The Path To Peace Therapy Podcast

SEASON 3 , EPISODE 1 (PART ONE) The Valley: Kristen & Luke Through the Eyes of a Therapist | What Postpartum Really Does to the Brain (Part One)

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jakson SEASON 3 , EPISODE 1 (PART ONE) The Valley: Kristen & Luke Through the Eyes of a Therapist | What Postpartum Really Does to the Brain (Part One) kansikuva

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SEASON 3 , EPISODE 1 (PART ONE) The Valley: Kristen & Luke Through the Eyes of a Therapist | What Postpartum Really Does to the Brain (Part One) Reality Case Studies, Season Three Real stories. Real psychology. Real tools for everyday life. When millions of people watched Kristen and Luke struggle after the birth of their daughter, most viewers asked, "Who's right?" As a therapist, that was never my question. I found myself asking something different: what was happening inside Kristen's brain, and what was happening inside Luke's? In this two-part case study, we use their publicly shared story not to gossip, but as a mirror — a way to understand our own nervous systems, our own families, and our own patterns. This is Part One, and it's about the biology. As always, this is a case study, not a diagnosis. I have never met or evaluated anyone featured on The Valley. We study the observable patterns, then turn every one of them back toward our own lives, because that is the step that separates a case study from gossip. In this episode you'll learn, in plain language: why postpartum is a developmental period rather than a diagnosis; how homeostasis, allostatic load, and matrescence reveal the true cost of adaptation; why the maternal brain literally reorganizes through neuroplasticity; how hypervigilance and an over-sensitized amygdala can turn an ordinary airport into an emergency; why affect regulation explains how two people experience the same stress so differently; and a thoughtful, evidence-based word on cannabis and the postpartum nervous system. Woven throughout is Bowen Family Systems Theory, because no one in a family functions in emotional isolation. The Path to Peace Pause: This week's two questions: One, when you find yourself emotionally dysregulated, what does your nervous system do to try to create safety, and what problem is it actually trying to solve? Two, if the people who know you best described what happens to you under stress, would their description match your own? Go deeper on Patreon and Substack: eight more reflection questions and the full Companion Journal are waiting for you, linked below. A word of support: If the themes of postpartum anxiety, depression, or overwhelm feel close to home, you are not alone. In the U.S., call or text the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline at 1-833-TLC-MAMA (1-833-852-6262), free and confidential, every day, in English and Spanish. If you are ever in crisis, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. Next episode: What Postpartum Really Does to the Brain, Part Two: When Two Nervous Systems Try to Love Each Other body image and desire after childbirth, the amygdala hijack and the art of repair, attachment styles, and why control is so often anxiety wearing a different outfit. This episode is for educational purposes and support. It is not a psychological evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation for anyone featured, and it is not a substitute for professional mental health care. If today's themes are ones you're living, please reach out to a licensed professional in your area. Take a deep breath, give yourself some grace, and remember: understanding the patterns is the first step. Practicing something healthier is what changes the story. You got this, and I've got you. postpartum brain, matrescence, postpartum anxiety, maternal brain neuroplasticity, allostatic load, Bowen family systems, nervous system regulation, The Valley Kristen and Luke, postpartum nervous system, new mom mental health Hashtags: #Postpartum #Matrescence #PostpartumAnxiety #MaternalMentalHealth #NervousSystem #FamilySystems #TheValley #RealityCaseStudies #ThePathToPeace #NewMom Let's stay connected: Blog: https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog] Book a session: https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online] Instagram: @ThePathToPeaceTherapy LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/] Stephanie Buckley, AMFT #147538 | ADHD and OCD Specialist | Integrative Mental Health Practitioner | Sports-Psychology | Host of The Path to Peace Therapy Podcast | 14,000+ Downloads

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jakson REALITY CASE STUDIES Season 3 Episode 1: Part 2 of 2: When Two Nervous Systems Try to Love Each Other The Valley | Kristen & Luke Through the Eyes of a Therapist: Part Two: The Psychology of the Couple kansikuva

REALITY CASE STUDIES Season 3 Episode 1: Part 2 of 2: When Two Nervous Systems Try to Love Each Other The Valley | Kristen & Luke Through the Eyes of a Therapist: Part Two: The Psychology of the Couple

REALITY CASE STUDIES Season Three · Episode One · Part Two of Two When Two Nervous Systems Try to Love Each Other The Valley | Kristen & Luke Through the Eyes of a Therapist: Part Two: The Psychology of the Couple Real stories. Real psychology. Real tools for everyday life. This is Part Two of our case study on Kristen and Luke from Bravo's The Valley. Last week, in Part One, we explored the biology, what postpartum really does to the brain, the body, and the nervous system. This week we turn to what happens between two people who love each other. As always, this is a case study, not a diagnosis. We study the observable patterns, then turn them back toward ourselves. The goal is never to decide who was right. It's to understand what each nervous system was trying to accomplish. NEW HERE? START WITH PART ONE What Postpartum Really Does to the Brain (Part One: The Biology) lays the foundation for everything in this episode. If you haven't heard it yet, I'd gently encourage you to begin there. You'll find it wherever you're listening now, and it's linked in the show notes. In This Episode You'll learn, in plain language: how body image, feeling touched out, and two different love languages can collide, and why one partner reaching for closeness while the other withdraws is a collision of attachment needs rather than rejection; what we absorb by watching the relationships around us, through the psychology of observational learning, cognitive schemas, and anticipatory anxiety; what happens when two dysregulated nervous systems try to love each other, including the amygdala hijack and why repair, not perfection, builds secure relationships; how a couple is already practicing parenthood long before the baby arrives, and why interoception makes a cry feel like an emergency to one parent and a sound to the other; attachment styles as nervous-system strategies rather than personality types; and why control is so often anxiety wearing a different outfit, quietly reinforced through the brain's own learning. Woven throughout is Bowen Family Systems Theory, because no one in a family functions in emotional isolation. The Path to Peace Pause This week's two questions to carry with you: QUESTION ONE When you find yourself emotionally dysregulated, what does your nervous system do to try to create safety, and what problem is it actually trying to solve? Do you become more controlling, withdraw, become critical, go quiet, seek reassurance, or overfunction for everyone else? QUESTION TWO If the people who know you best described what happens to you under stress, would their description match your own, and what would that gap tell you about your intention versus your impact? Go Deeper on Patreon and Substack If today's episode resonated with you, eight more reflection questions and the full Companion Journal are waiting for you over on Patreon and Substack, linked in the show notes. That's where we go even deeper, because insight grows exponentially when you take the time to reflect rather than simply listen. A Word of Support If the themes of postpartum anxiety, depression, or overwhelm feel close to home, you are not alone. In the U.S., call or text the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline at 1-833-TLC-MAMA (1-833-852-6262), free and confidential, every day, in English and Spanish. If you are ever in crisis, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. You can reach me and my practice at thepathtopeacetherapy.com. Next Time on Reality Case Studies How the Postpartum Brain Heals: Nutrition, Movement, Sleep, and a Word to the Fathers Across these two episodes we've explored what postpartum does to the brain and what happens between two people who love each other. Next, we move from understanding to recovery. We'll explore nutrition, not as a way to bounce back, but as the raw material the brain requires to rebuild neurotransmitters, including protein, omega-3 fatty acids, hydration, magnesium, vitamin D, and stable blood sugar. We'll talk about movement and BDNF, or Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor, and why a twenty-minute walk can be a genuine neurobiological intervention rather than a way to get your body back. We'll cover sleep architecture, journaling, sunlight, community, and co-regulation, have an evidence-based conversation about cannabis and anxiety, and I'll speak directly to the fathers about their role in the fourth trimester. Because once we understand how the brain heals, the next question naturally becomes, how do we help that brain recover? Let's Stay Connected Blog — over 165 posts on parenting, neurodivergence, and family systems https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog] Book a session — https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online] Instagram — @ThePathToPeaceTherapy LinkedIn — https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/] HASHTAGS #Postpartum #AttachmentStyles #CoRegulation #RelationshipRepair #TouchedOut #MaternalMentalHealth #FamilySystems #TheValley #RealityCaseStudies #ThePathToPeace #NewParents This episode is for educational purposes and support. It is not a psychological evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation for anyone featured, and it is not a substitute for professional mental health care. If today's themes are ones you're living, please reach out to a licensed professional in your area. Stephanie Buckley, AMFT #147538 ADHD and OCD Specialist | Integrative Mental Health Practitioner | Sports-Psychology Host of The Path to Peace Therapy Podcast | 14,000+ Downloads

Eilen1 h 4 min
jakson SEASON 3 , EPISODE 1 (PART ONE) The Valley: Kristen & Luke Through the Eyes of a Therapist | What Postpartum Really Does to the Brain (Part One) kansikuva

SEASON 3 , EPISODE 1 (PART ONE) The Valley: Kristen & Luke Through the Eyes of a Therapist | What Postpartum Really Does to the Brain (Part One)

SEASON 3 , EPISODE 1 (PART ONE) The Valley: Kristen & Luke Through the Eyes of a Therapist | What Postpartum Really Does to the Brain (Part One) Reality Case Studies, Season Three Real stories. Real psychology. Real tools for everyday life. When millions of people watched Kristen and Luke struggle after the birth of their daughter, most viewers asked, "Who's right?" As a therapist, that was never my question. I found myself asking something different: what was happening inside Kristen's brain, and what was happening inside Luke's? In this two-part case study, we use their publicly shared story not to gossip, but as a mirror — a way to understand our own nervous systems, our own families, and our own patterns. This is Part One, and it's about the biology. As always, this is a case study, not a diagnosis. I have never met or evaluated anyone featured on The Valley. We study the observable patterns, then turn every one of them back toward our own lives, because that is the step that separates a case study from gossip. In this episode you'll learn, in plain language: why postpartum is a developmental period rather than a diagnosis; how homeostasis, allostatic load, and matrescence reveal the true cost of adaptation; why the maternal brain literally reorganizes through neuroplasticity; how hypervigilance and an over-sensitized amygdala can turn an ordinary airport into an emergency; why affect regulation explains how two people experience the same stress so differently; and a thoughtful, evidence-based word on cannabis and the postpartum nervous system. Woven throughout is Bowen Family Systems Theory, because no one in a family functions in emotional isolation. The Path to Peace Pause: This week's two questions: One, when you find yourself emotionally dysregulated, what does your nervous system do to try to create safety, and what problem is it actually trying to solve? Two, if the people who know you best described what happens to you under stress, would their description match your own? Go deeper on Patreon and Substack: eight more reflection questions and the full Companion Journal are waiting for you, linked below. A word of support: If the themes of postpartum anxiety, depression, or overwhelm feel close to home, you are not alone. In the U.S., call or text the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline at 1-833-TLC-MAMA (1-833-852-6262), free and confidential, every day, in English and Spanish. If you are ever in crisis, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. Next episode: What Postpartum Really Does to the Brain, Part Two: When Two Nervous Systems Try to Love Each Other body image and desire after childbirth, the amygdala hijack and the art of repair, attachment styles, and why control is so often anxiety wearing a different outfit. This episode is for educational purposes and support. It is not a psychological evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation for anyone featured, and it is not a substitute for professional mental health care. If today's themes are ones you're living, please reach out to a licensed professional in your area. Take a deep breath, give yourself some grace, and remember: understanding the patterns is the first step. Practicing something healthier is what changes the story. You got this, and I've got you. postpartum brain, matrescence, postpartum anxiety, maternal brain neuroplasticity, allostatic load, Bowen family systems, nervous system regulation, The Valley Kristen and Luke, postpartum nervous system, new mom mental health Hashtags: #Postpartum #Matrescence #PostpartumAnxiety #MaternalMentalHealth #NervousSystem #FamilySystems #TheValley #RealityCaseStudies #ThePathToPeace #NewMom Let's stay connected: Blog: https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog] Book a session: https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online] Instagram: @ThePathToPeaceTherapy LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/] Stephanie Buckley, AMFT #147538 | ADHD and OCD Specialist | Integrative Mental Health Practitioner | Sports-Psychology | Host of The Path to Peace Therapy Podcast | 14,000+ Downloads

Eilen1 h 3 min
jakson Reality Case Studies, Season 2: Jesse Lally & Michelle Saniei From The Valley. Episode 4: The Child Caught in the Middle. Is It the Divorce, or the Conflict? What Actually Harms and Protects Children When Parents Split kansikuva

Reality Case Studies, Season 2: Jesse Lally & Michelle Saniei From The Valley. Episode 4: The Child Caught in the Middle. Is It the Divorce, or the Conflict? What Actually Harms and Protects Children When Parents Split

Reality Case Studies, Season 2: Jesse Lally & Michelle Saniei From The Valley. Episode 4: The Child Caught in the Middle. Is It the Divorce, or the Conflict? What Actually Harms and Protects Children When Parents Split Is it the divorce that hurts children, or something else? If you are divorcing, separating, or co-parenting and you're afraid of the damage it might do to your kids, this episode carries the single most reassuring, research-backed finding in the entire field, and it hands the power back to you. In Episode 4 of Reality Case Studies Season Two, we turn toward the child at the center of every divorce, using the story of Jesse Lally and Michelle Saniei from Bravo's The Valley as our doorway into the universal question every separating parent asks: what will this do to my child? The answer, backed by decades of research, is more hopeful than most parents believe. As always, this is a case study, not a diagnosis, and today with extra care. I do not analyze or speculate about any child. Instead, we use this moment to teach the universal patterns and real research about what children experience when parents part, so you can apply it to the children in your own life, and perhaps to the child you once were. In this episode you'll learn, in plain language: the research finding that changes everything, that it is not divorce itself but the conflict around it that most affects children, and why a high-conflict intact marriage can harm a child more than a low-conflict divorce; how a child experiences conflict in the body through co-regulation, borrowing a parent's calm or absorbing a parent's alarm; the loyalty bind from the child's side, and why asking a child to choose against one parent is asking them to reject half of themselves; the four research-backed protective factors that build resilience, low conflict, one stable regulated adult, routine and predictability, and permission to love both parents freely; and the liberating truth that not one of those protective factors requires your co-parent's cooperation, which means even one steady parent can change a child's trajectory. This is the episode that turns fear into a plan. This week's two questions from The Path to Peace Pause: One, think about the children in your life, or the child you once were, what is or was the emotional temperature of that home, and whose steadiness helped a young nervous system feel safe? Two, if you are navigating conflict with a co-parent, what is one thing within your control, and yours alone, that you could do this week to lower the temperature and protect a child's freedom to love both people? Go deeper in this week's Companion Journal, where you'll assess the emotional temperature of your child's world with a gentle, shame-free inventory, build a concrete conflict-reduction plan you can carry out on your own, explore how to become the one steady regulated adult, and, for those who were the child in the middle, work through a guided reflection on setting down what was never yours to carry: [Companion Journal link] Episodes mentioned in today's show: Team Jesse or Team Michelle? (Reality Case Studies Season Two, Episode Three) When Love Splits: How Divorce Reshapes a Child's World Divorce Without Damage: Protecting Kids from Triangulation!! The Divorce Series, Part Two: Co-Parenting Without Conflict Parenting Through Divorce Series, Part Three: Is It ADHD Or Is It The Divorce? Your Calm is Their Anchor: The Power of Emotional Scaffolding Contagious Emotions: How One Person's Anxiety Impacts the Whole Family Building a Thriving Family System: What Architecture Can Teach Us About Parenting!! Dear Parent: The Invisible Triangle, Why Parental Alignment is Your Family's Secret Weapon for Success!! Let's stay connected: Website and blog, over 165 posts: https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog] Book a session: https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online] Instagram: @ThePathToPeaceTherapy LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/] Next time on Reality Case Studies Season Two, our season finale, Episode Five: Who Am I Now? Rebuilding Your Identity, Reclaiming Your Judgment, and Becoming Whole After a Marriage Ends. This episode is for educational purposes and support. It is not a psychological evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation for anyone featured, and it is not a substitute for professional mental health care. If today's themes are ones you're living, please reach out to a licensed professional in your area. Take a deep breath, give yourself some grace, and remember: understanding the patterns is the first step. Practicing something healthier is what changes the story. You got this, and I've got you!

7. heinä 202620 min
jakson Reality Case Studies, Season 2: Jesse Lally & Michelle Saniei From The Valley. Episode 3: Team Jesse or Team Michelle? How a Divorce Recruits an Army kansikuva

Reality Case Studies, Season 2: Jesse Lally & Michelle Saniei From The Valley. Episode 3: Team Jesse or Team Michelle? How a Divorce Recruits an Army

Reality Case Studies, Season 2: Jesse Lally & Michelle Saniei From The Valley. Episode 3: Team Jesse or Team Michelle? How a Divorce Recruits an Army Why does everyone feel like they have to pick a side? If you have ever watched a divorce or a falling out split a whole friend group in two, or felt that magnetic pull to decide who the good one is and who the bad one is, this episode is about the pattern underneath that pull, and it is one of the oldest and most predictable dynamics in all of human relationships. In Episode Three of Reality Case Studies Season Two, we zoom out from Jesse Lally and Michelle Saniei to the entire friend group around them on Bravo's The Valley, and we ask what happens when a private rupture becomes a public war with teams. This is the episode about sides, and about how to stop being recruited into other people's conflicts. As always, this is a case study, not a diagnosis. I have never met or assessed anyone featured on The Valley, and in this episode especially, I will not tell you who was right, who was wrong, or who belonged on which team, because the pull to assign teams is itself the pattern we are here to understand. We study the observable dynamics, then turn every one back toward our own lives. In this episode you'll learn, in plain language: triangulation, the Bowen Family Systems concept explaining why two people in tension pull in a third to stabilize the discomfort, and why the smallest stable unit of an emotional system is a triangle, not a pair; the difference between healthy venting and destructive recruiting, or when a friend becomes a resource versus a weapon; loyalty binds, the painful state of feeling that caring for one person requires betraying another; the loyalty bind that matters most, the one a child is placed in when triangulated into a parents' conflict, and why asking a child to choose against a parent is asking them to choose against half of themselves; and the three forces that make our minds beg to pick a team, splitting, narrative bias, and the fundamental attribution error. Then we learn the way out: Bowen's non-anxious presence and staying differentiated, the rare and powerful skill of loving both people without enlisting in anyone's army. This week's two questions from The Path to Peace Pause: One, in your family growing up, when two people were in conflict, who became the third point of the triangle, and do you still step into that role today? Two, in a conflict happening around you right now, are you being invited to support someone, or to enlist against someone, and what would it look like to stay a caring, non-anxious presence to everyone involved? Go deeper in this week's Companion Journal, where you'll map the triangles in your own family of origin, identify the loyalty binds you may still carry, work through a guided exercise on becoming a non-anxious presence, and, for the parents among us, build a concrete plan for keeping the children in your life out of the triangle: [Companion Journal link] Episodes mentioned in today's show: Why Is He Like That With Her? (Reality Case Studies Season Two, Episode One) The Roommate Marriage (Reality Case Studies Season Two, Episode Two) Triangulation in ADHD Families: Why Kids End Up in the Middle Divorce Without Damage: Protecting Kids from Triangulation!! The Divorce Series, Part Two: Co-Parenting Without Conflict When Love Splits: How Divorce Reshapes a Child's World Contagious Emotions: How One Person's Anxiety Impacts the Whole Family Dear Parent: The Invisible Triangle, Why Parental Alignment is Your Family's Secret Weapon for Success!! Parentification: When Kids Become the Adults in the Room Let's stay connected: Website and blog, over 165 posts: https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog] Book a session: https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online] Instagram: @ThePathToPeaceTherapy LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/] Next time on Reality Case Studies Season Two: the child at the center of it all, and what high-conflict divorce does to a young nervous system, plus what the research says actually protects children through it. This episode is for educational purposes and support. It is not a psychological evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation for anyone featured, and it is not a substitute for professional mental health care. If today's themes are ones you're living, please reach out to a licensed professional in your area. Take a deep breath, give yourself some grace, and remember: understanding the patterns is the first step. Practicing something healthier is what changes the story. You got this, and I've got you.

7. heinä 202622 min
jakson Reality Case Studies, Season 2: Jesse Lally & Michelle Saniei From The Valley. Episode 2: The Roommate Marriage. How Two People Can Live in the Same House and Slowly Disappear From Each Other kansikuva

Reality Case Studies, Season 2: Jesse Lally & Michelle Saniei From The Valley. Episode 2: The Roommate Marriage. How Two People Can Live in the Same House and Slowly Disappear From Each Other

Reality Case Studies, Season 2: Jesse Lally & Michelle Saniei From The Valley. Episode 2: The Roommate Marriage. How Two People Can Live in the Same House and Slowly Disappear From Each Other How do two people who share a home, a business, and a child slowly become strangers? If your marriage has quietly become a set of logistics, if the house is calm but the connection is gone, this episode is about the slow fade almost no one names while it's happening, and about the money fault line that so often runs underneath it. In Episode Two of Reality Case Studies Season Two, we rewind into the marriage of Jesse Lally and Michelle Saniei from Bravo's The Valley, back before the divorce, to the roommate marriage itself. We start with a hard moment from the ending, a hidden loan and a conversation about a child's health insurance, and we work backward to understand how intimacy drains out of a relationship one missed moment at a time. As always, this is a case study, not a diagnosis. I have never met or assessed anyone featured on The Valley. We study the observable patterns, then turn every one back toward our own lives, because that is the step that separates a case study from gossip. In this episode you'll learn, in plain language: emotional disengagement, the slow withdrawal of emotional investment that often looks like peace but is actually distance; bids for connection, John Gottman's research on the tiny everyday moments of reaching out where couples either turn toward each other or turn away, and how a marriage is lost in ten thousand missed ones; the pursuer and distancer cycle back where it starts, inside the marriage; stonewalling and emotional flooding, why shutting down feels like calm to one partner and abandonment to the other; money scripts, the unconscious childhood beliefs about money that shape us, and why a marriage between a scarcity script and a status script becomes two people afraid of opposite things; keeping up with the Joneses understood with compassion as nervous-system regulation rather than vanity; financial infidelity and why hidden debt wounds trust like other betrayals; and sunk cost, and why being willing to pay a fortune simply to leave is often a nervous system finally choosing freedom over self-erasure. We also look, with great care, at what the tension between two partners does to the whole family system, including the youngest member. This week's two questions from The Path to Peace Pause: One, in your closest relationship, when did the last real conversation happen, the kind that wasn't about logistics, and whose bids for connection have been going unanswered lately? Two, what money script did you inherit from your childhood home, is money about safety, status, or silence for you, and how has that quietly shaped the way you and your partner handle money together? Go deeper in this week's Companion Journal, where you'll map your bids for connection, uncover your money script and your partner's, work through a guided exercise on rebuilding emotional connection one small turn at a time, and explore the difference between the calm of peace and the calm of disappearance: [Companion Journal link] Episodes mentioned in today's show: Why Is He Like That With Her? (Reality Case Studies Season Two, Episode One) Help Me!! Loving Someone with ADHD: How to Protect Your Marriage When One of You Feels Like the Parent Beyond Resentment!! Thriving as a Neurotypical Partner in an ADHD Relationship The Blueprint for a Happy Family!!! Building a Thriving Family System: What Architecture Can Teach Us About Parenting!! The Butterfly Effect in Family Systems Therapy When Love Splits: How Divorce Reshapes a Child's World The Divorce Series, Part Two: Co-Parenting Without Conflict Contagious Emotions: How One Person's Anxiety Impacts the Whole Family Let's stay connected: Website and blog, over 165 posts: https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/blog] Book a session: https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online [https://www.thepathtopeacetherapy.com/book-online] Instagram: @ThePathToPeaceTherapy LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-buckley-3b85b6353/] Next time on Reality Case Studies Season Two, Episode Three: Team Jesse or Team Michelle? How a Divorce Recruits an Army. Triangulation, Loyalty Binds, and the Psychology of Taking Sides. This episode is for educational purposes and support. It is not a psychological evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation for anyone featured, and it is not a substitute for professional mental health care. If today's themes are ones you're living, please reach out to a licensed professional in your area. Take a deep breath, give yourself some grace, and remember: understanding the patterns is the first step. Practicing something healthier is what changes the story. You got this, and I've got you.

7. heinä 202624 min