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Autism in Relationships: When Love Speaks Different Languages

21 min · 1 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio Autism in Relationships: When Love Speaks Different Languages

Descripción

Season 3 begins with a conversation about understanding. In this episode of Just Listen to Me, Julia explores autism in relationships through the lens of attachment and Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT). When one partner is autistic and the other is not, it's easy for misunderstandings to develop—not because either person loves the other any less, but because they may experience, communicate and interpret connection in very different ways. Drawing on her experience as an attachment-based couples counsellor, Julia explores why these differences can create painful relationship patterns, how they often become misunderstood as rejection or emotional distance, and why the negative cycle—not either partner—is the real problem. In this episode you'll learn: • Why autism can shape relationship dynamics differently • Common challenges experienced by neurodiverse couples • How attachment needs become hidden beneath conflict • Why slowing down the negative cycle is the key to change • How couples can build greater understanding, emotional safety and secure attachment Whether you're autistic, in a relationship with an autistic partner, or simply wanting to better understand how different nervous systems experience connection, this episode offers a compassionate, attachment-focused perspective on building stronger relationships. Because secure attachment isn't built by erasing our differences. It's built by understanding them.

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26 episodios

episode Autism in Relationships: When Love Speaks Different Languages artwork

Autism in Relationships: When Love Speaks Different Languages

Season 3 begins with a conversation about understanding. In this episode of Just Listen to Me, Julia explores autism in relationships through the lens of attachment and Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT). When one partner is autistic and the other is not, it's easy for misunderstandings to develop—not because either person loves the other any less, but because they may experience, communicate and interpret connection in very different ways. Drawing on her experience as an attachment-based couples counsellor, Julia explores why these differences can create painful relationship patterns, how they often become misunderstood as rejection or emotional distance, and why the negative cycle—not either partner—is the real problem. In this episode you'll learn: • Why autism can shape relationship dynamics differently • Common challenges experienced by neurodiverse couples • How attachment needs become hidden beneath conflict • Why slowing down the negative cycle is the key to change • How couples can build greater understanding, emotional safety and secure attachment Whether you're autistic, in a relationship with an autistic partner, or simply wanting to better understand how different nervous systems experience connection, this episode offers a compassionate, attachment-focused perspective on building stronger relationships. Because secure attachment isn't built by erasing our differences. It's built by understanding them.

1 de jul de 202621 min
episode When Addiction Enters the Relationship: Trust, Betrayal and Attachment Wounds artwork

When Addiction Enters the Relationship: Trust, Betrayal and Attachment Wounds

Addiction rarely affects just one person. Whether it's alcohol, drugs, gambling, pornography, compulsive sexual behaviour, or other addictive patterns, addiction can slowly erode trust, emotional safety, intimacy, and connection within relationships. In this episode of Just Listen to Me, I explore addiction through the lens of attachment theory and relationship dynamics. We'll discuss why addiction often creates profound loneliness, how secrecy and deception damage trust, the pursuer-withdrawer cycle that many couples become trapped within, and why partners can find themselves walking on eggshells while desperately trying to hold the relationship together. We'll also explore the complex intersection between addiction, betrayal, financial secrecy, and attachment wounds, and why recovery is about far more than simply stopping the behaviour. Recovery is ultimately about rebuilding trust, restoring emotional safety, and finding a way back to connection. If addiction has touched your relationship, I hope this conversation offers understanding, compassion, and hope. Because secure relationships aren't built on perfection. They're built on honesty, accountability, repair, and the courage to reconnect after pain. 🛍️ The Project Secure Attachment Store is now open, with 15% off storewide during our launch period at the following link: https://project-secure-attachment.myshopify.com/ [https://project-secure-attachment.myshopify.com/] 🎙️ Hosted by Julia Shay, relationship counsellor, social worker, and creator of Project Secure Attachment.

29 de may de 202623 min
episode Why Love Feels Hard When the Nervous System Is Struggling artwork

Why Love Feels Hard When the Nervous System Is Struggling

Mental health can profoundly impact relationships — affecting communication, intimacy, emotional safety, conflict, and connection itself. ✨ Explore the growing Project Secure Attachment learning library including online courses, companion eBooks, and attachment-focused relationship resources: Project Secure Attachment Courses [https://www.flourishrelationship.com/courses?utm_source=chatgpt.com] In this episode of Project Secure Attachment, we explore what happens when one or both nervous systems are struggling with anxiety, depression, trauma, emotional overwhelm, or psychological distress. We discuss: • emotional withdrawal and misunderstanding • trauma and attachment dynamics • intimacy and reassurance-seeking • caretaking, over-functioning, and codependency • nervous-system regulation in relationships • the difference between emotional intensity and emotional safety This is a compassionate, trauma-informed conversation about why love can feel so difficult during periods of emotional struggle — and how relationships can slowly move toward greater security, honesty, and connection over time. If love feels hard right now, you’re not broken.

27 de may de 202615 min
episode What Safe Therapy Actually Feels Like artwork

What Safe Therapy Actually Feels Like

🎓 Julia’s new foundational online course: Not All Therapists Are Safe — How to Choose a Counsellor With Integrity is now officially live at the following link: https://www.flourishrelationship.com/courses [https://www.flourishrelationship.com/courses] The course is currently available at a special introductory launch price of $97 AUD until Sunday 24th May 8pm AEST, after which it will return to its usual price of $147 AUD. Healing does not always need to feel intense in order to be real. In this episode of Just Listen to Me, Julia Shay explores the quieter, steadier side of healing — and why emotionally safe therapy often feels very different from emotionally overwhelming or emotionally consuming experiences. After discussing emotionally unsafe therapy and nervous-system vulnerability in recent episodes, this conversation turns toward an equally important question: What does emotionally safe healing actually feel like? Drawing from attachment theory, emotionally focused therapy, nervous-system regulation, and trauma-informed practice, this episode explores: • why emotionally safe therapy often feels slower and steadier • emotional safety versus emotional intensity • co-regulation versus dependency • pacing, boundaries, and emotional containment • why calmness can initially feel unfamiliar to dysregulated nervous systems • and how safe therapy gradually strengthens self-trust, emotional stability, and connection to self over time This episode also explores why people with histories involving: attachment wounds… chaos… inconsistency… emotional unpredictability… or chronic invalidation… may sometimes mistake emotional intensity for emotional depth. Because emotionally safe therapy is usually not trying to overwhelm the nervous system. It is helping create conditions where: repair… clarity… regulation… secure attachment… self-trust… and sustainable healing can gradually emerge over time. And sometimes… the safest healing is also the gentlest.

22 de may de 20269 min
episode Not All Therapy That Feels Powerful Is Emotionally Safe artwork

Not All Therapy That Feels Powerful Is Emotionally Safe

🎓 Julia’s new foundational online course: Not All Therapists Are Safe — How to Choose a Counsellor With Integrity launches this Friday: https://www.flourishrelationship.com/courses [https://www.flourishrelationship.com/courses] Not all therapy that feels powerful is emotionally safe. In this episode of Just Listen to Me, Julia explores the important — and often misunderstood — difference between emotional intensity and genuine emotional safety within therapy and other high-impact relationships. Why can emotionally unsafe therapy initially feel: deeply validating… transformative… comforting… or even life-changing? Why do vulnerable nervous systems sometimes mistake intensity for safety? And how can emotional relief, attachment activation, and dependency quietly form within therapeutic relationships over time? Drawing from attachment theory, nervous-system regulation, relational safety, and trauma-informed practice, this episode explores: • emotional intensity vs emotional safety • fast emotional intimacy in therapy • nervous-system vulnerability during distress • dependency and co-regulation • attachment activation and emotional relief • why unsafe dynamics do not always initially feel unsafe • and why discernment matters deeply in therapeutic relationships This episode is also a continuation of Julia’s earlier conversation: Not All Therapists Are Safe. Because therapy can be profoundly healing. But because therapy is powerful, emotional safety and discernment matter deeply.

19 de may de 202614 min