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5 Way to Avoid Drama in your Life

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Manage episode 318029080 series 3306190
Content provided by Satish Kumbhar. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Satish Kumbhar or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Life is full of ups and downs and sometimes, these ups and downs are sweeping dramatic events. In fact, drama often accompanies major life changes or transitions. These really big, monumental times in our lives affect us deeply, often changing the way we live, the course and direction of where we go and what we do. For the most part, these are normal and happen to most of us. Then there are the dramas of everyday life—the way we see life, the way we process life, the way we’ve learned to deal with life from those around us. Some people view everything they do as incredibly challenging, monumental in its perceived outcome, and often fraught with catastrophic results if things go awry. So much of it is dependent on how people have experienced life as it unfolds. Some people just have that dramatic flair about them. Some people need drama to feel alive. Regardless of why people choose to process life in a dramatic way, the bottom line is that some people need to turn what most of us might consider very small issues into major problems. Before you try to figure out how to avoid other people’s drama, it’s important to ask yourself if you crave drama and why you might be attracted to it. For example, do you find it exciting to get embroiled in other people’s intrigues? Do you like creating drama because you get attention and draw other people into your life? Does drama make you feel important? Identifying that piece about yourself may help you understand why drama seems to follow you. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/satish-kumbhar/message
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20 episodes

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Manage episode 318029080 series 3306190
Content provided by Satish Kumbhar. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Satish Kumbhar or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Life is full of ups and downs and sometimes, these ups and downs are sweeping dramatic events. In fact, drama often accompanies major life changes or transitions. These really big, monumental times in our lives affect us deeply, often changing the way we live, the course and direction of where we go and what we do. For the most part, these are normal and happen to most of us. Then there are the dramas of everyday life—the way we see life, the way we process life, the way we’ve learned to deal with life from those around us. Some people view everything they do as incredibly challenging, monumental in its perceived outcome, and often fraught with catastrophic results if things go awry. So much of it is dependent on how people have experienced life as it unfolds. Some people just have that dramatic flair about them. Some people need drama to feel alive. Regardless of why people choose to process life in a dramatic way, the bottom line is that some people need to turn what most of us might consider very small issues into major problems. Before you try to figure out how to avoid other people’s drama, it’s important to ask yourself if you crave drama and why you might be attracted to it. For example, do you find it exciting to get embroiled in other people’s intrigues? Do you like creating drama because you get attention and draw other people into your life? Does drama make you feel important? Identifying that piece about yourself may help you understand why drama seems to follow you. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/satish-kumbhar/message
  continue reading

20 episodes

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