Notes from the Shadows
Why does personal growth sometimes feel like loss? In this episode of Notes From the Shadows, we explore what happens inside the nervous system when we begin interrupting familiar relational patterns. Many behaviors that once protected us—over-explaining, seeking reassurance, reacting quickly to uncertainty—are strategies the brain learned through repetition. But when these patterns begin to change, the body reacts. Restlessness. Mental scanning. The urge to fix something that may not even be broken. This episode explores how neuroplasticity shapes the patterns we repeat and why the brain often prioritizes what is familiar rather than what is healthy. We also discuss what emotional regulation actually looks like in everyday life. Not dramatic transformations, but quiet moments of restraint: tolerating pauses, sitting with uncertainty, and resisting the impulse to control connection. Over time, this expands the nervous system’s tolerance for discomfort and allows new patterns to emerge. Maybe the real question is no longer: “Why am I like this?” But: “Can I remain steady even when I don’t feel secure?” Because security that depends entirely on someone else’s behavior is fragile. But security built on internal tolerance becomes stable.
8 episodios
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