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You Call It Regulation. Your Partner Calls It Disappearing.

17 min · 11 de may de 2026
portada del episodio You Call It Regulation. Your Partner Calls It Disappearing.

Descripción

You've done the work. You learned to pause, to catch yourself before things escalated, to stay calm when the conversation got hard. And somewhere in there, calm started to look a lot like gone — a flatness your partner can't quite reach through, a stillness that reads less like steadiness and more like the lights going out. You thought you were regulating. They experienced something closer to being left. This episode untangles one of the quieter misunderstandings in how emotional regulation gets taught — the idea that the goal is to be unaffected, self-contained, fully managed. Rachel traces how that version of nervous system regulation becomes its own kind of distance, and why a partner who goes flat during a difficult moment isn't being mature or healthy so much as absent. The episode draws on what co-regulation actually means — not that one person always holds the other steady, but that two people build enough internal capacity to stay present with each other's experience rather than retreating behind their own. That's a different ask than most regulation conversations prepare you for. The nervous system was not designed to regulate alone — that's not a flaw, it's the architecture. What looks like emotional independence from the outside is sometimes just a nervous system that learned early that needing people was costly. The goal of relational health isn't to need nothing from your partner. It's to become someone who can stay in the room when something lands — and to be with someone safe enough that needing them is no longer a risk. Needing your partner doesn't mean you haven't done the work. Sometimes it means the work is finally paying off. Resources 1. Free Course | Break the Cycle: [https://attachmentrevolution.com/break-the-cycle-workbook] A self-paced introduction to understanding your patterns and nervous system responses. 2. Free Training | Why Love Feels Like Too Much: [https://attachmentrevolution.com/mini-training] A 10-minute video that explains why you spiral in relationships — and the 3-question nervous system reset to interrupt it. 3. Private Coaching (Limited Availability) [https://attachmentrevolution.com/coaching]: High-touch, individualized support for deep relational pattern change. 4. The Attachment Revolution Membership — Waitlist [https://attachmentrevolution.com/revolution]: Ongoing education, tools, and live support for building more secure relationships. 5. Meaningful Journey Counseling (WA residents only) [https://meaningfuljourneycounseling.com/seattle-eft-couples-therapy]: Licensed therapy services for individuals and couples in Washington State. And if you’re tired of replaying conversations at 2am… My private audio series When Love Feels Like Too Much [https://attachmentrevolution.com/when-love-feels-like-too-much] is the guided version of this work. Five short episodes. Companion Workbook. Nervous system resets you can actually use in the moment. This is where we move from understanding the cycle to interrupting it. [Start here] [https://attachmentrevolution.com/when-love-feels-like-too-much] Disclaimer This podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for mental health treatment, therapy, diagnosis, or medical advice. Listening to this podcast does not create a therapist-client relationship. If you are experiencing significant distress, please seek support from a licensed mental health professional or medical provider.

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59 episodios

episode Why Your Partner Still Doesn't Know You After All This Time artwork

Why Your Partner Still Doesn't Know You After All This Time

There is a specific kind of loneliness that happens inside a relationship. It's not the loneliness of being alone. It's the feeling of being with someone you love, someone who is right there, and still feeling fundamentally unknown. They miss the moments that matter. They don't understand the needs that have always been there. And after years together, you think—how? How do you still not know this about me? The story most people tell themselves is that their partner doesn't pay attention, doesn't care enough to learn, isn't willing to know them. Rachel challenges that story. The gap between you and your partner might not exist because they're failing to find you. It might exist because you were never fully findable—because the unedited parts of yourself, the needs that felt too risky, the tender spots you protected, never fully came into the room. This isn't blame. It's a more accurate map. Your nervous system learned early to edit what felt unsafe to show. That made sense then. But years into a relationship, you're angry at your partner for not knowing the parts of you that you've never clearly brought into the room. The partner, meanwhile, fell in love with the version you showed and is now receiving frustration they can't fully trace. You're both running without complete information. This episode explores what that gap actually is, why it's there, and what closing it actually requires—which has nothing to do with your partner paying better attention and everything to do with the decision to finally show up fully. The version of the relationship that becomes possible when the whole self is in the room is not something either of you has yet experienced. That's not a tragedy. It's an invitation to do something different.

25 de may de 202617 min
episode Why the Most Capable Person in the Room Shuts Down at Home artwork

Why the Most Capable Person in the Room Shuts Down at Home

There's a moment somewhere between the office and the front door. The part of you that knew exactly what it was doing all day quietly steps back, and something else steps forward. Something that feels a lot like bracing. You love these people. That's not the confusion. And still, some nights the hand on the door handle carries a weight that has nothing to do with how tired you are. This episode is about what happens when the place you feel most capable becomes the place you hide — and what that costs the people on the other side of the door. Rachel traces the nervous system logic underneath emotional withdrawal in relationships: why high-functioning people often find more safety in work than in closeness, how the relational cycle tightens when one partner's reach keeps landing on someone who doesn't yet know how to be reached, and why the pursuer's grief and the withdrawer's exhaustion are almost always running in parallel without either person knowing the other feels it too. This episode speaks directly to both people in that pattern. The withdrawer isn't indifferent. They're loving from the only place their nervous system learned to be safe — and that place has walls. The silence isn't the absence of love. It's a nervous system that found its footing in competence and performance long before intimacy was part of the equation, and hasn't yet learned that closeness is survivable. You cannot achieve your way into intimacy. The difference between where things are and where they could be isn't effort. It's direction. Neither person in this cycle is the villain. Both of them are exhausted by it. The question isn't whether they love each other. It's whether the place they've learned to be safe has enough room for the other person to actually reach them there. Resources 1. Free Course | Break the Cycle: [https://attachmentrevolution.com/break-the-cycle-workbook] A self-paced introduction to understanding your patterns and nervous system responses. 2. Free Training | Why Love Feels Like Too Much: [https://attachmentrevolution.com/mini-training] A 10-minute video that explains why you spiral in relationships — and the 3-question nervous system reset to interrupt it. 3. Private Coaching (Limited Availability) [https://attachmentrevolution.com/coaching]: High-touch, individualized support for deep relational pattern change. 4. The Attachment Revolution Membership — Waitlist [https://attachmentrevolution.com/revolution]: Ongoing education, tools, and live support for building more secure relationships. 5. Meaningful Journey Counseling (WA residents only) [https://meaningfuljourneycounseling.com/seattle-eft-couples-therapy]: Licensed therapy services for individuals and couples in Washington State. And if you’re tired of replaying conversations at 2am… My private audio series When Love Feels Like Too Much [https://attachmentrevolution.com/when-love-feels-like-too-much] is the guided version of this work. Five short episodes. Companion Workbook. Nervous system resets you can actually use in the moment. This is where we move from understanding the cycle to interrupting it. [Start here] [https://attachmentrevolution.com/when-love-feels-like-too-much] Disclaimer This podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for mental health treatment, therapy, diagnosis, or medical advice. Listening to this podcast does not create a therapist-client relationship. If you are experiencing significant distress, please seek support from a licensed mental health professional or medical provider.

18 de may de 202617 min
episode You Call It Regulation. Your Partner Calls It Disappearing. artwork

You Call It Regulation. Your Partner Calls It Disappearing.

You've done the work. You learned to pause, to catch yourself before things escalated, to stay calm when the conversation got hard. And somewhere in there, calm started to look a lot like gone — a flatness your partner can't quite reach through, a stillness that reads less like steadiness and more like the lights going out. You thought you were regulating. They experienced something closer to being left. This episode untangles one of the quieter misunderstandings in how emotional regulation gets taught — the idea that the goal is to be unaffected, self-contained, fully managed. Rachel traces how that version of nervous system regulation becomes its own kind of distance, and why a partner who goes flat during a difficult moment isn't being mature or healthy so much as absent. The episode draws on what co-regulation actually means — not that one person always holds the other steady, but that two people build enough internal capacity to stay present with each other's experience rather than retreating behind their own. That's a different ask than most regulation conversations prepare you for. The nervous system was not designed to regulate alone — that's not a flaw, it's the architecture. What looks like emotional independence from the outside is sometimes just a nervous system that learned early that needing people was costly. The goal of relational health isn't to need nothing from your partner. It's to become someone who can stay in the room when something lands — and to be with someone safe enough that needing them is no longer a risk. Needing your partner doesn't mean you haven't done the work. Sometimes it means the work is finally paying off. Resources 1. Free Course | Break the Cycle: [https://attachmentrevolution.com/break-the-cycle-workbook] A self-paced introduction to understanding your patterns and nervous system responses. 2. Free Training | Why Love Feels Like Too Much: [https://attachmentrevolution.com/mini-training] A 10-minute video that explains why you spiral in relationships — and the 3-question nervous system reset to interrupt it. 3. Private Coaching (Limited Availability) [https://attachmentrevolution.com/coaching]: High-touch, individualized support for deep relational pattern change. 4. The Attachment Revolution Membership — Waitlist [https://attachmentrevolution.com/revolution]: Ongoing education, tools, and live support for building more secure relationships. 5. Meaningful Journey Counseling (WA residents only) [https://meaningfuljourneycounseling.com/seattle-eft-couples-therapy]: Licensed therapy services for individuals and couples in Washington State. And if you’re tired of replaying conversations at 2am… My private audio series When Love Feels Like Too Much [https://attachmentrevolution.com/when-love-feels-like-too-much] is the guided version of this work. Five short episodes. Companion Workbook. Nervous system resets you can actually use in the moment. This is where we move from understanding the cycle to interrupting it. [Start here] [https://attachmentrevolution.com/when-love-feels-like-too-much] Disclaimer This podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for mental health treatment, therapy, diagnosis, or medical advice. Listening to this podcast does not create a therapist-client relationship. If you are experiencing significant distress, please seek support from a licensed mental health professional or medical provider.

11 de may de 202617 min
episode Why "It" Felt Like It Didn't Work artwork

Why "It" Felt Like It Didn't Work

You tried something different. Maybe you paused before responding, or finally said the real thing instead of the version that comes out sideways. Your partner still got upset. The conversation still went somewhere you didn't want it to go. And somewhere between the end of that exchange and right now, a verdict assembled itself: it didn't work. This episode is about what "working" actually means in the context of nervous system change — and why the definition most people are using is quietly making the work harder. Rachel breaks down why one careful conversation that still ends in an argument isn't a failed experiment, why your partner having feelings after you tried something new is not proof the approach failed, and what the nervous system is actually tracking underneath the surface of any relational pattern. This is an episode for the person doing the work — whether or not their partner is doing it alongside them. The nervous system doesn't change on intention. It changes on evidence — small, repeated, consistent evidence that this relationship is becoming a slightly safer place to be. That's a different timeline than most people are told to expect, and it requires a different metric entirely: not whether your partner calmed down faster, but whether, over time, both nervous systems are trusting the relationship a little more. Consistency isn't the slow path. It's the only path. And understanding why that's true doesn't make it easier — but it does make it mean something. Resources 1. Free Course | Break the Cycle: [https://attachmentrevolution.com/break-the-cycle-workbook] A self-paced introduction to understanding your patterns and nervous system responses. 2. Free Training | Why Love Feels Like Too Much: [https://attachmentrevolution.com/mini-training] A 10-minute video that explains why you spiral in relationships — and the 3-question nervous system reset to interrupt it. 3. Private Coaching (Limited Availability) [https://attachmentrevolution.com/coaching]: High-touch, individualized support for deep relational pattern change. 4. The Attachment Revolution Membership — Waitlist [https://attachmentrevolution.com/revolution]: Ongoing education, tools, and live support for building more secure relationships. 5. Meaningful Journey Counseling (WA residents only) [https://meaningfuljourneycounseling.com/seattle-eft-couples-therapy]: Licensed therapy services for individuals and couples in Washington State. And if you’re tired of replaying conversations at 2am… My private audio series When Love Feels Like Too Much [https://attachmentrevolution.com/when-love-feels-like-too-much] is the guided version of this work. Five short episodes. Companion Workbook. Nervous system resets you can actually use in the moment. This is where we move from understanding the cycle to interrupting it. [Start here] [https://attachmentrevolution.com/when-love-feels-like-too-much] Disclaimer This podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for mental health treatment, therapy, diagnosis, or medical advice. Listening to this podcast does not create a therapist-client relationship. If you are experiencing significant distress, please seek support from a licensed mental health professional or medical provider.

4 de may de 202616 min
episode Before You Clarify: What Repair Actually Needs First artwork

Before You Clarify: What Repair Actually Needs First

You said it, and you knew. Maybe you watched their face change in real time — the subtle shift, the warmth dropping, something closing that was open a moment before. And before they've even finished reacting, the explanation is already forming. You know what you meant. You know this isn't what they think. And if you can just say that clearly enough, quickly enough, the hurt should go away. It doesn't. This episode is about why. Rachel walks through what actually happens in the nervous system in the first thirty seconds after you've caused hurt — yours and your partner's — and why the move most people make in that moment, the fast, well-meaning clarification, functions as an exit rather than a repair. It's not a character flaw. It's a nervous system pattern, and understanding it changes what becomes possible next. The core reframe here is quiet but significant: your partner's activated system isn't waiting for information. It's waiting for contact. When explanation arrives before presence, it sends a message neither of you intended — that their experience is a misunderstanding to correct rather than something worth sitting inside, even briefly. This is the sequence problem at the heart of most failed repair attempts. What this episode offers isn't a script. It's a direction — toward their experience first, before the clarification, before the case for your intention. Presence before explanation. Thirty seconds that change the entire architecture of what repair can become.

27 de abr de 202617 min