Venting used to just be what friends did. Now it feels like a social minefield; and we can't seem to agree on whether it's a sign of closeness or a boundary violation. You've probably caught yourself mid-vent wondering, am I being too much right now? Or maybe you're on the other side, nodding along while silently drowning in your friend's update about her boss for the fourth time this month.Danielle sits down with licensed therapist Amanda White, the voice behind @therapyforwomen and co-host of the Nuance Needed podcast, to break down what's actually happening when we vent, when it tips into co-rumination or trauma dumping, and why we've gotten so weird about a friendship behavior that used to be second nature. If you've ever wondered whether you're allowed to bring your hard stuff to your friends anymore, this one's for you.🎧 JOIN US FOR BONUS CONTENT IN OFFICE HOURSWant to go deeper into this work? Members of our Office Hours community get access to bonus material for this episode, including a set of reflection questions to evaluate how your ambition may be impacting your friendships, plus scripts for making new friends when you tend to lead with your accomplishments. Join anytime at: https://friend-forward.captivate.fm/office-hours.TOPICS IN THIS EPISODE:Venting vs. co-rumination vs. trauma dumping: what's actually differentWhy venting doesn't reduce anger but still strengthens friendshipsHow our shrinking tolerance for discomfort is eroding connectionThe "catch-up loop": when seeing friends rarely turns every hangout into a vent sessionThe anti-venting and anti-gossip overlap, and why both have historically protected womenWhy you can't hold space for a friend if you can't sit with your own hard feelingsWhat both the chronic venter and the vent-avoider need to hearABOUT AMANDAAmanda E. White is a licensed therapist, bestselling author of Not Drinking Tonight, and the founder of Therapy for Women Center. She is the creator of the popular Instagram account @therapyforwomen (463K+ followers) and co-host of the podcast Nuance Needed with Sam Dalton. Amanda's work challenges quick-fix mental health culture and explores the messy gray areas most content creators avoid.CONNECT WITH AMANDA:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/therapyforwomen/Podcast, Nuance Needed: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nuance-needed/id1769274006Substack, Nuance Needed: https://nuanceneeded.substack.com/Website: https://amandaewhite.comTherapy for Women Center: https://therapyforwomencenter.com📚 EPISODE RESOURCES & REFERENCES:Julie Beck, "The Common Friendship Behavior That Has Become Strangely Fraught" (The Atlantic, January 2026): https://www.theatlantic.com/family/2026/01/venting-complaining-advice/685529/Kjærvik & Bushman (2024), "A meta-analytic review of anger management activities that increase or decrease arousal: What fuels or douses rage?" — Clinical Psychology Review: https://news.osu.edu/breathe-dont-vent-turning-down-the-heat-is-key-to-managing-anger/The Gottman Institute on the 5:1 "Magic Ratio:" https://www.gottman.com/blog/the-magic-relationship-ratio-according-science/🎙️ GET FEATURED ON THE PODCASTHave a friendship question, hot take, or personal story you want featured? Send a voice note via Instagram DMs @friendforward or email a voice note or video to hello@betterfemalefriendships.com.WORK WITH DANIELLE:</stro
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