The Cost of Performing
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There is a particular kind of emptiness that can follow a success.
You worked hard. You delivered. You were impressive. The recognition arrived. And then, briefly and privately, something in you noticed that it didn't quite land where you needed it to. That the place it was meant to fill remained, somehow, unfilled.
If you know that feeling, this episode is for you.
For women who grew up learning that love had to be earned, achievement becomes complicated. Not because ambition is wrong or success is meaningless. But beneath the drive to achieve is often something more tender at work. A belief, absorbed early and carried quietly ever since, that worth is located in what you produce. That love is a response to performance. That if you stopped delivering, something important might shift.
And so you keep delivering. Consistently, reliably, impressively. And the feeling you are looking for keeps arriving just slightly out of reach.
That is the particular cost this episode names.
Not the external cost of working too hard or giving too much, though those are real. The internal cost. The cost to your relationship with success, which can never quite feel like enough. The cost to your closest relationships, where genuine intimacy requires a quality of vulnerability that the performing self finds almost unbearable. The cost to your relationship with yourself, where the inner critic runs at a standard you would never apply to anyone you love.
Because here is what the performing for love belief does to a woman over time. It keeps her in a loop of proving that has no natural endpoint. There is no achievement large enough, no approval consistent enough, no relationship secure enough to finally silence the part of her that is waiting for the evidence that she is enough. That part was formed before evidence could help it. And evidence alone cannot reach it.
What can reach it is something quieter. Something that has nothing to do with what you have done this week, or how well you have shown up, or what the people around you think of you.
This episode makes space for that something. It does not ask you to stop performing or to suddenly believe you are enough when that belief feels out of reach. It simply offers a quiet space to sit with the cost of what has been required of you. To let it be named. To let it be witnessed. And to carry, gently, a question about whether the strategy that kept you safe for so long is still the only one available to you.
Through a quiet somatic invitation, you will be offered a moment to bring to mind one relationship where your presence, simply your presence, is enough. Where you are welcome without having earned it. Where love does not arrive in response to performance but simply exists, steadily, beneath everything else.
For some women, that relationship comes to mind quickly. For others, it takes longer. And for some, the search itself is the most important part of the practice.
Whatever arises is welcome here. There is no right response. Only what is true for you.
This is the second episode in Week Two of Settle and Source, exploring the pattern of feeling that love has to be earned. It works best listened to after Tuesday's episode, For the Woman Who Earns Everything She Gets, but it also stands alone if this is where you are finding us.
On Sunday, the third episode in this week's arc invites you to explore what it might feel like to let the performance rest, just briefly, and discover what is there underneath.
If something in this description has already found you, come in. Settle wherever you are. Let this one be for you.
A Sourel from Angela M. Carter. Find more at traumareleasecentre.com.
Settle and Source: The Podcast is created by Angela M. Carter, founder of Trauma Release Centre and a trained IFS therapist with over thirty years of clinical experience.
Each episode is a Sourel: a short voiced reflection set to sound. Designed for the small pauses of a full life.
Find Angela and more of her work at www.traumareleasecentre.com.
If today’s reflection landed for you, share it with someone who needs it. That’s how a quiet message travels in a loud world.