Host Tressa Bell introduces The Fan in the Window and explores how growing up around conflict, emotional unpredictability, and unresolved intensity can become “normal,” shaping adult templates for love, attraction, and resilience as conditioning rather than health.
She explains that children prioritize attachment over accuracy, adapt to survive, and often can’t name dysfunction even when they perceive tension, power dynamics, and harm.
Using a dinner-table memory where her mother cruelly told someone she hoped he would choke, Bell describes how normalization can trigger "management mode” instead of clarity and how lack of repair teaches that relationships are destabilizing and damaging.
She discusses how the nervous system builds expectations, making familiar chaos feel more trustworthy than calm safety, invites listeners to notice “familiar vs. safe,” and closes with a brief grounding exercise, resources, and a preview of the next episode on what children carry.
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This podcast is for educational and reflective purposes only and does not constitute medical or mental health advice.If anything in this episode brings up strong feelings or memories, please take care of yourself and reach out for support. In the U.S., you can call or text 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. If you’re outside the U.S., you can find international hotlines at findahelpline.com. You don’t have to navigate this alone.Listener discretion is encouraged.
00:00 When Chaos Feels Normal
02:01 Show Intro and Disclaimer
04:10 Why Kids Normalize Chaos
06:54 A Dinner Table Memory
09:30 Conflict Without Repair
11:54 Harm That Looks Ordinary
14:33 Familiar Versus Safe
16:45 Roles We Learn to Survive
19:53 Body Knows First
22:16 Rewriting the Template
23:52 Calm Can Feel Wrong
25:25 Questions for the Week
26:28 Guided Grounding Exercise
29:00 Closing and Next Episode