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The Black Woman’s Stress Solution Podcast: discover the connection between Black women’s stress in work, love, and health—offering real solutions to help you stress less and thrive more!
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EP 241: Cognitive Violence How Mindset Work Became Another Way to Shame Black Women
Manage episode 498284244 series 3353674
Why I Had to Name This
I created this episode because I’ve seen too many high-achieving Black and Brown women—myself included—blame ourselves for the very thoughts that helped us survive. We’ve been told to “think better,” “stay positive,” or “change our mindset,” without anyone asking where those thoughts came from or what they were protecting us from. That’s not healing. That’s cognitive violence—and we need to name it to reclaim our power.
What This Episode is Really About
In this episode, I introduce the term “cognitive violence”—a pattern I’ve witnessed in coaching spaces where mindset work is used to shame rather than support. I break down how thought-shaming can happen subtly, especially in coaching rooted in privileged perspectives that ignore systemic oppression and generational trauma.
We explore:
- Why mindset “reframing” often skips over critical context for Black and Brown women.
- How survival-based thoughts are not mindset blocks—they’re protection mechanisms.
- What it means when your biology operates on rules written by oppression (what I call colonized biology).
- Real-life examples of cognitive violence in action, and how to stop committing it against yourself.
- The difference between changing your thoughts and feeling safe enough to believe them.
- The importance of decoding your survival scripts before trying to rewrite them.
This conversation is a call to stop labeling our trauma responses as flaws—and start seeing them as wisdom. 🔥
Your Call to Action
Pattern break time → Ask yourself or a trusted friend:
- What’s a thought I’ve been shaming myself for having?
- When did I first learn it, and who taught me?
- What was that thought trying to protect me from?
Then write it down. Speak it aloud. Witness it.
And if you’re ready to go deeper—take the free Stress Survival Style Quiz to start decoding your own survival patterns.
Take Action
Take my free quiz to discover how your nervous system and survival patterns may be blocking your clarity:
👉🏾 brigjohnson.com/stress-quiz
RESOURCES
- Join my Newsletter, Unlearn and Unleash
- Join the Next Breakthrough Master Class here
- Register for the Next Melanin Hour here
- Book a Breakthrough Call here
- Share Your Takeaways With Me at [email protected]
- Stress Quiz
KEYWORDS: mindset coaching, trauma-informed coaching, Black women healing, cognitive violence, mindset work, colonized biology, nervous system regulation, emotional safety, survival thoughts, generational trauma, uncoached coaching, thought shaming, inner command center, stress survival style, self-sabotage, coaching for Black women
257 episodes
Manage episode 498284244 series 3353674
Why I Had to Name This
I created this episode because I’ve seen too many high-achieving Black and Brown women—myself included—blame ourselves for the very thoughts that helped us survive. We’ve been told to “think better,” “stay positive,” or “change our mindset,” without anyone asking where those thoughts came from or what they were protecting us from. That’s not healing. That’s cognitive violence—and we need to name it to reclaim our power.
What This Episode is Really About
In this episode, I introduce the term “cognitive violence”—a pattern I’ve witnessed in coaching spaces where mindset work is used to shame rather than support. I break down how thought-shaming can happen subtly, especially in coaching rooted in privileged perspectives that ignore systemic oppression and generational trauma.
We explore:
- Why mindset “reframing” often skips over critical context for Black and Brown women.
- How survival-based thoughts are not mindset blocks—they’re protection mechanisms.
- What it means when your biology operates on rules written by oppression (what I call colonized biology).
- Real-life examples of cognitive violence in action, and how to stop committing it against yourself.
- The difference between changing your thoughts and feeling safe enough to believe them.
- The importance of decoding your survival scripts before trying to rewrite them.
This conversation is a call to stop labeling our trauma responses as flaws—and start seeing them as wisdom. 🔥
Your Call to Action
Pattern break time → Ask yourself or a trusted friend:
- What’s a thought I’ve been shaming myself for having?
- When did I first learn it, and who taught me?
- What was that thought trying to protect me from?
Then write it down. Speak it aloud. Witness it.
And if you’re ready to go deeper—take the free Stress Survival Style Quiz to start decoding your own survival patterns.
Take Action
Take my free quiz to discover how your nervous system and survival patterns may be blocking your clarity:
👉🏾 brigjohnson.com/stress-quiz
RESOURCES
- Join my Newsletter, Unlearn and Unleash
- Join the Next Breakthrough Master Class here
- Register for the Next Melanin Hour here
- Book a Breakthrough Call here
- Share Your Takeaways With Me at [email protected]
- Stress Quiz
KEYWORDS: mindset coaching, trauma-informed coaching, Black women healing, cognitive violence, mindset work, colonized biology, nervous system regulation, emotional safety, survival thoughts, generational trauma, uncoached coaching, thought shaming, inner command center, stress survival style, self-sabotage, coaching for Black women
257 episodes
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