Nothing Essential Is Missing
This episode was inspired by Lacey's latest revision of The Process of Unbecoming — and the realization that kept crystallizing through that process: we are born with everything we need to navigate life. The problem isn't that something is missing. The problem is that the frameworks we've been handed make us feel like there is.
In this episode, Lacey walks through the three core human capacities that self-help culture most often treats as deficits — vulnerability, adaptation and protection, and connection — and makes the case that none of them need to be fixed. They need to be understood.
What We Cover
The premise most of us are operating from without realizing it — that something is missing, something is wrong, and the work of life is to fix it.
Why vulnerability is not a skill to develop but a structural feature of being human — and why treating it as a deficit pathologizes the very mechanism through which life becomes worth living.
How adaptation and protection work together: every pattern that gets labeled as dysfunction in therapy is actually the nervous system doing its job. The protection isn't the problem. It's the evidence that you are worthy of protecting.
Why the nervous system doesn't need to be repaired — it needs updated information. And what changes when you stop trying to fix your protections and start getting curious about what they're managing.
Why connection is not an achievement you earn through enough inner work. It is biological, structural, and already present — even in the people who have organized their lives around not needing it.
What happens when you change the premise. When you stop asking what's wrong with me? and start asking what is this protecting?
A Question to Sit With
This week, if you notice something about yourself that you would normally label as a problem — a pattern, a reaction, a way you shut down or push through or avoid — try asking a different question: What is this protecting? You don't have to have an answer. Just start with a different ground.
For more, visit theunbecominghub.com