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Roots and Attachment Podcast

Podcast door Erika Baum

Engels

Gezondheid & Persoonlijke Ontwikkeling

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Over Roots and Attachment Podcast

Roots & Attachment Podcast explores relational trauma, attachment wounds, and nervous-system healing. Hosted by Erika Baum—attachment & relational trauma therapist grounded in compassion, curiosity, and helping you reconnect to your own inner wisdom. rootsandattachment.substack.com

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5 afleveringen

aflevering How Attachment Styles Form (They’re Not Personality Traits) artwork

How Attachment Styles Form (They’re Not Personality Traits)

Attachment styles shape how we love, argue, pull away, cling, shut down, or stay silent in relationships—but most people don’t realize they formed long before adulthood. In this episode of Roots & Attachment, Denver trauma therapist Erika Baum, LPCC, breaks down how attachment styles develop, why they exist, and why they are not personality traits or character flaws. Through a relatable story and nervous-system-based explanation, you’ll learn how early caregiving experiences wire the brain for connection, protection, and survival—and why these patterns still show up in adult relationships today. This episode is for you if: * You’ve ever wondered “Why do I react this way in relationships?” * You struggle with closeness, conflict, or emotional vulnerability * You identify with anxious, avoidant, or fearful attachment patterns * You want to heal attachment wounds without shame or self-blame What You’ll Learn in This Episode * What attachment styles actually are (and what they’re not) * How attachment patterns form in early childhood * Why babies “borrow” nervous systems from caregivers * The real purpose of anxious and avoidant attachment styles * Why attachment styles are survival strategies—not flaws * How early adaptations show up in adult relationships * Why healing attachment isn’t about fixing yourself * How attachment patterns can change over time Key Takeaway Your attachment style isn’t who you are.It’s what worked when you had no better options. And anything learned for survival can be gently updated. About the Host Erika Baum, MA, LPCC, NCC is an attachment-focused trauma therapist based in Denver, Colorado. She specializes in treating relational trauma, C-PTSD, and attachment wounds using EMDR, Internal Family Systems (IFS), mindfulness, and nervous-system-based approaches. Learn more about Erika’s work, therapy intensives, and attachment-focused resources at:👉 https://www.denverattachmentcounseling.com/ Relevant Keywords attachment stylesanxious attachmentavoidant attachmentfearful avoidant attachmentsecure attachmentattachment traumachildhood traumanervous system regulationtrauma therapy DenverEMDR therapy DenverIFS therapyrelationships and attachmenthealing attachment woundsRoots and Attachment podcast This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rootsandattachment.substack.com [https://rootsandattachment.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

31 dec 2025 - 6 min
aflevering Home Alone: A Christmas Story About Avoidant Attachment artwork

Home Alone: A Christmas Story About Avoidant Attachment

Home Alone isn’t just a Christmas classic — it’s a powerful story about attachment, the nervous system, and emotional survival. In this episode, attachment trauma therapist Erika Baum explores Home Alone through the lens of avoidant attachment, breaking down how dismissive avoidant and fearful avoidant patterns form in childhood — often in families that look “functional” from the outside. Using Kevin McAllister and the McAllister family as a case study, Erika explains how emotional unavailability, chronic stress, humiliation, and missed repair moments shape a child’s nervous system and teach them to survive by becoming self-reliant instead of connected. You’ll also hear how avoidant attachment can show up more subtly in high-achieving or upper-middle-class environments, why it often goes unnoticed, and how research actually explains the relationship between attachment and socioeconomic stress. This episode weaves together attachment theory, nervous system science, real-world clinical insight, and Buddhist wisdom, including the powerful metaphor of The Second Arrow — showing how avoidant attachment isn’t a flaw, but a learned survival strategy. If you’ve ever been told you’re “independent,” “low-maintenance,” or “fine on your own” — but struggle with closeness, emotional safety, or letting others support you — this episode is for you. You’ll learn: How avoidant attachment forms in childhood The difference between dismissive avoidant and fearful avoidant attachment Why emotional unavailability (not lack of love) shapes attachment patterns How avoidant attachment often hides behind competence and success Why healing doesn’t come from trying harder — but from safe connection To learn more about attachment-focused trauma therapy, EMDR, IFS, and nervous system healing, visit Denver Attachment Counseling:👉 https://www.denverattachmentcounseling.com/ [https://www.denverattachmentcounseling.com/] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rootsandattachment.substack.com [https://rootsandattachment.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

20 dec 2025 - 13 min
aflevering The Fixer Pattern: When Safety Meant Managing Everyone Else artwork

The Fixer Pattern: When Safety Meant Managing Everyone Else

Do you feel responsible for everyone else’s emotions?Do you step in, smooth things over, and fix problems—often before anyone even asks?Do you struggle to relax unless everyone around you is okay? In this episode of Roots & Attachment, we explore the Fixer role — not as a personality flaw, but as a nervous-system survival strategy that often develops in childhood homes shaped by emotional unpredictability, addiction, or chronic conflict. Fixers don’t fix because they want control.They fix because not fixing once meant danger. Using real-life examples (yes, including Emily in Paris), attachment science, and a powerful client story, Erika breaks down: * Why fixers are hyper-attuned to tension and silence * How over-functioning develops as a childhood survival role * The link between fixing, anxious attachment, and chronic nervous-system activation * Why relaxation can feel unsafe for fixers * The hidden emotional and physical costs of carrying everyone else * What actually heals the fixer pattern (and it’s not trying harder) You’ll hear the story of “Melissa,” a woman who grew up managing emotional chaos—and how her fixer wiring followed her into adulthood through anxiety, exhaustion, and physical symptoms… until she learned something radically different: Safety without fixing. This episode is for you if: * You avoid conflict at all costs * You feel guilty saying no * You’re everyone’s go-to support person * You feel anxious until problems are resolved * You learned early that keeping the peace meant staying safe Healing the fixer doesn’t mean you stop caring.It means you stop disappearing. ✨ Learn more about Erika’s work, therapy intensives, and resources at👉 www.denverattachmentcounseling.com [http://www.denverattachmentcounseling.com] If this episode resonated, consider sharing it with someone who’s been carrying too much for too long. We are wounded in relationship — and we heal in relationship. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rootsandattachment.substack.com [https://rootsandattachment.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

15 dec 2025 - 12 min
aflevering Living on Guard: The Fear of Losing Loved Ones artwork

Living on Guard: The Fear of Losing Loved Ones

Living on Guard: The Fear of Losing Loved Ones Roots & Attachment — with Erika Baum We are wounded in relationship and we heal in relationship — because insight alone doesn’t transform us. Corrective relational experiences do. In this episode of Roots & Attachment, Erika explores a deeply common but rarely named experience: living on constant alert for the people you love. Do you feel uneasy when loved ones leave the house — jumping straight to worst-case scenarios?Check your baby’s breathing even when everything is okay?Scan moods, over-remind, or feel quiet responsibility to keep everyone safe?Struggle to fully relax because your body whispers, “Don’t get too calm… something’s coming.” This pattern is known as loss aversion or attachment anxiety — a trauma-based nervous system response that forms when early relationships were unpredictable, emotionally unstable, or required children to grow up too fast. In this deeply personal episode, Erika shares her own story of early hyper-responsibility and how those experiences shaped the protective wiring in her nervous system — along with how true healing became possible. 🌱 In This Episode You’ll Learn: What loss aversion & attachment anxiety actually look like in real life How childhood unpredictability wires the brain for protection instead of trust Why hypervigilance persists even after life becomes safe The “false responsibility loop” that keeps fear of loss cycling Why this pattern isn’t a thinking issue — it’s nervous system conditioning How trauma therapy (not just talk therapy) helps the brain finally update What allowed Erika to loosen the grip of lifelong hypervigilance 🧠 Healing Tools Discussed: EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) Parts Work / Internal Family Systems (IFS) Somatic trauma therapy Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy (with licensed providers) 🤍 Support in Colorado If this episode resonates and you’re located in Colorado, Erika offers attachment-focused trauma therapy using EMDR, parts work, somatic approaches, and ketamine-assisted psychotherapy to help nervous systems move from survival mode into safety. 🔗 Learn more:https://www.denverattachmentcounseling.com [https://www.denverattachmentcounseling.com] 🎙 About the Host Erika Baum is an attachment trauma therapist, author of Making Therapy Work, wife, mom, and fellow human healing her own anxious attachment. Through both therapy and storytelling, Erika helps people understand their trauma wiring, release hypervigilance, and build secure relationships from the inside out. ✨ Remember: We are wounded in relationship and we heal in relationship — because insight alone doesn’t transform us. Corrective relational experiences do. Thank you for listening to Roots & Attachment. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rootsandattachment.substack.com [https://rootsandattachment.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

7 dec 2025 - 14 min
aflevering Why You’re Trying to Heal the Wrong Thing artwork

Why You’re Trying to Heal the Wrong Thing

Have you ever wondered why you can read the books, journal endlessly, try new habits — and still feel stuck in the same emotional patterns? In this episode of Roots & Attachment, we explore one of the most important shifts in trauma healing: understanding the difference between symptoms and core wounds. Most of us focus on stopping behaviors — people-pleasing, numbing, overworking, emotional shutting down — without realizing these aren’t the real problem. They are nervous-system adaptations that once helped us survive emotional pain. When we fight the symptom without healing the wound underneath, we stay trapped in cycles of effort without true change. In this episode you’ll learn: What symptoms vs. core wounds really mean Why patterns formed from survival — not personal failure How experiences like emotional neglect, gaslighting, parentification, or conditional love shape adult behavior Why discipline and willpower alone don’t create healing How the nervous system heals through safety, compassion, and emotional repair We walk through real-life examples of how symptoms like numbing, people-pleasing, and emotional withdrawal develop — and how seeing them differently can soften self-judgment and unlock deeper healing. 🌿 A Healing Pathway You’ll be guided through a simple framework to begin shifting your patterns: Symptom → Curiosity → Core Wound → Compassion → Repair Instead of asking “What’s wrong with me?”you’ll learn to ask:“What happened to me that made this pattern necessary?” 💬 Key reminder:Your nervous system isn’t broken — it adapted.Healing doesn’t come from force or perfection — it comes from understanding and repair. If this episode resonated, consider sharing it with someone walking their own healing journey — and join me next week as we continue exploring how attachment and trauma shape the lives we’re trying to change. —Hosted by Erika Baum, LPCCAttachment & Relational Trauma TherapistRoots & Attachment Interested in working with Erika? Book a consultation at https://www.denverattachmentcounseling.com/. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rootsandattachment.substack.com [https://rootsandattachment.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

6 dec 2025 - 8 min
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