODE CREDITS

    Host & Producer: Asbatra Coaching

    Episode Length: 33 minutes

    続きを読む 一部表示
    34 分
  • Permission Granted: Why You're Allowed to Want Something Different
    2026/02/05

    EPISODE SUMMARY

    Fifteen years. That's how long Jessica ran her company before she finally admitted to herself: I want something different. Not because the work wasn't important. Not because she'd failed. But because it had stopped feeling like hers. The creativity and innovation that launched the business had been replaced by limitations defined by someone else. It had become a job. And she didn't want it anymore.

    But admitting that felt like betrayal. Like failure. Like quitting.

    This episode is the bridge between recognizing you're in transition and actually navigating it. It's about giving yourself permission to want something different than what you've been working toward—even when you've invested years, money, identity, or reputation into the path you're on. Using Annie Duke's framework from "Quit," this episode reframes quitting as strategic resource reallocation rather than failure, and teaches you how to calculate expected value, set kill criteria, and create backup plans so you can walk away from bad bets without guilt.

    If you've ever wanted something different but felt like you weren't allowed to—this episode is for you.

    RESEARCH & RESOURCES MENTIONED

    1. Annie Duke: "Quit: The Power of Knowing When to Walk Away" - Framework for skillful quitting as strategic resource reallocation. Core concepts: kill criteria, expected value calculations, sunk cost fallacy, loss aversion, endowment effect, status quo bias, backup plans, and embracing the quitter identity.
    2. IDEA Analytics now focuses on organizational change management projects involving digital transformation, talent acquisition, and leadership development.


    THIS WEEK'S REFLECTION ACTIVITY

    Download the Permission Exercise Worksheet


    CONNECT WITH JESSICA

    If you need support navigating financial anxiety and making strategic decisions under pressure, visit Asbatra.comto explore one-on-one coaching. We separate fear from facts, identify what actually creates security for you, and build strategic plans that give you runway without compromising what matters. It's for people who want to make financial decisions from strategy, not panic.

    Website: www.asbatra.com

    Substack: https://asbatracoaching.substack.com/ - Join the community for deeper discussions and downloadable worksheets

    Leave feedback: Use the thumbs up/down button in your podcast app or comment on Substack


    EPISODE CREDITS

    Host & Producer: Asbatra Coaching

    Episode Length: 39 minutes


    続きを読む 一部表示
    39 分
  • The Performance Trap: When Proving Yourself Becomes the Problem
    2026/01/29

    Episode Summary

    Here's the paradox I see constantly: A leader's role becomes uncertain. And what does that leader do? They work harder.

    More projects. Longer hours. Yes to everything. They're exhausted, overwhelmed, and burning out—but they keep performing. Because if they can just prove their value, maybe they'll be safe.

    Except the harder they perform, the more unsustainable it becomes. It's a trap. And if you're in it right now, you probably know it—but you don't know how to stop.

    This episode unpacks why successful leaders double down on performance during transitions, what the research says about the addictive nature of the validation cycle, and how to start untangling your worth from your output.

    Resources Mentioned

    • Emily and Amelia Nagoski, Burnout

    • Carol Dweck, Mindset

    • Brené Brown, Atlas of the Heart

    • Adam Grant, Think Again


    This Week's Reflection Activity:

    Download the Performance Inventory Worksheet


    CONNECT WITH JESSICA

    If you need support navigating financial anxiety and making strategic decisions under pressure, visit Asbatra.comto explore one-on-one coaching. We separate fear from facts, identify what actually creates security for you, and build strategic plans that give you runway without compromising what matters. It's for people who want to make financial decisions from strategy, not panic.


    Website: www.asbatra.com

    Substack: https://asbatracoaching.substack.com/ - Join the community for deeper discussions and downloadable worksheets

    Leave feedback: Use the thumbs up/down button in your podcast app or comment on Substack


    EPISODE CREDITS

    Host & Producer: Asbatra Coaching

    Episode Length: 31 minutes

    続きを読む 一部表示
    31 分
  • Decision Fatigue Isn't Your Problem (Decision Avoidance Is)
    2026/01/22

    Episode Summary

    Three weeks. That's how long a highly competent executive spent deciding whether to apply for a new role. Not because she lacked information—she had plenty. She couldn't decide because the decision felt like it was defining who she was becoming.

    This episode tackles why smart, capable people suddenly can't make decisions during transitions—and why "just decide already" is useless advice.

    We'll dig into the difference between decision fatigue and decision avoidance, what the research actually says about why your brain freezes when stakes feel high, and why you're probably waiting for certainty that will never arrive. Then we'll flip the script entirely: instead of trying to make the "right" decision, you'll learn how to design a 30-day experiment.

    Resources Mentioned

    • Sheena Iyengar, The Art of Choosing

    • Dr. Maya Shankar on uncertainty and the brain

    • Daniel Kahneman, Thinking Fast and Slow

    • William Bridges, Transitions


    This Week's Reflection Activity

    Download the Decision Archaeology Worksheet


    CONNECT WITH JESSICA

    If you need support navigating financial anxiety and making strategic decisions under pressure, visit Asbatra.comto explore one-on-one coaching. We separate fear from facts, identify what actually creates security for you, and build strategic plans that give you runway without compromising what matters. It's for people who want to make financial decisions from strategy, not panic.

    Website: www.asbatra.com

    Substack: https://asbatracoaching.substack.com/ - Join the community for deeper discussions and downloadable worksheets

    Leave feedback: Use the thumbs up/down button in your podcast app or comment on Substack


    EPISODE CREDITS

    Host & Producer: Asbatra Coaching

    Episode Length: 30 minutes

    続きを読む 一部表示
    30 分