Loved Without Losing Yourself A podcast for high-achieving women who are done abandoning themselves.
Loved Without Losing Yourself is a podcast for capable, high-achieving women who look strong on the outside but feel disconnected, emotionally drained, or quietly exhausted on the inside.
Hosted by Penelope Magoulianiti, this podcast explores what happens when a woman has spent years holding everything together and realises she has slowly stopped listening to herself.
These are grounded, honest conversations about identity, over-functioning, emotional responsibility, self-leadership, and the subtle ways women lose themselves while doing everything “right.”
This is not a space for fixing yourself.
It’s a space for remembering who you are and learning how to come back to yourself without burning your life down.
Short episodes. No noise. No performance.
Just clarity, truth, and a return to what actually matters.
Loved Without Losing Yourself A podcast for high-achieving women who are done abandoning themselves.
The Panic Attack That Woke Me Up
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What happens when clarity lands? When a woman finally sees the truth about what's been happening to her marriage, her health, and her sense of self?
In this episode, I'm sharing three real (anonymized) stories of women who had that one honest moment. Their transformations weren't about trying harder or doing more. They were about seeing clearly what was true.
You'll hear:
Sarah's story: How her marriage shifted when she stopped managing it and started being in it
Emma's story: How she found herself again after losing herself in success
Monica's story: How resentment transformed into compassion once clarity arrived
Plus my story: The panic attack that woke me up to what I'd been sacrificing: my health, my marriage, my sense of self
I'm also sharing three reflection questions you can answer RIGHT NOW to start assessing your own clarity.
If you recognize yourself in these stories, if you're succeeding externally while struggling internally, this episode is for you.
Reset Sessions are 70 minutes of focused clarity work that changes everything. Everything shifts from there.
Book your Reset: HERE
This podcast is part of my deeper work supporting women who are capable, accomplished, and exhausted from overgiving, overcarrying, and losing themselves inside the life they’ve built.
If you’re ready to go deeper, here are a few ways to begin:
Take the Burnout Assessment
Explore my book, Claws Out: Thriving in a World That Wants You Tamed
Book a Reset Session with me and get clear on the deeper reason behind your pressure, confusion, or emotional exhaustion.
Hello and welcome to Love to Without Losing Yourself. Today's episode is going to be different than the ones before. Today I'm bringing you real stories from my clients where the moment Clarity landed, everything shifted. And I am sharing my story too because I didn't come to this work as an outside expert. I came to do this work because I lived it, I experienced it. Throughout the years, I became the woman who offered support and comfort to everyone around me, my family, my kids, my partner, at the expense of my own needs. And for a long time that felt like love, like responsibility, like what a good woman does. And this behavior had a cost in my marriage, in my body, in my health. I think you might recognize yourself in what I am about to share today. And I want to be clear from the beginning: if you recognize yourself in any of the stories I'm about to share, don't think bad about yourself. Please don't blame yourself. Understand instead that what's causing this behavior is that you've learned to operate from a pattern. And the good news is that patterns can change. So let's dive in. Before we uh we start, a quick note first. The names and some details have been changed for privacy. The transformations, however, are real. And taking this out of our way, I want to start with Sarah's story. She came to me in late January. She was successful, she was married for 12 years, she had two kids. And everyone that saw Sara thought she had it all figured out. She had the perfect life. But the minute she started our conversation, I saw the pain underneath. I don't know who I am anymore, and I think my marriage is dying. She told me that her marriage had become a logistics meeting. She and her husband coordinated schedules, they discussed finances, they managed the household, but they didn't talk to each other. Not really, not the way couples do when there is intimacy and presence. I cannot even pinpoint when I stopped being his partner and became his project manager, she told me. I manage the marriage like I manage everything else. I do it efficiently, responsibly, perfectly, but there is no warmth. There is no how are you today, my love? No, I missed you today. It's all logistics. And she continued by saying, I think he feels it too. We are both just going through the emotions. And Sarah had learned like so many women that her value came from managing everything, from being responsible, from giving so much and never complaining. And she became so good at managing that she forgot how to be present, how to be vulnerable, how to be a partner instead of a project manager. And when she got honest, this is when some things shifted in our conversation. I think the problem isn't my marriage, she told me. The problem is me. I stopped showing up as myself. I stopped being myself, I stop being available emotionally. And I've been treating my marriage like it's another thing to manage instead of something to live in. And then she said, what if my husband isn't distant because he doesn't love me? What if he's like this because I've been emotionally unavailable? What if the logistics thing is actually my way of controlling everything so I don't have to feel how disconnected I actually am? She was hiding behind her fear, and the minute she saw it, she became clear of her thoughts and actions. That was clarity, real clarity by just being honest. Three months later Sarah came back and told me everything shifted, and it wasn't because I took drastic measures. We didn't go to a couple's therapy. I just decided to stop managing my marriage and instead to start being in it. So here's what changed. First, her mind got quieter. She stopped the constant planning and managing in her head. And in that quiet space she could think about what she wanted, what she missed, what she needed from her partner. Second, she became present in conversations. Instead of coordinating logistics, she asked him real questions. How are you today? What's going on beneath the surface? She started showing up emotionally. And third, because her whole presence changed, her husband showed up differently. He started becoming more available, more present, more interested. So this is what she told me. It's like he was waiting for me to come back because I had left, not intentionally, but emotionally. And the moment I returned, he was there. So Sarah changed, and everything changed from there. That's what clarity does. Now let's move to Emma. Emma had a high position in a consulting firm. She was overseeing teams, managing clients, delivering results. And she was excellent at what she was doing. And she had a lot of people dependent on her. She was respected, she got promoted, valued. But during our conversation, this is what she told me. You know, Penelope, I've succeeded at everything. The great career, the good marriage, the healthy kids. But what I feel is like I'm disappearing, like I've become so good at being what everyone needs that I've forgotten who I actually am. You see, Emma at work was strong and decisive, and at home she managed and coordinated. But where was she? Where was the woman who used to want things, who had dreams that weren't around everyone else's happiness and comfort, who could ask for peace without guilt. Emma was successful at everything except knowing who she was. I used to love to read, she told me. I used to go to concerts. I had opinions about things that didn't matter. Now everything is about managing something or someone. I can't remember the last time I did something just because I wanted to. She was exhausted in a way sleep couldn't fix. Numb, going through the motions of a successful life that felt empty. So I asked her this question. Who would you be if nobody needed anything from you? If you didn't have to manage, produce, or be strong, who would you actually be? And she couldn't answer. She literally couldn't access that person. She would be her successful persona for so long. She didn't know who she was underneath. And that was the question that cracked something open. She started to cry. She was crying for her lost self, and she feared she wouldn't be able to find her again. That was her moment of clarity. This is when something fundamental shifts. In her case, she accepted her circumstances, but also gave herself permission to stop performing, to stop managing, to stop being strong all the time. And in that space, she started to remember. She started reading again. She said yes to time for herself. She started saying no to things that didn't matter. She got honest about what she actually wanted instead of what she thought she should want. And surprisingly, she became a better executive. The minute she stopped operating from desperation and started operating from authenticity and clarity, her leadership skills improved because it came to her effortlessly. And this is what she told me at some point. I became successful, Penelope, despite losing myself. And now that I am finding myself again, I'm actually better at everything. Because I'm doing it from a place of choice, not obligation. That's clarity. Not changing circumstances, but changing who you are in them. Who you are in those circumstances. The third story I want to share with you is slightly different, as it involves both partners realizing the truth at the same time. And I will call her Monica. And Monica came to me at a breaking point. She and her husband hadn't had a real conversation in three years. Just going through the motions, doing tasks, not real conversations, no deep conversations. And Monica had built up so much resentment that she couldn't even look at him without feeling angry. And this is what she told me. I don't think I love him anymore. I think I've just become angry at him because he doesn't understand how much I am caring. And the more I carry, the more invisible I become. And the more invisible I become, the more resentful I get. Her husband didn't understand how much she was caring, and his ignorance wasn't attributed to insensitivity if we want to be honest here. It was because Monica had never told him. She would silently carry it all, expecting him to notice, expecting him to rescue her. So what he did unintentionally he ended up adapting to her carrying everything, and he withdrew because her resentment was obvious. Monica's clarity moment came when she understood that she was he wasn't the problem. I am the problem, she told me. I've been silently resenting him for not understanding something I never told him about. I've been angry at him for not reading my mind, and the whole time I've been the one who stopped letting him in. That was a hard clarity to sit with, because it meant she couldn't blame him. She had to own what she she would done. That's where the shift happened again. She went home and had the conversation she would have been avoiding for three years, an honest yet hard conversation. A confession that I've been carrying so much that I forgot how to let you in. I've been angry at you for not saving me when really I've been pushing you away. Her husband, who felt that distance and he didn't even know why that distance existed, finally understood. And in his own merit he decided to show up for her because he loved her. Honesty, not perfection. This is I want to point to you. If you get one thing out of here, be honest with yourself. And from honesty everything rebuilds. Monica realized that the resentment didn't go away immediately, but it shifted, it helped her shift from anger at him to compassion for both of them. What changed in their case was presence and responsibility and a willingness to be vulnerable instead of resentful. My story is not far off. As I said at the beginning of this episode, I became the woman who gave. Reading without guilt, time alone without worrying about what needed to be done, the ability to laugh freely without managing someone else's mood, going out with friends and dancing without apologizing for having fun. I stopped doing these things. I chose numbness instead. I told myself I didn't need these things anymore. As I got older, I convinced myself that they didn't matter. And in doing that, I suppressed who I was. The cause became real when I got a diagnosis. When my doctor told me 90% cancer, a wake-up call. My husband was away when I needed him most at that moment, and I felt anger instead. Pure anger at myself and at him. I blame myself for not speaking up, for suppressing my feelings and needs for so long that somehow they had to surface in my body. I blame him for always traveling while I stayed behind. And I broke. I broke down. I cried and blamed myself. I had regrets about my choices and behaviors, and I felt despair when I got clear about what I've done, of what I've allowed myself to not to do. I forgot who I was in the effort to support other people. I was giving unconditional love to all of them, and I deprived myself from that love. My marriage was almost dead, no intimacy, roommates instead of lovers. My body was screaming. And I would be ignoring it. Chronic tension in my shoulders and neck. I lost the ability to sleep deeply because my mind never turned off. Exhausted in a way caffeine couldn't fix. And trust me, I tried. I tried so much to fix things with caffeine. And then one day I had a panic attack out of nowhere, a full panic attack. I couldn't breathe. And that was my wake-up call. I was emotionally drained, empty inside, telling myself I have nothing else to give. I will put so much energy into taking care others, as I already said, that I had no capacity left for myself. And sadly, my family didn't need this kind of sacrifice from me. What they needed was me, the healthy me, the present me, the happy me. During that hard period, and with the help of my coach, I came to understand that I didn't do this to myself. I learned it. I learned that my value came from what I gave. I learned that being good meant being selfless. I learned that love meant sacrifice. And you know what? I decided to unlearn it. I'm not gonna say it was easy, but the first step I took is to be honest, honest with myself. I wrote down what this pattern was costing me. And the price was steep, but I did it. Apart from my happiness, the cause was my health, my marriage, my sense of self. And when I saw that cause written in front of me, this is when I decided to choose to become someone else. It took work, it took time, I finally allowed myself to cry, and I cried a lot. And all this started with clarity. That moment when I saw honestly what was happening and decided this wasn't living, it was just functioning. And I didn't want to function anymore. So here's what I want you to know. You heard three stories of my clients and my story. And if you're still listening to these stories, it's because you recognize yourself in them at some point. Maybe you heard Sarah's marriage and thought, that's mine. Or maybe you heard Emma's invisibility and felt it in your own chest. Or maybe Monica's resentment and knew exactly what she meant. And you heard my panic attack, and you might have thought, that could be me. So right now, not tomorrow, not someday, I want you to do something right now. I want you to sit with three questions. Because here's what I know from my experience of doing this work. Once you see the cost clearly, the cost in your life, in your body, I can promise you that something will shift. You might decide to stop blaming yourself. You will start probably understanding the pattern, or maybe you will stop thinking something is wrong with you, and instead you will start seeing something changeable. So grab a piece of paper and let's do this together. Question number one. What does that mean? What did you lose? What exactly did you lose? Maybe it's your spontaneity, your sense of humor, the ability to do something just because you want to. Maybe it's physical touch, specific desire, creativity, or your peace of mind. What specifically have you given up in the effort to be for someone else, to serve, to give? Take a moment and write it down. Just write whatever comes. comes in mind. Question number two. What's the cost in your relationship? If you're in a partnership or marriage, how is this pattern showing up there? Are you managing instead of connecting? Present but that are unavailable? Maybe you are resentful, numb. What is the pattern costing you with the person you love most? Write that down. And take as much time as you need. Pause this episode if you have to and answer these questions with as much detail as possible. Question number three What's the cost in your body? And this is a very important question. Your body always knows the truth because before your mind does and the body always keeps score. If you like reading books there is this beautiful book called The Body Keeps Core. It's a great book to read. So what is the cost in your body? Are you exhausted in a way sleep doesn't fix? Do you have chronic tension? Do you experience anxiety out of nowhere? Maybe you have difficulty in sleeping like me or maybe difficulty in feeling desire or joy. What is your body trying to tell you? Write that down. Now here's the thing if you took my suggestion and you answered those three questions you did something really important. You got honest. You named what you've been afraid to acknowledge you decided to see clearly what's true even if it scares you and I want to congratulate you if you answer these questions. It takes courage to see what's really going on instead of avoiding. Now I hope that you took the time again to answer those three questions. And tell me if you did what is different now you can feel it. I know that you can you can see it. You know something has to shift. And that's why I want to tell you a bit about the research sessions I'm offering. A research session is not another cause is not passive. It's not something that you see it and you watch me talking over and over, explaining stuff. This is 70 minutes of real clarity one focused conversation where we get honest about what's true, what you've lost and what becomes possible when you rebuild from self-respect instead of sacrifice. The shift doesn't happen years from now. It happens in that conversation women come to me overwhelmed, stretched disconnected and they live with clarity with with direction with a plan. This is exactly for this moment when you are tired of waiting when you are ready to get clear when you know something has to shift now. I will drop the link in the show notes for you to learn more and book if you choose to go ahead with it. But if you thought I need this please don't say I will do it later. Do it now book it today. The longer you allow the time to pass by the more reasons you will find to do not do it. I want you to recognize that you are here because for some reason you saw yourself new stories. Maybe it's your marriage that feels like logistics as I said or maybe your identity disappeared or maybe resentment is starting to build up more and more. Whatever it is I want you to understand it's changeable. Clarity changes everything. So go answer those three questions and then go ahead and book your reset. Thank you so much for listening. If this landed please share it with someone who needs to hear it and until next week much love
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