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Description

We are quick to label selfish or defensive behavior as "narcissism," but what if the issue runs deeper than personality? In this episode, we explore how disordered desires, our need for control, comfort, or validation, shape the way we relate to others and quietly erode connection.

This conversation unpacks the difference between healthy self-awareness and self-absorption, why freedom begins when we stop defending ourselves, and how real change doesn't come from trying harder—but from surrendering deeper. You'll be challenged to look beneath behavior and consider what your heart is truly after.

If you're tired of surface-level fixes and ready for lasting transformation, this episode invites you to step out of self-protection and into humility, empathy, and freedom.



Episode Takeaways:

What we often label as narcissism or selfishness is rooted deeper than personality. It flows from disordered desires and a heart that wants control, comfort, or validation more than connection.

Healthy self-awareness leads to growth, humility, and empathy. Self-absorption does the opposite , it narrows our world until everything revolves around us and what we want.

Freedom starts when we stop defending ourselves.

Change doesn't come from trying harder, but surrendering deeper.

 

Quotes from this Episode:

"Selfishness doesn't start with what we do — it starts with what we want most."

"Narcissism isn't always loud or arrogant; sometimes it's quiet, defensive, and deeply fragile."

"You can't out-behave a heart problem — transformation always starts inside."

"The more we focus on protecting ourselves, the less capable we are of loving others."

"Growth happens when we stop asking, 'How does this affect me?' and start asking, 'How did this affect you?'"

"Humility isn't thinking less of yourself — it's thinking of yourself less."

"God isn't after better versions of us; He's after surrendered hearts."




Take Time to Talk About It:

  1. Where do you notice selfishness showing up most in your relationships — words, reactions, expectations, or silence?
  2. How can you tell the difference between healthy self-care and self-centeredness in your own life?
  3. What might change if you stopped defending yourself and started listening with curiosity instead?

 

Mentioned in this Episode: