When Self-Awareness Turns Into Self-Blame
Description
In this episode of Wired for Well-Being, Dr. Jeffrey Rutstein explores what’s really behind the question so many of us ask: “What’s wrong with me?”
Through two powerful listener questions, Jeffrey and producer Steve Lessard reveal how our nervous system—not our character—drives much of what we feel, believe, and do in relationships and in healing. You’ll discover how protective patterns like over-giving, shame, and self-blame arise from old nervous-system habits, and how shifting to curiosity and compassion can transform them.
You’ll learn:
• What neuroception is—and how our body’s unconscious “danger detector” can misread safety and threat.
• How relational habits like over-extending, people-pleasing, and caretaking often reflect survival programs, not personality flaws.
• Why feedback that feels shaming often reveals the other person’s dysregulation more than your own.
• How to tell when intrusive trauma memories mean something still needs gentle attention—not that you’re doing healing “wrong.”
• The liberating shift from self-judgment to seeing every state—anger, fear, collapse—as information, not confirmation of your worth.
As Jeffrey shares, “Our state drives our story.” By learning to recognize when we’re viewing life through a defensive state—and how to come back into regulation—we begin to see ourselves and others more clearly, with compassion, freedom, and ease.
Have a question for Jeffrey? Leave a voicemail at 866-357-5156. If you can’t reach that number, record a voice memo and email it to hello@drjeffreyrutstein.com.
Learn more about the Healing Trauma Program: drjeffreyrutstein.com/links
The content in this podcast is for informational purposes only and not intended as professional mental health advice. Always consult qualified healthcare providers for medical concerns.



