Omslagafbeelding van de show Doing The Work: A Naples Integrated Recovery Podcast

Doing The Work: A Naples Integrated Recovery Podcast

Podcast door Brian Granneman

Engels

Technologie en Wetenschap

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Over Doing The Work: A Naples Integrated Recovery Podcast

Doing The Work: A Naples Integrated Recovery Podcast goes beyond motivational quotes and surface-level “growth” discussions. This podcast is about the uncomfortable, necessary work that real recovery demands — emotional honesty, nervous system regulation, accountability, repairing relationships, and learning how to stop abandoning yourself.Hosted by Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, a psychotherapist specializing in trauma, addiction, and integrated recovery, this podcast blends clinical insight with lived experience.No grad school jargon. No guru woo-woo energy. No “manifest your way out" or peer-led program clichés and bumper sticker wisdom. Just real conversations about how people change — and why they don’t.This show is about trauma and emotional wounds that don’t fit DSM boxes • Addiction, relapse cycles, and what sobriety actually requires • Boundaries, differentiation, and breaking generational patterns • Relationships, intimacy, communication, and the parts of ourselves we avoid • Shame, fear, avoidance, and how to stop letting your history run your life • The quieter forms of addiction: people-pleasing, anger, perfectionism, emotional outsourcingSome episodes will be structured lessons. Others will feel like a speaker meeting. Some will dig into Stoicism, family systems, or spirituality. All of them will come back to the same thing: you can’t get better by thinking about change — only by doing the work.If you’re tired of shortcuts, tired of stories that keep you powerless, and ready to build a life you’re actually proud of, welcome.

Alle afleveringen

10 afleveringen

aflevering Who’s Driving Your Car? — The Inner Parts That Hijack Your Reactions artwork

Who’s Driving Your Car? — The Inner Parts That Hijack Your Reactions

This episode digs into the question, “Who’s actually driving the car inside your mind?” Using Internal Family Systems (IFS), I break down how anger, fear, shame, hesitation, and even revenge can hijack the wheel in a split second—leaving you wondering why you reacted the way you did. We look at protectors, firefighters, managers, and the parts of you that step up when you feel hurt, betrayed, embarrassed, or threatened. I share the moment I first learned “there are no bad parts,” and how that shifted my relationship with my own anger and the parts of me built for retribution and self-protection. We also talk about why Self—not ego, not wounded history, not survival strategies—is the one who should be driving. If you've ever looked back and thought, “That wasn’t the version of me I want behind the wheel,” this episode gives you a way to understand what happened and how to get the keys back. You’ll walk away with a practice you can use this week to notice which part is driving and how to let Self lead with clarity instead of fear. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: brian@naplesintegratedrecovery.com

21 dec 2025 - 21 min
aflevering How Attachment Style and the Nervous System Amplify Conflict artwork

How Attachment Style and the Nervous System Amplify Conflict

Why do relationships sometimes hurt more than they should — and when is that pain actually telling the truth? This episode explores how attachment patterns, negativity bias, and nervous-system threat detection amplify conflict in intimate relationships. You’ll hear why closeness raises emotional stakes, how anxious and avoidant strategies escalate under stress, and where insight helps — and where it can quietly turn into self-blame. The episode also draws a clear line between nervous-system reactivity and real relational problems, emphasizing repair, structure, and accountability rather than minimizing harm. A grounded, neuroscience-informed look at why love alone doesn’t regulate relationships — and what actually creates stability under stress. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: brian@naplesintegratedrecovery.com

18 dec 2025 - 28 min
aflevering The Neuroscience of Suffering: Why Spiritual Principles Can Reduce Pain artwork

The Neuroscience of Suffering: Why Spiritual Principles Can Reduce Pain

Most of the pain you feel isn’t coming from the moment itself — it’s coming from the way your brain interprets the moment. In this episode, we break down the neural circuits behind suffering: the amygdala’s threat response, the insula’s reading of bodily sensations, the dopamine and norepinephrine loops that drive craving and avoidance, the prefrontal cortex going offline under stress, and the default mode network turning discomfort into self-story and catastrophe. And we explore why certain timeless principles — acceptance, clarity, presence, aligned action — reliably calm these systems down. No dogma, no mysticism. Just the biology of why we suffer, and the practical skills that help us stop multiplying the pain. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: brian@naplesintegratedrecovery.com

14 dec 2025 - 22 min
aflevering Dopamine, Drive, and Why You Keep Doing What You Know Is Bad for You artwork

Dopamine, Drive, and Why You Keep Doing What You Know Is Bad for You

Why you keep doing stuff you know is bad for you comes down to one thing: dopamine. This episode breaks down motivation, procrastination, compulsive habits, burnout, and trauma-driven behavior through the lens of how your nervous system actually works—not the Instagram version, not the lab-coat version. If you’ve ever wondered why you wake up scrolling, chase short-term relief, repeat patterns you hate, or lose momentum halfway through your goals, this is the mechanics behind all of it. We get into dopamine baselines, craving cycles, overstimulation, trauma-linked intensity seeking, and the loop that keeps pulling you toward behaviors you don’t even enjoy anymore. You’ll learn why stability feels uncomfortable, why big achievements crash harder than failures, and how to rebuild motivation without burnout or shame. This episode gives you the real psychology and neurobiology behind drive, discipline, self-sabotage, and why your brain keeps choosing the wrong thing even when you know better. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: brian@naplesintegratedrecovery.com

11 dec 2025 - 33 min
aflevering The Legend of Zelda and Growth: Leveling Up Through Life’s Hardest Seasons artwork

The Legend of Zelda and Growth: Leveling Up Through Life’s Hardest Seasons

Life’s hardest seasons have a way of feeling like the dungeons from the Zelda games many of us grew up with — dark rooms, tough puzzles, unexpected bosses, and the sense that you’re wildly underprepared. In this episode, Brian breaks down how those game mechanics mirror real growth: the tools you only earn in pain, the companions who show up at the right moment, the side quests that give life meaning, and the arrival fallacy that keeps us chasing the next milestone. A deep dive into leveling up through the hardest chapters of your life. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: brian@naplesintegratedrecovery.com

7 dec 2025 - 24 min
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