
The Plus One Theory
The Plus One Theory Podcast explores how small, intentional actions can create big, lasting impacts in our personal and professional lives. Each episode features inspiring guests sharing their experiences with kindness, resilience, and the transformative power of doing just one more, The Plus One Theory in action.
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The Plus One Theory
Episode 44 | From Fitting In to Feeling Seen: How Small, Brave Steps Build Real Belonging
We explore why fitting in leaves you hollow and how belonging fills you with breath, courage, and connection. A poem reframes success, practical tools build pause power, and a mustard-smooth act of kindness shows how small moments can change a life.
• origin of the Plus One theory and finish-strong mindset
• difference between fitting in and belonging
• conformity science and the cost of approval-chasing
• The View That Found Me poem and its message
• Delay the Binge tools: two-column journal and purposeful pause
• “never start over” as a healing practice
• postponing the Collective to build true community
• the mustard story and the power of kindness
• resources and ways to connect, learn, and share
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Share my story through my book From the Piney Woods
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Welcome back to the Plus One Theory Podcast. I'm your host, Pam Dwyer, and my mission is simple: to remind you that your past does not define you, it prepares you. The plus one theory was born in a junior high gym class, believe it or not. I was running a timed mile at the lowest point in my young life. I was hungry, hurting, malnourished, and exhausted. By the last lap, everything in me wanted to quit. But I made a choice. A plus one effort to finish stronger than I started. That decision became the framework for my life. And it's the same principle behind everything I teach today. Growth happens in small intentional steps. That brings me to today's conversation. The difference between fitting in and belonging. Fitting in is about changing yourself to be accepted. It's pretending, shrinking, or silencing your real self so you'll be liked. But here's the truth. Fitting in leaves you empty. You might gain approval, but it's hollow because it's not authentic. Belonging, on the other hand, is when you show up as your true self. Flaws, gifts, quirks, and all, and you're valued for it. Belonging allows you to breathe, to grow, to connect, and in today's world, where so many people stay silent out of fear of rejection, belonging matters more than ever. Researchers have proven how strong the pull to fit in really is. In one classic experiment, people were asked a simple question. Which line on a chart was longer? The answer was obvious, but here's the twist. Most of the group were actors secretly working with the researchers. That's not fair. But when those actors all gave the wrong answer, the real participant often went along with them, even though they knew it wasn't true. Why? Well, because we're wired to fit in, that's why. The fear of standing out, of being rejected can be stronger than your own eyes. That's why learning to pause, to notice what's happening inside you before you respond is so critical. This idea of chasing approval versus finding belonging reminds me of a poem I wrote. It's called The View That Found Me. And yes, I write poems as well as PJ Hamilton, but I wanted to share this one with you because it really fits in with today's episode. Anyway, it's called The View That Found Me. I thought the top would hold the prize, a place where love and peace reside, but all I found was thinner air and echoes of what wasn't there. I missed the wildflowers on the trail, the way the light broke through the veil. I never saw the grace beneath, each stumble scar and jagged grief. I climbed with weight I didn't name, rejection's voice a quiet shame. I chased approval, craved a nod, when all along I carried God. It wasn't heights that healed my soul, but letting go of false control. It was the pen, the pause, the page that turned my wounds into a stage. Now purpose calls me down the slope to meet the ones who've lost their hope. I walk beside them hand in hand, not pointing up, but helping stand. So if you're climbing just to win, pause, look around, begin again. The view you seek is not ahead. It's in the steps you've bravely tread. That poem is a reminder. The view that heals us isn't waiting at the top. It's in the awareness we bring to each and every step we take. It's in the belonging we create when we walk beside each other instead of chasing approval. This is exactly why I created Delay the Binge. We all have lower brain chatter, the noise of trauma, anxiety, or exhaustion that pushes us back into unhealthy habits. Maybe it's overeating, overdrinking, overworking, anything to numb the pain. And here's the kicker. Even when we hit a health goal or a success milestone, if we don't address what's underneath, we slide right back into the old patterns. That's why I always say never start over. Start from where you are. Every step you've taken counts. Every pause is progress. And that's what delay the binge tools are designed to do. Things like the two column journal where you write down what you planned versus what actually happened, and reflect on why. Or the purposeful pause protocol, which helps you take back power in the moment the urge hits. These small intentional tools shift us from fitting in to belonging, from pretending to pausing, and from cycles of failure to cycles of strength. Now, I want to mention something important. You may have heard me announce the October 2nd launch event for the Delay the Bench Collective. Well, I've decided to postpone it for now. I want this collective to feel like a true community, not just a call with a couple of people. That means I'm going to take a little more time to build momentum. So when we gather, it feels like the powerful space it's meant to be. But here's where you can help. If this message resonated with you, the best way to support me is simple. Share it. Share this podcast with a friend who might need it. Share my story through my book from the Piney Woods, where I talk about how I transformed pain into purpose. And of course, like, subscribe, or follow. Because the biggest form of support is spreading the word so more people know they are not alone. Remember, fitting in will leave you empty. Belonging will fill you, and kindness, it's the superpower that bridges the gap between the two. It's just like the story I've told before. You know, growing up hungry, we would go to a convenience store and steal like hot dog weenies, hot dog buns, and go in the store, put it under our shirt, and walk out. We did that for many, many weeks. And we thought we were pretty clever. But one day, the owner of the store, Mac, he says, Stop, you two. And we turned around thinking we're going to jail. But instead, Mac was holding a bottle of mustard. He just looked at us with a smirk and said, Man, y'all been taking my hot dogs for weeks. Do you know Don Tha want some mustard or something to go with him? We looked at him and we said, Yes, sir. Our eyes were so wide. And he knelt down and looked us straight in the eye, and he said, Don't ever steal from me, girls. But if you're hungry and you need food, all you have to do is ask. That's the first time I ever experienced kindness. Right? That type of kindness. And as we walked out with our mustard and our hot dog weenies and buns, I I was trying to figure out why he did what he did. There was no logical reason for it. And I didn't really I'm not f I wasn't familiar with it. All I knew is how it made me feel, right? It made me feel important, like I mattered. Actually, it's the first time I ever felt seen by someone. And I loved how that felt. And I wanted to be just like Mac. Just like him. And do that for other people. So Mac had an impact on my life that has lasted to this day. And what did it take him? Five seconds, maybe? Five seconds, y'all, is all it takes to make an incredible difference, a big impact in someone else's life. Plus, it makes you feel great when you do selfless things. Show someone kindness that doesn't necessarily deserve it. But they really do. And so you show them kindness. It could impact them, it could change the whole the course of their lives. So remember, fitting in will leave you empty. Belonging will fill you. And kindness it's a superpower that bridges the gap between the two. At the beginning of today's episode, I shared that I've postponed the October 2nd launch of the Delay the Binge Collective, and I want to circle back to that as we close. The reason is simple. I don't just want to host an event. I want to build a true collective, a community where people can belong, learn, and grow together. That takes more voices, more energy, and more time to prepare. So instead of rushing it, I'm choosing to pause because sometimes the pause is the most powerful move we can make. In the meantime, there are plenty of ways to stay connected and support this mission. For ongoing inspiration, visit the plus one theory podcast dot com. For my personal story of transformation, you can grab my book at FromThePinewoods.com. And for speaking, events, and resources, go to PamDwyerspeaker.com. And if you want to learn more about the collective when it's ready, you can join the wait list at delaythebinge.com. I know I'm working in a lot of lanes right now, but that's because I want you to have options. You get to choose where you connect with me. Whether it's this podcast, my writing, an event, or the collective when it launches, your support matters. And the best support of all, share this message. Send this episode to someone who needs to be reminded they don't have to fit in. They can belong. Because fitting in will drain you, belonging will fill you, and kindness is still the greatest superpower in the world. This has been the Plus One Theory Podcast. I'm Pam Dwyer, reminding you your past doesn't define you, it prepares you. And you can always finish stronger than you started. See you next week.