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In this episode, Drs. Derek and Laura Cabrera of Cornell University unpack one of the most uncomfortable—but important—distinctions in human behavior: the difference between being passive-aggressive and being direct.

They challenge the common belief that passive aggression is somehow “nicer” or less harmful than open aggression, and explain why passive-aggressive behavior is actually a form of dishonest aggression—one that hides intent, creates confusion, and slowly erodes trust. Through everyday examples, cultural patterns, and systems thinking concepts like externalities, identity, and integrity, they show how indirect behavior creates invisible debt that compounds over time.

The conversation explores why people learn passive aggression in the first place, how sociocultural norms reinforce it, and how metacognition creates the pause needed to catch it before it spills out sideways. They also explain why living transactionally may help you “get away with things,” but costs you something far more valuable in the long run: self-concept, trust, and deep relationships.

If you’ve ever wondered why certain dynamics feel off, why resentment leaks out in strange ways, or why indirect communication never seems to resolve anything, this episode will help you see what’s really happening—and how to change it without pretending, gaslighting, or losing yourself.