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Change is expensive, but won't staying cost you even more?
What if the reason you feel stuck, drained, or unhappy isn't because your life is hard, but because you've been "adding sugar" to what's actually bitter?
In this episode, Lindsey Maestas shares what she calls the "Black Coffee Theory": a simple but transformative mindset shift that has changed the way she approaches relationships, work, habits, and her spiritual life.
The concept is this: the happiest, most successful, most grounded people don't add sugar to things that are already bitter. They're honest with themselves that it's bitter, and they put the cup down.
They don't distort reality to make something tolerable, they don't romanticize what hurts, and they don't convince themselves something is good just because they're afraid of what honesty might require.
This episode also explores the research behind why we do this in the first place:
Cognitive Dissonance
When our reality conflicts with our identity or beliefs, we feel internal tension. Instead of changing the situation, we often change the story.
The Sunk Cost Fallacy
We stay in situations because we've already invested so much — time, emotion, reputation, or faith — and leaving feels more painful than tolerating.
Emotional Suppression and Resentment
Research shows that consistently overriding internal signals leads to emotional exhaustion, resentment, and anxiety. When we ignore what drains us, our body and nervous system keep the score.
Isaiah 5:20 warns:
"Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter."