The Toll of Generalized Resentment (and What to Do About It)

The Toll of Generalized Resentment (and What to Do About It)

There is a feeling many people in midlife carry that does not have a name, a clear cause, or anyone to blame.


It shows up when you have been the dependable one long enough that dependable starts to feel like a cage. Or when you have handled everything capably and walked away feeling hollowed rather than proud. Or when you have given more than you have received for so long that the imbalance stopped feeling like generosity and started feeling like the terms of your life.


In this solo episode, Jonathan Fields examines what he calls diffuse resentment, a specific, accumulated form of feeling that is distinct from the anger or grievance most people recognize as resentment. It does not have an address. It does not require a villain. And because it feels illegitimate, because the voice in your head says you made these choices, you have so much to be grateful for, it tends to go unexamined, parked, managed, and silently expensive.


In this solo episode, Jonathan draws on his own experience, research from psychologists Jennifer Lerner, Laura Carstensen, James Pennebaker, and Nick Epley, and thousands of conversations over 14 years of doing this work, to offer a way of looking at this feeling directly.


In this episode, you will explore:



  • The five territories where diffuse resentment most reliably lives, the calcified role, the invisible labor ledger, the deferred self, relational drift, and the unlived path
  • Why midlife is specifically when this feeling tends to become unavoidable, and why it often intensifies precisely when things are going well
  • What the research on emotional suppression actually shows about the cost of carrying unexamined feelings
  • Two movements (not steps) for beginning to look at this honestly, and why the first must come before the second is possible
  • What becomes available on the other side: accuracy, energy, and a different quality of closeness in the relationships that matter most


If you have been explaining away a feeling you cannot quite name, this episode is for you.


Episode Transcript


Next week, we're sitting down with David Epstein to talk about something that runs against just about everything the self-help world has told you about freedom and options: why the constraints, limits, and boundaries you have been trying to escape are often the very conditions that make creativity, focus, and satisfaction actually possible. It is a genuinely counterintuitive conversation, and it is the kind that stays with you. Be sure to follow Good Life Project wherever you get your podcasts so you don't miss it.


Check out our offerings & partners:

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(1163)

You Spent Years Acting Normal Inside a Life That Never Fit | Sari Botton

You Spent Years Acting Normal Inside a Life That Never Fit | Sari Botton

Gotta love a good midlife reinvention story, and today we’ve got a great one!Sari Botton built her career editing some of the most celebrated voices in American literary nonfiction. Then, in her mid-5...

22 Jun 54min

The Midlife Muscle Loss Lie: How to Stay Strong at Any Age | Dr. Vonda Wright

The Midlife Muscle Loss Lie: How to Stay Strong at Any Age | Dr. Vonda Wright

According to Dr. Vonda Wright, almost everything we believe about aging and muscle loss is wrong. The research that told you to expect decline was built on populations where 70 percent of participants...

18 Jun 54min

The 4 Chemicals That Run Your Brain…and Your Life | Tj Power

The 4 Chemicals That Run Your Brain…and Your Life | Tj Power

Four chemicals, produced by your brain, serve as a master switch for nearly everything you think, do, and feel. In no small way, they also control our lives. But, all too often, instead of harnessing ...

15 Jun 59min

What Lucky People Do Differently, According to Science | Tina Seelig

What Lucky People Do Differently, According to Science | Tina Seelig

Luck is not a personality trait you either have or you don't. It is something you build, and science tells us there are specific, learnable skills behind why some people consistently seem to be in the...

11 Jun 49min

Why Rituals Matter More Than You Know, And How to Design Your Own | Bruce Feiler

Why Rituals Matter More Than You Know, And How to Design Your Own | Bruce Feiler

There is a particular kind of loneliness that hits in the middle of a full life. Not because you are isolated. Because the relationships that used to hold you steady are all being renegotiated at once...

8 Jun 54min

Dating in Midlife…Oh My! | Bela Gandhi

Dating in Midlife…Oh My! | Bela Gandhi

Here is something most of us have never been told: falling in love was never supposed to be easy, and the fact that it hasn't been isn't a character flaw. It's a design problem. Your biology may be wo...

4 Jun 57min

Your Ambitions Might Not Be Yours | Tom Rath

Your Ambitions Might Not Be Yours | Tom Rath

Most of us reach our 40s and discover something unsettling: the ambitions we've been chasing weren't entirely ours. They came from parents, from culture, from the two or three careers we happened to s...

1 Jun 46min

Populært innen Fakta

fastlegen
dine-penger-pengeradet
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
foreldreradet
treningspodden
jakt-og-fiskepodden
rss-kunsten-a-leve
rss-kull
takk-og-lov-med-anine-kierulf
mikkels-paskenotter
sinnsyn
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
hverdagspsyken
gravid-uke-for-uke
rss-sarbar-med-lotte-erik
hagespiren-podcast
smart-forklart
fryktlos
rss-bisarr-historie