You don’t have to carry burnout alone. The right support can help you breathe again—start here: https://caitdonovan.com/coaching. Burnout recovery gets real as Sarah Vosen sits down with an anonymous guest who feels trapped by perfectionism, people-pleasing, and the voice of an inner critic that makes self-compassion feel out of reach. In this episode, she’s trying something different for the podcast: a real-time coaching session. Her guest “Kate” describes how burnout began with constant illness and eventually knocked her flat, leaving her exhausted and uncertain about how to move forward. Years later, Kate still feels caught in a loop of trial and error, trying new practices, hoping for change, and losing faith when nothing seems to last. How do you find the courage to say no before your body forces you to? And how do you begin to quiet the inner critic that insists you’ll never get better? Through thoughtful coaching, Sarah helps Kate see the fear of saying no for what it is: a strategy that once kept her safe but now keeps her stuck. She offers a new way to look at recovery, like a scale that can slowly tip away from self-judgment and toward self-compassion with each small act of courage. Along the way, Kate begins to see how even the tiniest pieces of evidence, moments of asking for help, choosing rest, or protecting her needs, can start to shift the balance. This conversation opens a window into the real work of burnout recovery. It’s messy and slow, but it’s also a practice of rediscovering your voice, setting boundaries that protect your energy, and remembering that even a flicker of hope is proof that change is possible. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Real-Time Coaching on Burnout Recovery 02:26 Kate’s Burnout Journey and First Signs of Collapse 05:09 Career Uncertainty and Feeling Stuck 10:52 Battling the Inner Critic and Self-Judgment 12:38 Fear of Saying No and People-Pleasing Patterns 14:13 Rediscovering Passion for Storytelling and Audio 20:08 Hyper-Independence and the Struggle to Ask for Help 24:02 The Core Loop: Avoiding “No” to Feel Safe but Staying Stuck 33:00 The Burnout Recovery Process and the Unfried Program 43:03 Practicing Self-Compassion During Setbacks 49:41 Building Evidence for Growth and Recovery Links Hailey Page Magee episode Kristin Neff episode Your Burnt Out Brain Is Mean, And A Liar episode Connect with Cait: Initial Call with Cait Initial Call with Sarah You don’t have to carry burnout alone. The right support can help you breathe again—start here: https://caitdonovan.com/coaching. Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm…
Dan and Ryan talk about Dan's latest book which is about why Dan left the Christian faith over a decade ago. They also talk about a couple of Christian apologists who had a lot to say in response to Dan's first book. Politely Rejecting Jesus is available on Amazon and Barnes & Noble in both paperback and ebook form. The audio book will be available soon! Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
Picking up where the last episode left off, Dan continues his discussion of cosmological arguments for atheism. In this episode he talks about an argument from Quentin Smith which accepts the Kalam Cosmological Argument for a cause of the universe, but which attempts to show that the universe is its own cause. Resources mentioned in this episode: The Cambridge Companion to Atheism edited by Michael Martin ch. 11, "Kalam Cosmological Arguments for Atheism" by Quentin Smith Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
Ryan is currently on a quest to rescue the New Year Baby with the help of Caveman and Ben Franklin, so Dan tackles a couple of philosophical arguments for atheism. The first is a version of (or response to) the Kalam Cosmological Argument which suggests that the universe can't possibly have a cause. Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
Does everything have an explanation? What about the clown ghost that seems to be haunting Ryan? These are Very Important Questions and Dan and Ryan will do their best to get to the bottom of them as they talk about another version of the cosmological argument for God's existence. (As for the ghost, he is welcome to set up a third mic and join the discussion.) Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
Can someone really hire an infinite number of assassins to take out Ryan? Also where did the universe come from? These are the questions that Dan and Ryan try to get to the bottom of in talking about the Kalam Cosmological Argument, which is a prominent argument for the existence of God. Resources mentioned/used in this episode: The Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology edited by William Lane Craig and J.P. Moreland Ch 2: "The Leibnizian cosmological argument" by Alexander R. Pruss Ch 3: "The kalam cosmological argument" by William Lane Craig and James Sinclair This Idea Must Die: Scientific Theories that Are Blocking Progress , edited by John Brockman "Entropy" by Bruce Parker Hilbert's Hotel and Infinity by drcraigvideos A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking "The Kalam Cosmological Argument" by William Lane Craig (website) Question of the Week #336: “Honesty, Transparency, Full Disclosure” and the Borde-Guth-Vilenkin Theorem by William Lane Craig Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
Ryan sinks deeper into the world of depressing holiday specials while Dan reels from the horror of Meta's ill-fated AI-generated Instagram account. Then the two get to work in discussing a variety of informal logical fallacies. Resources mentioned in this episode: Informal Logical Fallacies: A Brief Guide by Jacob E. Van Vleet Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
Three ghosts visited Ryan in one night and convinced him to keep doing this podcast, meanwhile Dan can't get any ghosts to visit him. Also, Dan and Ryan talk about a YouTube video that claims to show how science disproves free will. Resources mentioned in this episode: "Free Will" by Mark Balaguer "Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will" by Robert Sapolsky "Neuroscience of free will" on Wikipedia "Science Suggests Free Will Doesn't Exist" from Ben Miles on YouTube Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
Seems like our old pals Smith and Jones are at it again, this time baking cookies with potentially deadly results. Also, we can't seem to stop ourselves from dunking on the late Stephen Hawking. But can we be blamed? Or did the universe make us do it? Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
Do we have free will? If not, then who should we blame for the movie where Nicolas Cage plays a Vegas magician who can see two minutes into the future? Personally, I blame Ryan. Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
What do evolution, a cat named Nacho, and 108 philosophy podcasts all have to do with the problem of skepticism? I'd tell you but I don't know anything. Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
Dan and Ryan know things, allegedly. But what does it mean to know something? And what does this have to do with a man named Jones bringing loose change to a job interview? Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
Do minds even exist? Will Ryan let Dan remove his brain for scientific purposes? It's all part of their ongoing discussion about the mind-body problem. Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
What is the self? Is it possible for mental substances to interact with physical bodies? Dan and Ryan continue discussing the mind-body problem and consider some of the problems related to substance dualism. Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
What happens when a transporter malfunction creates two Will Rikers? Where does his mind end up? Did he even have a mind to begin with? Also what is the secret to comedy? Dan and Ryan take a look at the mind-body problem and explore a view called substance dualism. Send us your questions, comments, and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com (Podcast art by Andie Basto)…
The late great Stephen Hawking once opined that philosophy is dead, so Dan and Ryan get to work to try to figure out who the killer is. Send us your philosophy questions and other general hate mail via our podcast page, which you can access by visiting thinkhardernotsmarter.com Special thanks to Andie Basto for the amazing podcast art! Follow @andieisonline on IG!…
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