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  <title>When the World Is On Fire… and You Still Have to Do the Dishes</title>
  <description>January broke me a little. Living in Minneapolis during political tension, violence, and constant headlines left me feeling something I haven’t felt in years: hopelessness. And here’s the truth no one talks about — you can feel grateful for your life and still feel overwhelmed by the world. Those two things live together. In this deeply personal episode of Sustained Courage, we explore: • How humans survived the Black Death, the Great Depression, war, and social upheaval • How people throughout history found meaning during collapse • What your nervous system is actually doing when you feel frozen or exhausted • Why “care tasks” like dishes and laundry are morally neutral • How to reduce barriers so you can function when you feel like you’re drowning This episode blends history, neuroscience, and practical tools from the book How to Keep House While Drowning to answer one powerful question: How do we stay human when everything feels unstable? If you’ve been doom-scrolling, overwhelmed, numb, or quietly holding it together for everyone else — this conversation is for you. You are not broken. You are living through rupture. And you can still choose small acts of courage. </description>
  <author_name>Sustained Courage</author_name>
  <author_url>https://sustainedcourage.com/</author_url>
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