Communication Skills for Working Women Podcast:Effective Communication, Healthy Relationships, Direct Communication

Communication Skills for Working Women Podcast:Effective Communication, Healthy Relationships, Direct Communication

Elizabeth Amorino, Certified Coach and Facilitator; Rosemay Webster, Licensed Therapist, PhD Candidate
ประเทศ สหรัฐอเมริกา
ภาษา EN
จำนวนตอน 62
ล่าสุด 29.06.2026

Elizabeth and Rosemay, two friends who are also wives, mothers and working women, share their personal struggles with communication skills. Despite different backgrounds in psychology and organizational communication, they both felt unfulfilled and silenced by trying to be compliant and agreeable. They now teach simple yet effective communication skills to help women become calm, confident communicators at work and at home, without walking on eggshells or burning bridges.

ตอน

  • 054 I Why Your Ideas Get Ignored (Even When You Say Them Right) 29.06.2026 10นาที
    Episode Summary:Have you ever walked away from a conversation thinking, “I said exactly what I meant… so why didn’t they listen to me?” For many working women especially those navigating career transitions, leadership growth, or evolving relationships the frustration isn’t a lack of good ideas. It’s that your ideas are being overlooked, dismissed, or not fully heard in meetings and important conversations. And over time, that leads to something deeper: communication anxiety, second-guessing, and overthinking every interaction. In this episode, we break down what we call the Communication Gap the space between what you’re thinking and how you actually speak up in the moment. You’ll learn why people don’t listen even when you’re saying the right thing, how overexplaining and people-pleasing habits weaken your message, and what to do differently so you can speak clearly, build communication confidence, and be heard at work and in your relationships. What You’ll Learn: Why working women often feel unheard in meetings and everyday conversations How communication anxiety and overthinking impact how others respond to you What creates the gap between your ideas and how they’re received 3 common communication habits that cause your ideas to be ignored How to speak clearly at work without overexplaining or softening your message Practical ways to build communication confidence and stop second-guessing yourself Who This Episode Is For:This episode is for working women who: Feel like people don’t listen or take their ideas seriously Want to improve communication skills in both work and relationships Are navigating career transitions, leadership roles, or personal growth Struggle with overthinking, overexplaining, or people-pleasing communication patterns Want to feel more confident speaking up and being heard in meetings and important conversations Key Takeaways: 1. The problem isn’t your ideas it’s how they come across in the momentWhen you’re managing how you’re perceived, your communication shifts in real time. This is why strong, thoughtful ideas sometimes get overlooked or ignored.👉 This is the Communication Gap and it’s especially common for women navigating leadership and career growth. 2. Stop burying your point lead with clarityWhen you overexplain or build up to your point, people stop listening before you ever get there.👉 Try: “Here’s my recommendation.” “The key issue is…” Leading clearly is one of the most important communication skills for being heard at work. 3. Remove language that weakens your messageSoftening phrases like “I just think,” “maybe,” or “I feel like” can make your communication sound uncertain even when you’re confident internally.👉 Try: “I think we should…” “This isn’t working.” Clear, direct language builds trust and helps others respond to what you’re actually saying. 4. Say it once then let it landOverexplaining is one of the most common communication habits that causes people to tune out or miss your point.👉 Try: “That’s my recommendation.” “That’s the main point.” Then pause. This is where being heard actually happens. The Core Shift:If people aren’t hearing you, it’s not because you’re not capable, intelligent, or prepared. It’s because overthinking, communication anxiety, and people-pleasing are changing how your message is delivered in real time. When you learn to speak clearly without overexplaining or softening you close the Communication Gap. And that’s how you move from feeling ignored… to being heard, respected, and understood in both your work and your relationships. Action Step:In your next meeting or conversation, practice this: 👉 Say your point in one clear sentence: “Here’s my recommendation…” Then stop. No overexplaining.No softening.No second-guessing. This is how you begin building real communication confidence—and start getting your ideas heard. Connect & Share:If this episode resonated with you, share it with a f
  • 053 I Why You Can’t Stop Replaying Conversations (And What It’s Really Costing You) 22.06.2026 15นาที
    Episode Summary:Do you ever find yourself replaying a conversation long after it’s over analyzing what you said, what they meant, and what you should have done differently? For many working women navigating life and career transitions, this pattern of overthinking can feel constant. It shows up after meetings, difficult conversations, or even everyday interactions leaving you feeling anxious, uncertain, and emotionally drained. In this episode, we break down why your brain replays conversations, what’s really driving that anxiety, and how to stop the Overthinking Loop in the moment. You’ll learn simple, practical tools to help you move from second-guessing yourself to feeling clear, grounded, and confident in your communication. What You’ll Learn: Why women overthink conversations especially during stressful transitions How anxiety impacts communication in relationships and at work The difference between reflection and the “Overthinking Loop” Why your brain replays conversations to manage perception and acceptance A simple 3-step process to stop overthinking in real time How to build self-trust and emotional clarity after difficult conversations This episode is for working women who: Replay conversations and struggle to “turn off” their thoughts Feel anxious about how they’re perceived in relationships or at work Are navigating a transition (career shift, leadership growth, family changes) Tend to overthink, people-please, or second-guess themselves Want more peace, clarity, and confidence in their communication Key Takeaways: 1. Overthinking is about perceived acceptance not clarityWhen you replay conversations, you’re not actually improving your communication.👉 You’re trying to manage how you were perceived. 2. Name the Overthinking Loop to interrupt itWhen you label the pattern, you create space between you and your thoughts.👉 Try: “This is the Overthinking Loop.” “I’m replaying, not problem-solving.” 3. Separate facts from the story your brain is tellingYour brain fills in gaps with assumptions but those are not facts.👉 Try: “What do I actually know happened?”Then label the rest: “That’s a story not a fact.” 4. Close the loop instead of waiting to feel doneOverthinking doesn’t resolve itself you have to decide to stop.👉 Try: “I’ve thought about this enough.” “There’s nothing else to solve.” “I’m choosing to move on.” The Core Shift:Overthinking isn’t helping you communicate better.It’s trying to protect you from judgment. But what you actually need is closure not more analysis. When you learn to stop the loop, you reduce anxiety, strengthen self-trust, and show up more confidently in your relationships and workplace. Action Step:The next time you catch yourself replaying a conversation, use this 3-step reset: 👉 “This is the Overthinking Loop.” 👉 “What do I actually know happened?” 👉 “I’m done thinking about this.” Then intentionally move on shift your focus, your body, or your environment. Connect & Share:If this episode resonated with you, share it with a friend who overthinks their conversations or struggles with communication anxiety. Leaving a review helps more women find the tools to communicate clearly and confidently. Closing Thought:Speak Clearly and Listen Bravely.
  • 052 I 3 Ways to Speak So People Actually Listen (Even If You’re Overthinking It) 15.06.2026 18นาที
    Episode Summary:If you’re a working woman navigating a career transition, shifting relationships, or increased anxiety at work or home, this episode will help you understand why you’re not being heard, even when you know exactly what you want to say. So many women between find themselves second-guessing their words, softening their message, or over-explaining in important conversations. Not because they lack confidence but because they are trying to be thoughtful, likable, and emotionally aware. In this episode, we break down the subtle communication habits that are quietly undermining your clarity and what to say instead so you can feel more confident, respected, and understood in the moments that matter most. What You’ll Learn: The “Acceptability Trap” and how it keeps you from being heard 3 common indirect communication habits that weaken your message Simple, in-the-moment phrases to help you speak clearly and confidently How to communicate with clarity without sounding harsh or aggressive This episode is for working women who: Are navigating a transition (career change, leadership role, family shift, identity growth) Feel anxious speaking up in meetings or important conversations Struggle with overthinking, people-pleasing, or fear of being misunderstood Want stronger, more confident communication in their relationships and workplace Key Takeaways: 1. Disclaimers weaken your messageWhen you say things like “I could be wrong” or “just a thought,” you unintentionally signal uncertainty.👉 Try instead: “Here’s what I’m seeing.” “Here’s my recommendation.” 2. Over-explaining dilutes your clarityWhen you lead with too much context, your main point gets lost.👉 Try instead: “I recommend we move forward with option B.”(Pause. Let that be enough.) 3. Softening language invites others to override youTurning statements into questions or adding “maybe” reduces your authority.👉 Try instead: “Let’s move forward with this.” “What questions do you have?” The Core Shift:Clarity is not rude.Clarity is respectful, especially in relationships that matter most. When you communicate clearly, you reduce anxiety, strengthen connection, and build trust in both professional and personal relationships. Action Step:In your next conversation, practice saying one clear sentence without softening or disclaiming: “Here’s what I’m seeing.” “I recommend…” Then pause.Let your words stand. If this episode resonated with you, share it with a friend who is navigating a transition or struggling to be heard. Leaving a review helps more women find the tools to communicate clearly and confidently. Speak Clearly and Listen Bravely.  
  • 051 I Unclear Communication at Work: Simple Communication Skills for Busy Women to Reduce Anxiety, Save Time, and Build Better Connection 08.06.2026 8นาที
    What if that moment at work isn’t small… What if it’s actually unclear communication? You’re sitting at your desk, focused, trying to manage your time and get through your to-do list. And then you hear it— A question, just… floating in the room. “Does anyone know where that file is?”“Are we still meeting at 2?” No name.No direction.No eye contact. And suddenly—you pause. Are they talking to me?Am I supposed to answer that?Should I ignore it? And just like that, your focus is broken. This is what unclear communication at work does. It interrupts your time.It increases anxiety at work.And it quietly weakens connection in the workplace. Because when communication is vague, indirect, or not directed to a person—everyone is left guessing. And guessing is exhausting. In this episode, Elizabeth shares a real-life example of how common this is in workplace communication, especially in collaborative or open office environments. Because while it may seem harmless, this kind of indirect communication creates distraction, confusion, and unnecessary mental load—especially for busy, middle-aged working women who are already balancing responsibilities at work and at home. The truth is—most of us were never taught clear, effective communication skills for working women. We were taught to be easygoing.To not interrupt.To keep things casual. But that often leads to unclear professional communication, where no one knows who is responsible, and everyone is managing low-level stress trying to figure it out. If you’ve ever felt distracted, overwhelmed, or slightly on edge in a work environment where communication feels indirect or unclear—this episode will give you simple, practical tools to shift that immediately. You’ll learn how to move from vague, indirect communication to clear communication, so you can reduce anxiety, save time, and build stronger connection at work. Because strong communication skills don’t just make you more effective—they help you feel calmer, more confident, and more connected in your daily life. 💡 In This Episode, You’ll Learn: Why unclear communication in the workplace increases anxiety and disrupts focus How indirect communication wastes time and creates confusion A simple shift to make your communication clear, direct, and effective How to build connection at work through intentional communication How to strengthen professional communication skills without adding more to your plate ✨ A Simple Shift to Try Today Clear is kind.Unclear is unkind. Direct is kind.Indirect is unkind. Say the name.Ask the question clearly.Create clarity instead of confusion. Because small shifts in communication create big shifts in how you experience your workday. 🎧 Share This Episode If this episode helped you rethink workplace communication and gave you a simple way to reduce anxiety at work, share it with a friend or colleague who wants clearer communication and stronger connection in their day. 🌿 Our Mission We help working women build communication skills, strengthen connection, and thrive without adding more overwhelm or taking more time than they have. Speak clearly… and listen bravely. Connect with us at communicationskillsforwomen@gmail.com
  • 050 I Passive Aggressive Emails: Simple Communication Skills for Busy Women Managing Anxiety, Connection, and Time 01.06.2026 10นาที
    What if that email didn’t bother you because you’re “too sensitive”… What if it actually wasn’t clear communication? You open your inbox, read the message, and pause. It sounds polite.It looks professional.But something about it feels off. So you reread it.And reread it again. Trying to figure out the tone.Trying to decide if you’re overreacting.Trying to figure out how to respond without making things worse in a professional setting. And suddenly, a simple email has taken your time, your energy, and your peace. This is what passive-aggressive emails do in the workplace. They create confusion instead of clear communication.They increase anxiety at work instead of building connection.And for busy women, they quietly drain the time and emotional bandwidth you don’t have to spare. In this episode, Elizabeth shares a real-life experience with passive-aggressive communication and how quickly it can impact your emotions, your confidence, and your ability to respond with strong professional communication skills. Because here’s the truth—most of us were never taught effective communication skills for working women.We were taught to be polite.To keep the peace.To not say the wrong thing. But that often leaves us stuck in unclear workplace communication, overthinking simple emails, and navigating difficult conversations at work without a clear strategy. If you’ve ever struggled with unclear tone, indirect feedback, or trying to maintain connection at work while managing your own emotional response, this episode will give you simple, practical tools you can use immediately. You’ll learn how to recognize passive-aggressive patterns, regulate your reaction, and respond with calm, confident clear communication—so you can protect your time, reduce stress, and show up with stronger emotional intelligence at work. Because better communication isn’t just about saying the right thing.It’s about creating clarity, building connection, and managing your energy in the middle of a full, busy life. 💡 In This Episode, You’ll Learn: How to recognize passive-aggressive emails in workplace communication Why indirect communication increases anxiety at work and wastes time A simple way to pause and regulate before responding How to use clear communication to handle difficult conversations at work How to strengthen communication skills while maintaining connection and professionalism ✨ A Simple Shift to Try Today You’re not responsible for how others communicate.But you are responsible for how you respond. Pause.Get clear.Then respond in a way that reflects your values, not your emotions. 🤝 Connect With Us We’d love to stay connected with you as you grow your communication skills, strengthen connection, and create more peace in your work and life. Follow along and reach out: Instagram: @YourPodcastHandle Facebook Group: Communication Skills for Working Women Email: yourpodcast@email.com Come share your experience—have you navigated passive-aggressive communication at work? 🎧 Share This Episode If this episode helped you feel more confident navigating workplace communication and managing anxiety at work, share it with a friend or colleague who wants stronger communication skills and more ease in their day. 🌿 Our Mission We help working women build communication skills, deepen connection with themselves and others, and thrive without adding more overwhelm or taking more time than they have. Speak clearly… and listen bravely. Connect with us at Communicationskillsforwomen@gmail.com
  • 049 I When Power Talks Down: Navigating the Anxiety of a Demeaning Coworker in a High Position 25.05.2026 21นาที
    What if the hardest part of your job… isn’t the workload but the way someone with power speaks to you? You’re in a meeting.You share an idea. And then it happens— A dismissive tone.A sarcastic comment.An interruption that shuts you down. No one says anything.The meeting moves on. But internally? You pause.You replay what just happened.You start adjusting how you show up. Maybe I should say less.Maybe I should prepare more.Maybe I should just stay quiet. This is what happens when power talks down in the workplace. And for many working women, this dynamic creates a very real layer of anxiety at work, self-doubt, and disconnection from your own voice. Because it’s not just about their behavior— It’s about how you start managing yourself around their behavior. Editing your voice.Second-guessing your ideas.Shrinking without even realizing it. In this episode, we unpack what it really means to navigate demeaning or condescending communication in the workplace, especially when it comes from someone in a higher position. And we do something different— We don’t just talk about what they are doing.We help you understand what’s happening internally for you. Because strong communication skills for working women aren’t just about knowing what to say—they’re about understanding the patterns that keep you silent, and learning how to shift them. You’ll also hear a powerful and honest story from Elizabeth—reflecting on a moment where she recognized this behavior in herself. A moment where her tone, her words, and her delivery caused others to second-guess themselves and hold back. And while that realization was difficult—it became a turning point. Because it led to growth.To awareness.And to a deeper commitment to clear, respectful communication—both at work and at home. This episode is not about blame. It’s about awareness, ownership, and learning how to navigate power dynamics in the workplace with clarity and self-respect. Because the truth is—we are all, at different times, on both sides of power. Using the Immunity to Change framework, we walk through a step-by-step approach to help you understand: Why you may be holding back in moments of tensionWhat fears are driving your silenceWhat hidden commitments are keeping you “safe”And how to begin shifting your communication—without escalating conflict 💡 In This Episode, You’ll Learn: How condescending communication in the workplace impacts confidence and connection Why women often adapt by shrinking, over-preparing, or staying quiet How internal fears increase anxiety at work and limit professional communication How to identify hidden commitments that keep you stuck in silence Simple, practical ways to communicate clearly and confidently in high-pressure situations ✨ A Simple Shift to Try Today You don’t need to change everything at once.Start small. In your next meeting or interaction: Say one idea clearly—without softening or over-explainingPause instead of shrinking if interruptedReturn to your point calmly:“I’d like to finish what I was saying.” Because clear communication is not confrontation—it’s self-respect in action. And when you begin to speak with even 10% more clarity and directness, you start to rebuild trust in your own voice. 🎧 Share This Episode If you’ve ever experienced difficult workplace communication or felt the impact of power dynamics at work, share this episode with a friend or colleague who may need support, language, and tools for navigating it. 🌿 Our Mission We help working women build communication skills, strengthen connection, and thrive, while managing anxiety, navigating complex workplace dynamics, and showing up with clarity, confidence, and self-trust. Until Next Time Speak clearly… and listen bravely.
  • 048 I “Is There Space for Me Here?” Navigating Identity, Race, and Growth at Work 18.05.2026 17นาที
    What if the exhaustion you feel at work… isn’t about the workload? What if it’s coming from the constant effort of managing how you’re perceived? You walk into a meeting and immediately start thinking— How should I say this?How will this land?Am I being too direct… or not direct enough? You adjust your tone.You filter your words.You read the room before you even speak. And over time… It becomes exhausting. This is something many working women experience in workplace communication—especially when navigating identity, race, and unspoken expectations in professional environments. Because sometimes the challenge isn’t just doing your job. It’s figuring out how to show up in a space that may not have been designed with you in mind. In this episode, we talk about what it really means to grow professionally while navigating power dynamics in the workplace, identity, and the pressure to fit into existing norms of professional communication. If you’ve ever:Felt like you had to carefully manage your tone, your presence, or your reactionsWorried about being seen as “too much” or “not enough” at the same timeQuestioned whether you can truly be yourself and still succeed This episode will give you language, clarity, and a new way to think about your experience. Because this isn’t just about confidence. This is about identity, communication skills, and development inside real-world systems. You’ll hear a powerful story about “Danielle”—a capable, thoughtful professional who described her workday as constantly calculating how she was coming across. Not just what she said—but how it might be interpreted. If she was direct, she worried about being labeled.If she was expressive, she worried about being dismissed.If she spoke up, she risked being seen as too much.If she stayed quiet, she felt invisible. And over time, her workplace communication became a performance—carefully managed, constantly adjusted. Externally, it worked.She was seen as professional and reliable. But internally? She was exhausted. Because navigating identity in the workplace often means balancing:Authenticity and acceptanceConfidence and perceptionConnection and self-protection And that creates a unique kind of anxiety at work—one that isn’t always visible, but deeply felt. This episode introduces a powerful shift: Moving from automatic adaptation to intentional choice. Because strong communication skills for working women aren’t about shrinking to fit the environment—they’re about understanding the environment and choosing how you show up within it. 💡 In This Episode, You’ll Learn: How workplace norms and expectations shape professional communication Why managing perception can increase anxiety at work and emotional exhaustion How identity and race impact communication and connection in the workplace Why adapting your communication style is a skill—not a weakness How to move from automatic code-switching to intentional, strategic communication ✨ A Simple Shift to Try Today Instead of trying to change everything—start small. Choose one moment in your day to show up with slightly less self-editing. Share your idea without over-rehearsing.Let your natural tone come through. Not everywhere.Not all at once. But intentionally. Then reflect: What actually happened?What did I expect to happen?What felt different? Because confidence, clarity, and connection don’t come from waiting for the perfect environment—they come from practicing intentional communication within real ones. 🎧 Share This Episode If this episode gave you language for something you’ve felt but haven’t been able to name, share it with a friend or colleague navigating identity, communication, and connection at work. 🌿 Our Mission We help working women build communication skills, strengthen connection, and thrive, while managing anxiety, navigating complex workplace dynamics, and showing up with clarity and confidence. Until Next Time Speak clearly… and listen bravely.
  • 047 I Navigating Power Without Losing Yourself: Growth Beyond People-Pleasing 11.05.2026 13นาที
    What if people-pleasing isn’t a flaw… What if it’s actually a stage of development? You say yes when you want to say no.You keep the peace instead of speaking up.You think about how everyone else will feel—before you even consider what you need. And over time… You start to feel tired.Resentful.Disconnected from yourself. This is the reality for so many working women navigating workplace communication, relationships, and expectations—especially when you care deeply about connection at work and at home. Because people-pleasing often looks like strong professional communication skills on the surface. You’re helpful.Flexible.Easy to work with. But underneath, it can create:BurnoutAnxiety at workAnd a loss of clarity around your own needs, values, and boundaries In this episode, we explore how people-pleasing is not weakness—it’s part of adult development. Many women are socialized to prioritize harmony, relationships, and being accommodating—especially in multicultural environments where respect, collectivism, and connection are deeply valued. But over time, this can lead to unclear communication, difficulty with boundaries, and challenges navigating power dynamics in the workplace. Because when your focus is always on others, your own voice gets quieter. And eventually, you may find yourself asking:“What do I actually want?” This episode introduces a powerful shift—from people-pleasing to self-authorship. Learning how to stay connected in relationships—without losing yourself. If you’ve ever struggled with setting boundaries at work, avoiding difficult conversations, or managing anxiety around how others will respond, this episode will give you a clear, practical path forward. Because strong communication skills for working women aren’t just about being kind—they’re about being clear, direct, and grounded in your values. 💡 In This Episode, You’ll Learn: Why people-pleasing is part of adult development—not a personal failure How prioritizing harmony over honesty impacts workplace communication Why fear of conflict increases anxiety at work and weakens boundaries How cultural values influence communication styles and decision-making How to build self-authorship and set clear, respectful boundaries ✨ A Simple Shift to Try Today You can care about others…and still have boundaries. Instead of immediately saying yes, try: “I’m not able to take that on right now.”“I need more time to think about that.” Clear.Respectful.Direct. Because boundaries are not a rejection of connection—they are what make healthy connection possible. And when you communicate with clarity and intention, you don’t lose relationships—you strengthen them. 🎧 Share This Episode If this episode helped you rethink people-pleasing, boundaries, and communication at work, share it with a friend or colleague who wants stronger communication skills, less anxiety, and more confidence navigating relationships. 🌿 Our Mission We help working women build communication skills, strengthen connection, and thrive, while managing anxiety, protecting their time, and showing up with clarity and confidence in both work and life. Until Next Time! Speak clearly… and listen bravely.
  • 046 I Why Confidence Feels Different for Women: A Developmental Perspective 04.05.2026 8นาที
    We would love to connect with you!  Find us at Communication Skills for Working Women What if that moment at work isn’t small… What if it’s actually unclear communication? You’re sitting at your desk, focused, trying to manage your time and get through your to-do list. And then you hear it— A question, just… floating in the room. “Does anyone know where that file is?”“Are we still meeting at 2?” No name.No direction.No eye contact. And suddenly—you pause. Are they talking to me?Am I supposed to answer that?Should I ignore it? And just like that, your focus is broken. This is what unclear communication at work does. It interrupts your time.It increases anxiety at work.And it quietly weakens connection in the workplace. Because when communication is vague, indirect, or not directed to a person—everyone is left guessing. And guessing is exhausting. In this episode, Elizabeth shares a real-life example of how common this is in workplace communication, especially in collaborative or open office environments. Because while it may seem harmless, this kind of indirect communication creates distraction, confusion, and unnecessary mental load—especially for busy, middle-aged working women who are already balancing responsibilities at work and at home. The truth is—most of us were never taught clear, effective communication skills for working women. We were taught to be easygoing.To not interrupt.To keep things casual. But that often leads to unclear professional communication, where no one knows who is responsible, and everyone is managing low-level stress trying to figure it out. If you’ve ever felt distracted, overwhelmed, or slightly on edge in a work environment where communication feels indirect or unclear—this episode will give you simple, practical tools to shift that immediately. You’ll learn how to move from vague, indirect communication to clear communication, so you can reduce anxiety, save time, and build stronger connection at work. Because strong communication skills don’t just make you more effective—they help you feel calmer, more confident, and more connected in your daily life. 💡 In This Episode, You’ll Learn: Why unclear communication in the workplace increases anxiety and disrupts focus How indirect communication wastes time and creates confusion A simple shift to make your communication clear, direct, and effective How to build connection at work through intentional communication How to strengthen professional communication skills without adding more to your plate ✨ A Simple Shift to Try Today Clear is kind.Unclear is unkind. Direct is kind.Indirect is unkind. Say the name.Ask the question clearly.Create clarity instead of confusion. Because small shifts in communication create big shifts in how you experience your workday. 🎧 Share This Episode If this episode helped you rethink workplace communication and gave you a simple way to reduce anxiety at work, share it with a friend or colleague who wants clearer communication and stronger connection in their day.
  • 045 I You’re Not “Too Much”: Understanding Identity Development at Work 27.04.2026 15นาที
    Show Notes In this episode, we cover: Adult identity development and workplace expectations Multicultural tensions in professional environments How to integrate—not split—your identity Practical ways to show up authentically Homework: Notice one moment this week where you adjust yourself—pause and ask why.
  • 044 I The Hidden Cost of People-Pleasing in Professional and Personal Relationships 20.04.2026 26นาที
    Have you ever considered? Where do I tend to over-adjust in workplace interactions? When I communicate with certain people, do I feel like myself—or slightly off? What is my actual goal in these interactions: clarity or approval? Am I softening, over-explaining, or tiptoeing to manage someone else’s reaction? What am I worried would happen if I were more direct? What assumptions am I making about their power vs. mine? What would it sound like to communicate with both clarity and self-respect? In this episode, we’re unpacking how to communicate effectively when you’re navigating workplace gatekeepers—those individuals who hold influence without formal authority. If you’ve ever felt the need to manage someone’s mood, soften your message, or walk away from an interaction feeling slightly off, this conversation will resonate. We introduce a practical framework for staying grounded in unequal power dynamics—so you can communicate with clarity and self-respect without becoming overly accommodating or reactive. This episode is for professionals who want to feel more steady, aligned, and authentic in their communication—even in tricky or high-pressure interactions. Follow us on Facebook: Communication Skills for Working Women Share this episode with a colleague or friend navigating office dynamics Leave a review to help more women build confident, grounded communication If this episode resonated, your next step is simple: Pay attention to one interaction this week where you feel the urge to over-adjust. Instead of changing your message, practice delivering it with: More clarity More steadiness Less over-explaining This is how you build self-trust in real time. Remember:You don’t need to overpower the dynamic.You just need to stay anchored in yourself. Speak Clearly & Listen Bravely
  • 043 I How Your Presence Shapes Your Relationships, Communication, and Confidence 13.04.2026 22นาที
    Have you ever walked away from a conversation thinking "that wasn't really me" — but you're not sure exactly what went wrong? Do you ever find yourself adjusting your tone, your words, or your whole communication style just to match the energy in the room — even when it doesn't feel right? Have you ever wanted to show up more genuinely but felt like the environment around you made that impossible? If any of that resonates, this episode is going to hit home. This episode is not about managing other people or changing the environment around you. It is about something quieter and honestly more powerful — learning to stay aligned with yourself no matter what is happening around you. Key reminder: Value-consistent communication is an internal practice before it's an external skill. This week, notice one conversation where you find yourself adjusting to the room instead of showing up as yourself. Before you speak, ask — what would it look like to say this in a way that actually feels like me? You don't have to change the environment. You don't have to say anything dramatic. Just make one small move toward alignment and notice how it feels. At Communicate Connect Thrive, we believe that confident communication starts on the inside — and this episode is the clearest example of that. When your words match your values, something settles. You walk away from conversations feeling whole instead of slightly off. That is what we are building toward together. If this episode spoke to you, share it with someone who is working on showing up more authentically — and leave us a review so more women can find this community. Connect with us! Instagram: @communicationskillsforwomen Website: communicateconnectthrive.com Email: communicationskillsforwomen@gmail.com Until next time — speak clearly and listen bravely.                    
  • 042 -1 I Get Curious : Feelings aren't Facts they are Information 08.04.2026 3นาที
    Feelings Aren't Facts Quick story about life and how curiosity helps us navigate our feelings.
  • 042 I Feelings Aren’t Facts: How to Stop Letting Emotions Control Your Communication 06.04.2026 20นาที
    Have you ever read a text or email and immediately felt defensive — only to reread it later and realize it was completely neutral? Have you ever let a feeling — frustration, self-doubt, fear — make a decision for you before you had all the facts? Have you ever stayed quiet in a meeting, assumed someone was upset with you, or talked yourself out of speaking up — based entirely on how you felt in that moment? If any of that sounds familiar, this episode was made for you. One of the biggest things holding us back in our communication isn't our skills or our environment — it's the stories our feelings tell us before we have all the information. In this episode, we break down a real situation that illustrates exactly what it looks like when emotions hijack our communication — and what it looks like when we catch it in time. This week, notice one moment when a feeling starts writing a story for you before you have all the facts. Before you respond — pause. Reread. Ask yourself what your actual goal is. Then respond from that place instead. At Communicate Connect Thrive, we believe that the path from discomfort to confident communication runs straight through self-awareness — and this episode is exactly that. When you learn to separate how you feel from what is actually true, your communication becomes clearer, your relationships become stronger, and you stop creating problems that were never really there. If this episode resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it — and leave us a review so more women can find this community. Connect with us! Instagram: @communicationskillsforwomen Website: communicateconnectthrive.com Email: communicationskillsforwomen@gmail.com  
  • 41-1l Managing the Emotions After You Speak Up 02.04.2026 6นาที
    Speaking up in high-stakes situations can be exhilarating—and exhausting. In this follow-up mini episode, we explore what happens after you share your voice, especially when you’re in a room where your identity or perspective feels hyper-visible. You’ll learn how to: Recognize and name the emotional activation that happens after speaking up Normalize the “emotional hangover” that often follows risk-taking Reality-check the negative stories your mind may create Anchor your confidence in your values, not others’ reactions Create a simple ritual to close the experience and support your nervous system If you’ve ever replayed a conversation in your head, felt post-speaking anxiety, or worried about how your words landed, this episode gives practical tools to stay grounded, resilient, and on your own side. Tip: Speaking up is a skill, and managing the aftermath is just as important as the act itself. Use these strategies to turn post-speech anxiety into self-support.
  • 041 I 3 Confidence Shifts for Speaking Up When You Feel Outnumbered 30.03.2026 20นาที
    Have you ever walked into a room and immediately felt the weight of being the only one — the only woman, the only person of color, the youngest, the newest? Do you ever monitor yourself so carefully that by the time you decide it's safe to speak, the moment has passed? Have you ever felt like your mistakes carry more weight than everyone else's? Feeling like the only one doesn't mean you're weak — it means you're navigating systems that weren't built with you in mind. This episode gives you practical tools to speak anyway. This week, notice one moment you feel different and stay quiet because of it. Name the worry, identify the commitment, and choose one small experiment. Speak once — just once — before you talk yourself out of it. Communicate Connect Thrive was built for moments exactly like this one. When you feel unseen, out of place, or like you're carrying more than your share — we want to help you find your footing and your voice. That is what this work is all about. Connect with us! Instagram: @communicationskillsforwomen Website: communicateconnectthrive.com Email: communicationskillsforwomen@gmail.com Until next time — speak clearly and listen bravely. Caste By Isabel Wilkerson
  • 040-1 I It's Hard to Respect Someone You Don't Agree With - Here's How to Do It Anyway 25.03.2026 4นาที
    Communication Skills for Working Women - Facebook Group One Page Miracle Vivid Vision Value the individual even when you don't value their values.  People matter, they are important and so are you.  Take a deep breath and choose to be the person you want to be, the one that makes you proud, the one 'that fits'.   Interested in Coaching?  Message us on our Facebook page linked above!
  • 040 I When Your Values Don’t Match Theirs: 3 Ways to Navigate Hard Conversations With Friends and Family 23.03.2026 22นาที
    Have you ever heard someone you love say something harmful and completely frozen — not knowing whether to speak up or let it go? Have you ever stayed silent in a moment like that and replayed it for days? Do you ever feel like speaking your truth in certain relationships could cost you the relationship — or your safety? In this episode we walk through a six-step framework for navigating value misalignment with people you love — without abandoning who you are. Get clear on your goal — before you speak, know why you're speaking Look at what you're already doing — silence, subject-changing, and going along are strategies, not failures Name your worries — "If I speak up I'll lose them" / "If I stay quiet I'm complicit" Identify hidden commitments — what are you actually protecting underneath the worry? Design a small experiment — test your assumptions before assuming the worst Collect data, not self-blame — let evidence guide your next move, not guilt Key reminder: You are not required to risk your safety to preserve someone else's comfort.   This week, pick one relationship where values feel misaligned. Work through the six steps on paper or before your next conversation. You don't have to fix anything. You just have to respond in a way that keeps you whole. At Communicate Connect Thrive, we believe clarity and dignity are the foundation of every meaningful conversation — and this framework puts both in your hands. If this resonated, share it with someone who needs it. Connect with us! Instagram: @communicationskillsforwomen Website: communicateconnectthrive.com Email: communicationskillsforwomen@gmail.com Until next time — speak clearly and listen bravely. Brene Brown - Diary of a CEO Podcast
  • 39-1 I How to take back your power 18.03.2026 8นาที
    In this midweek drop, we explore how to stay grounded in your sense of agency at work—even when the world outside feels overwhelming. When stress is high, everyday workplace dynamics can start to feel intense, urgent, or even threatening. This episode breaks down how to move through those moments with more clarity, steadiness, and self-trust. We talk about the difference between power and pressure, why your nervous system may be reacting to more than just what’s happening at work, and how to reclaim small, meaningful moments of choice throughout your day.
  • 039 I How to Hold Your Ground When Power Feels Intimidating 16.03.2026 15นาที
    Does your chest tighten the moment you need to bring something to your manager's attention? Do you rehearse conversations with authority figures so many times that you either over-explain or avoid them altogether? Have you ever said nothing — not because you had nothing to say, but because the risk felt too high? Anxiety around authority isn't a professionalism problem — it's a nervous system response. This episode helps you communicate upward with clarity instead of panic. Name your goal — clear, grounded communication, not impressing anyone See what you're doing — over-explaining, apologizing excessively, delaying difficult conversations Name your worries — "I'll look incompetent" / "One wrong move could define me" Identify hidden commitments — staying safe, protecting your image, avoiding mistakes Test your assumptions — "Managers expect perfection" feels true but it's testable Four experiments to try: Lead with the headline Separate facts from feelings Ask for direction, not permission Say your point, stop, and let it land Key reminder: Authority doesn't require self-erasure. Clarity is not disrespect. This week, notice one interaction with authority that triggers anxiety. Name the worry, identify the hidden commitment, and choose one experiment. Communicate once without over-performing. At Communicate Connect Thrive, we believe you can hold both respect and self-trust at the same time — and this episode shows you exactly how. Power doesn't have to produce panic when you have a framework to stand on. Connect with us! Instagram: @communicationskillsforwomen Website: communicateconnectthrive.com Email: communicationskillsforwomen@gmail.com Until next time — speak clearly and listen bravely.

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