The RISE to Intimacy Podcast
You're talking to your partner, and they glance at their phone or sigh at the wrong moment, and suddenly your whole body tenses up. Maybe you start yelling, or you shut down and want to get out of the room. Later, you're lying in bed replaying it, wondering why your partner triggers you so easily, or worse, whether you're the problem for reacting the way you did. You're not the problem, and this isn't about the sigh. When your partner triggers you, your nervous system is responding to something much older than the moment in front of you. Romantic relationships activate your attachment system more than any other relationship in your life, which is why the person you love the most often has a direct line to your oldest wounds. The closer you get to someone, the more those old patterns come to the surface. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I talk about why your partner seems to trigger you more than anyone else in your life and what you can actually do about it. I share real examples from my practice, the science of why old wounds resurface in close relationships, and five steps you can start practicing when you feel yourself getting pulled into the cycle. Getting triggered in your relationship isn't a sign that something's wrong with you or with your partner. It's a sign that something inside you is ready to heal. 00:52 – Why a small moment can create a reaction that feels much bigger than the situation itself 2:20 – How childhood experiences quietly shape your expectations for relationships in adulthood 4:27 – The psychological phenomenon that draws you toward partners who mirror your early caregivers 5:25 – How couples can get locked into repeating cycles without realizing they are responding to old patterns 9:40 – Five steps to break the cycle of reacting to old wounds when trying to connect with your partner 14:25 – What being triggered by the person you love most means about you and your relationship Mentioned In Why Your Partner Triggers You More Than Anyone Else The Body Keeps the Score [https://www.besselvanderkolk.com/resources/the-body-keeps-the-score] by Dr. Bessel van der Kolk Dr. Joe Dispenza [https://drjoedispenza.com/] An Introduction to Interpersonal Neurobiology | Dr. Dan Siegel [https://drdansiegel.com/interpersonal-neurobiology/] The Neurosequential Network | Bruce D. Perry, M.D., Ph.D. [https://www.neurosequential.com/] Rise to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]
26 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The RISE to Intimacy Podcast!