MBT EN – Understanding Mentalization-Based Treatment

#33: MBT Group Therapy > When the Past Suddenly Feels Close Again

30 min · 19 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio #33: MBT Group Therapy > When the Past Suddenly Feels Close Again

Descripción

🎙️ Special Episode – “When the Past Suddenly Feels Close Again” Welcome to this special episode of the MBT podcast. In this episode, we once again step inside an MBT group therapy session — a place where personal stories intersect, where people affect one another in unexpected ways, and where experiences from the past can suddenly become very present. What unfolds in this session will be familiar to many people. A conversation. A disagreement. A reaction. A moment that seems ordinary on the surface. And yet, something much deeper is touched. Today, we listen to a group in which old feelings of insecurity, fear, vulnerability, and emotional survival begin to emerge in ways that surprise even the people experiencing them. And perhaps more importantly: What happens when those feelings are finally seen? ⸻ 🧠 What is central in this episode When old feelings are triggered again Sometimes a situation appears small from the outside. But inside, something much bigger happens. A feeling that belongs not only to the present moment, but also to the past. A reaction that seems stronger than the situation itself. In this session, group members explore how experiences from long ago can suddenly reappear through events happening today. ⸻ The experience of feeling unsafe A powerful theme throughout this episode is emotional safety. What happens when tension rises between people? When conflict appears? When voices become stronger? Or when it feels as though a situation may spiral out of control? For some members of the group, these moments awaken feelings that reach far beyond the here and now. ⸻ The importance of being seen Another central theme is recognition. Not fixing. Not solving. Not changing the past. But simply being seen. Sometimes a single moment of understanding from another person can have more impact than any advice. Because it confirms something deeply important: What you felt was real. ⸻ Old survival strategies The group also reflects on the ways people learned to survive difficult situations earlier in life. Becoming invisible. Staying quiet. Keeping the peace. Walking away. Pretending everything is fine. Strategies that once helped people cope, but which may still automatically appear when emotions become intense. ⸻ The power of recognition One of the most moving aspects of this session is the way group members begin to recognize parts of themselves in one another. Not because their stories are identical. But because the emotions underneath those stories feel surprisingly familiar. And through that recognition comes something many people have been missing for a long time: The feeling of not being alone. ⸻ Staying curious about what is happening Rather than rushing to conclusions or solutions, the group creates space for something else. Curiosity. What is happening inside me? Why does this affect me so strongly? And what might this tell me about my past and my present? ⸻ 🌟 The common thread The common thread in this episode is that the past is not always gone. Sometimes it continues to live on through emotions, reactions, and patterns that become activated when something familiar is touched. Mentalizing helps us slow down when that happens. To pause. To stay curious. And to explore what is really happening — within ourselves and between people. ⸻ 💬 Closing This episode shows that old pain is not always visible. Sometimes it hides behind silence. Behind anger. Behind withdrawal. Or behind the need to keep going as if nothing happened. But when those experiences are shared and recognized by others, something begins to change. Not because the past disappears. But because you no longer have to carry it alone. And sometimes healing begins with one simple experience: “What I felt was real… and someone else could see it too.”

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33 episodios

Portada del episodio #33: MBT Group Therapy > When the Past Suddenly Feels Close Again

#33: MBT Group Therapy > When the Past Suddenly Feels Close Again

🎙️ Special Episode – “When the Past Suddenly Feels Close Again” Welcome to this special episode of the MBT podcast. In this episode, we once again step inside an MBT group therapy session — a place where personal stories intersect, where people affect one another in unexpected ways, and where experiences from the past can suddenly become very present. What unfolds in this session will be familiar to many people. A conversation. A disagreement. A reaction. A moment that seems ordinary on the surface. And yet, something much deeper is touched. Today, we listen to a group in which old feelings of insecurity, fear, vulnerability, and emotional survival begin to emerge in ways that surprise even the people experiencing them. And perhaps more importantly: What happens when those feelings are finally seen? ⸻ 🧠 What is central in this episode When old feelings are triggered again Sometimes a situation appears small from the outside. But inside, something much bigger happens. A feeling that belongs not only to the present moment, but also to the past. A reaction that seems stronger than the situation itself. In this session, group members explore how experiences from long ago can suddenly reappear through events happening today. ⸻ The experience of feeling unsafe A powerful theme throughout this episode is emotional safety. What happens when tension rises between people? When conflict appears? When voices become stronger? Or when it feels as though a situation may spiral out of control? For some members of the group, these moments awaken feelings that reach far beyond the here and now. ⸻ The importance of being seen Another central theme is recognition. Not fixing. Not solving. Not changing the past. But simply being seen. Sometimes a single moment of understanding from another person can have more impact than any advice. Because it confirms something deeply important: What you felt was real. ⸻ Old survival strategies The group also reflects on the ways people learned to survive difficult situations earlier in life. Becoming invisible. Staying quiet. Keeping the peace. Walking away. Pretending everything is fine. Strategies that once helped people cope, but which may still automatically appear when emotions become intense. ⸻ The power of recognition One of the most moving aspects of this session is the way group members begin to recognize parts of themselves in one another. Not because their stories are identical. But because the emotions underneath those stories feel surprisingly familiar. And through that recognition comes something many people have been missing for a long time: The feeling of not being alone. ⸻ Staying curious about what is happening Rather than rushing to conclusions or solutions, the group creates space for something else. Curiosity. What is happening inside me? Why does this affect me so strongly? And what might this tell me about my past and my present? ⸻ 🌟 The common thread The common thread in this episode is that the past is not always gone. Sometimes it continues to live on through emotions, reactions, and patterns that become activated when something familiar is touched. Mentalizing helps us slow down when that happens. To pause. To stay curious. And to explore what is really happening — within ourselves and between people. ⸻ 💬 Closing This episode shows that old pain is not always visible. Sometimes it hides behind silence. Behind anger. Behind withdrawal. Or behind the need to keep going as if nothing happened. But when those experiences are shared and recognized by others, something begins to change. Not because the past disappears. But because you no longer have to carry it alone. And sometimes healing begins with one simple experience: “What I felt was real… and someone else could see it too.”

19 de jun de 202630 min
Portada del episodio #32: MBT 1 on 1 Therapy > Not Everything Has to Be Mine to Carry

#32: MBT 1 on 1 Therapy > Not Everything Has to Be Mine to Carry

🎙️ Special Episode – “Not Everything Has to Be Mine to Carry” Welcome to this special episode of the MBT podcast. In this episode, we once again step inside a one-on-one therapy session — a place where change often begins long before it becomes visible on the outside. What unfolds in this session will feel familiar to many people: spending years carrying responsibilities that may never have been yours to carry in the first place. Not only your own worries. But also the worries of others. The emotions of others. The problems of others. And then, slowly, discovering that not everything belongs on your shoulders. Today, we listen to a conversation in which old patterns of control, responsibility, and adaptation begin to give way to something new. Not because life suddenly becomes easier. But because the client is beginning to recognize what belongs to him — and what does not. ⸻ 🧠 What is central in this episode Letting go of responsibility Some people spend years carrying more than they were ever meant to carry. Trying to solve. Trying to protect. Trying to make things better. In this session, a new realization begins to emerge: being involved is not the same as being responsible. And letting go is not the same as not caring. ⸻ Taking up space without guilt An important theme in this episode is learning to take up space. Not by becoming harder. Not by caring less. But by finally including yourself in the equation. What happens when your needs no longer automatically come last? ⸻ Allowing appreciation to come in Sometimes receiving a compliment is harder than receiving criticism. In this session, the client begins to notice something changing. Positive feedback is no longer immediately dismissed. Recognition is no longer pushed away. Instead, there is a growing willingness to let it in. And that turns out to be a bigger shift than it first appears. ⸻ When others have to adjust to your change Change rarely happens in isolation. People become familiar with who you have always been. And when you begin to change, they often need time to adjust as well. This can create confusion. Resistance. Misunderstanding. But sometimes it can also create entirely new conversations. ⸻ What belongs to me, and what belongs to someone else? One question runs throughout the entire session: Whose responsibility is this? Whose emotion is this? Whose problem is this? Again and again, the client finds himself exploring the difference between caring for someone and carrying someone. And those are not the same thing. ⸻ Doors that may still need to be opened Toward the end of the session, another theme quietly emerges. Not the changes happening today. But experiences from much earlier in life. There is a growing curiosity about whether some parts of the past may still be waiting behind closed doors. Not from fear. But from a desire to understand what may still need attention. ⸻ 🌟 The common thread The common thread in this episode is the difference between caring for others and carrying others. For a long time, those two things felt almost identical. Now, something new is beginning to emerge. The realization that you can remain connected to people without taking responsibility for everything they feel, think, or experience. Mentalizing plays an important role in that process. By slowing down. By staying curious. And by continually asking: What belongs to me? What belongs to the other person? And what is happening between us? ⸻ 💬 Closing This episode shows that growth is not always about doing more. Sometimes it is about carrying less. Less fixing. Less controlling. Less responsibility for things that were never truly yours. And sometimes change begins with one simple realization: “I can care deeply… without carrying everything.”

17 de jun de 202645 min
Portada del episodio #31: MBT Three-Month Treatment Review > Six Months In: Looking Back, Growing, and Looking Ahead

#31: MBT Three-Month Treatment Review > Six Months In: Looking Back, Growing, and Looking Ahead

🎙️ Special Episode – “Six Months In: Looking Back, Growing, and Looking Ahead” Welcome to this special episode of the MBT podcast. This episode is different from the previous ones. This is not a group session. This is not an individual therapy session. Today, we listen in on an official progress review of the MBT program, held halfway through the nine-month treatment journey. Together, therapist and client reflect on the past six months: What has changed? What is going better? Which patterns have become visible? And what challenges still lie ahead? It is a moment of reflection, honesty, and awareness. ⸻ 🧠 What this review focuses on Looking back on six months of MBT The client describes how tension no longer escalates as quickly as it once did. Where automatic reactions used to take over, there is now more space to pause, reflect, and consciously choose how to respond. What once required enormous effort is gradually becoming more natural. ⸻ From surviving to living consciously One of the key insights in this review is that many of the skills learned in therapy are no longer being applied only consciously. A new way of responding to emotions, conflict, and stress is slowly becoming part of everyday life. Not perfect. But clearly different from six months ago. ⸻ Learning that you matter A recurring theme throughout the review is self-worth. The client reflects on how unfamiliar it feels to truly see himself as important. Not only focusing on others. Not only taking care of everyone else. But making space for himself as well. This may be one of the most significant areas of growth. ⸻ Old patterns have not disappeared At the same time, this review highlights that old patterns can still be triggered. Certain situations continue to touch deeper layers of fear, insecurity, or pain. Especially experiences that resemble earlier life events can still provoke strong emotional reactions. The goal is no longer to prevent these reactions entirely, but to learn how to respond to them differently. ⸻ Looking ahead to the final three months This review is not only about looking back. It is also about exploring what still needs attention. Which skills can continue to develop? Where are the remaining challenges? And how can the client build even more trust in his ability to regulate himself when tension rises? ⸻ 🌟 The common thread The central theme of this review is trust. Trust in the process. Trust in change. Trust in yourself. Not because all difficulties have disappeared. But because there is growing confidence that difficult emotions, setbacks, and moments of tension no longer automatically lead to losing control. ⸻ 💬 Closing This review shows that personal growth is not about becoming perfect. It is about becoming more aware. More reflective. More compassionate toward yourself. And perhaps the most important realization after six months of MBT is this: “I am no longer the same person who started this journey.”

13 de jun de 202623 min
Portada del episodio #30: MBT 1 on 1 Therapy > Between Valuing Yourself and the Fear of Losing Each Other

#30: MBT 1 on 1 Therapy > Between Valuing Yourself and the Fear of Losing Each Other

🎙️ Special Episode – “Between Valuing Yourself and the Fear of Losing Each Other” Welcome to this special episode of the MBT podcast. In this episode, you are once again given a unique insight into a one-on-one therapy session — a space where personal growth, relationships, and old patterns become visible as they unfold in everyday life. What makes this session powerful is how clearly it shows that personal growth can sometimes create tension within relationships. The more someone learns to understand and value themselves, the greater the challenge becomes to continue moving forward together. Today, we listen to a conversation about self-worth, boundaries, connection, and the question of how to stay true to yourself without losing the people you care about. ⸻ 🧠 What this episode explores Learning that you matter A central theme in this session is the realization that your own needs matter too. Not only the needs of others. Not only the expectations of those around you. But also your peace. Your boundaries. Your feelings. For someone who has spent years focusing primarily on others, this represents a profound shift. ⸻ Relationships in transition When one person grows, relationships often change as well. What once felt natural and familiar suddenly no longer works in the same way. Old expectations collide with new boundaries. And both people are left trying to find their footing. This can create confusion, sadness, and misunderstanding. ⸻ Being seen versus being understood A recurring theme throughout this session is the desire to be truly seen. Not only heard. Not only understood. But genuinely seen for what you feel, what you need, and what you are trying to express. The session highlights how difficult this can be when two people experience the same situation through very different perspectives. ⸻ Peace as a compass One thing that stands out in this session is how important peace and calm have become. No longer living from tension, adaptation, or constantly anticipating the needs of others. Instead asking: Where do I feel calm? What gives me energy? What helps me stay connected to myself? ⸻ Caring for a parent The themes of loss and caregiving also play an important role in this conversation. The pain of watching a parent slowly change. The realization that independence is fading. And the difficult balance between helping, protecting, and letting go. These moments touch on love, grief, responsibility, and acceptance. ⸻ New pride and self-confidence One of the most meaningful moments in this session is the realization that pride no longer has to come from external validation. Pride in choices. Pride in growth. Pride in no longer losing yourself in old patterns. Slowly, confidence begins to emerge — not in what you do, but in who you are. ⸻ 🌟 The common thread The central theme of this episode is discovering self-worth. Not through working harder. Not through proving yourself. But through feeling that your needs, feelings, and boundaries deserve space too. Mentalizing helps create that space by allowing you to pause and reflect, rather than automatically falling back into old patterns. It invites you to become curious about what is happening within yourself — and within your relationships with others. ⸻ 💬 Closing This episode shows that personal growth is not always comfortable. Not because something is going wrong, but because old ways of relating to yourself and others are beginning to change. And within that change, something new can emerge. Sometimes healing does not begin with a dramatic breakthrough, but with a simple realization: “I matter… and that is allowed to be true.”

11 de jun de 202647 min
Portada del episodio #29: MBT Group Therapy > Between Seeking Connection and Protecting Yourself

#29: MBT Group Therapy > Between Seeking Connection and Protecting Yourself

🎙️ Special Episode – “Between Seeking Connection and Protecting Yourself” Welcome to this special episode of the MBT podcast. In this group session, an intense conversation unfolds about vulnerability, self-protection, and the tension that can arise when people genuinely try to understand one another but still end up missing each other. What makes this session powerful is how clearly it shows that behind conflict, frustration, and misunderstanding often lies the very same need: connection. Today, we listen to a group session where themes such as safety, rejection, loss, self-protection, and the longing to be seen take center stage. ⸻ 🧠 What this episode explores Daring to be vulnerable This session reveals how difficult it can be to share something deeply personal. Because the moment you allow yourself to be seen, you also risk feeling misunderstood. That makes vulnerability both powerful and frightening. ⸻ Good intentions that collide One of the most striking aspects of this session is how people can lose connection precisely while trying to do something good. One person tries to protect. Another tries to understand. Someone else tries to connect. And yet tension still emerges. Not because anyone wants to hurt the other, but because everyone is listening through the lens of their own experience. ⸻ Protecting yourself from pain Several group members show how old protective strategies become activated when emotions intensify. Creating distance. Building walls. Withdrawing. Or trying even harder to explain yourself. Beneath these reactions often lies the same fear: I don’t want to get hurt again. ⸻ The feeling of not being understood An important theme in this session is the experience of having your intentions misunderstood. That can lead to frustration, sadness, and confusion. Because how do you explain what you meant, when the other person heard something completely different? ⸻ Loss and old wounds Beneath many of the reactions are experiences of loss, rejection, and emotional insecurity from the past. As tension rises within the group, those old feelings begin to surface. And sometimes it is not only the adult in the present who reacts, but also the younger part that once had to protect itself. ⸻ Mentalizing under pressure What makes this session particularly meaningful is how clearly it demonstrates how difficult mentalizing becomes when emotions run high. The challenge is no longer about being right. The challenge is staying curious. Curious about yourself. Curious about the other person. And curious about what is happening between people. ⸻ 🌟 The common thread The central theme of this episode is the tension between seeking connection and protecting yourself. The need to be seen exists alongside the fear of rejection. The desire for closeness exists alongside the urge to create distance when things become overwhelming. Mentalizing helps people pause before reacting from old protective patterns and explore what is truly being touched underneath the surface. ⸻ 💬 Closing This episode shows how complex human relationships can be — even when everyone involved has good intentions. Connection does not emerge because people think or feel the same way. It emerges because they remain curious about each other’s inner worlds. And sometimes growth does not begin by resolving the conflict, but by asking a simple question: “What is really happening inside you right now?”

6 de jun de 202629 min