Permission to be Complex
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About this listen
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, Casey explores what happens when people are reduced to labels instead of being seen as whole. Starting from personal moments of tuning out, subtle dismissal, and everyday microaggressions, the conversation widens into a deeper reflection on attention, neurodivergence, trauma, race, education, and lived experience. This isn’t an episode about diagnosing ADHD or explaining trauma, it’s about how complex human realities get flattened, and what that flattening costs us in connection, focus, and understanding.
Drawing on insights from Scattered Minds, recent conversations on trauma and the nervous system from the Huberman Lab featuring psychiatrist Paul Conti, and research on attention, multitasking, and educational inequity, this episode argues for something simpler—and harder—than better labels: permission to be complex. Because when people are truly seen, attention doesn’t disappear. It stays.
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Sources & Influences Referenced
• Scattered Minds — Gabor Maté
• Huberman Lab, Essentials: Therapy, Treating Trauma & Other Life Challenges (Jan 22, 2026), conversation with Paul Conti
• Research from cognitive psychology on attention and task-switching (multitasking vs. switching)
• Sociological and economic research on educational access, student debt aversion, and inequities tied to class and race
• Anti-racism frameworks on microaggressions and cumulative harm