Doing The Work from Naples Integrated Recovery

Can You Be Honest With a Therapist Who Secretly Judges You?

33 min · 28. juni 2026
episode Can You Be Honest With a Therapist Who Secretly Judges You? cover

Beskrivelse

When therapy becomes filtered through politics, ideology, and online moral performance, clinical curiosity can disappear. This episode looks at how therapists can become too quick to sort clients into moral categories instead of understanding the biography, fear, attachment patterns, trauma, identity, and lived experience beneath their beliefs. The conversation challenges the trend of therapists publicly framing certain political identities as uniquely suspicious or “challenge-worthy.” Therapy requires values, ethics, and accountability, but it also requires restraint, curiosity, and the ability to stay with human complexity without turning the client into a symbol of everything the therapist hates. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com [http://www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com] Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 [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

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Alle episoder

68 Episoder

episode Can You Be Honest With a Therapist Who Secretly Judges You? cover

Can You Be Honest With a Therapist Who Secretly Judges You?

When therapy becomes filtered through politics, ideology, and online moral performance, clinical curiosity can disappear. This episode looks at how therapists can become too quick to sort clients into moral categories instead of understanding the biography, fear, attachment patterns, trauma, identity, and lived experience beneath their beliefs. The conversation challenges the trend of therapists publicly framing certain political identities as uniquely suspicious or “challenge-worthy.” Therapy requires values, ethics, and accountability, but it also requires restraint, curiosity, and the ability to stay with human complexity without turning the client into a symbol of everything the therapist hates. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com [http://www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com] Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 [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

28. juni 202633 min
episode You Don’t Keep Picking the Wrong People. You Keep Working Around the Wrong Things cover

You Don’t Keep Picking the Wrong People. You Keep Working Around the Wrong Things

Most people ask why they keep picking the same kind of person after the pattern has already taken over. The deeper problem usually shows up earlier: what gets minimized, explained away, tolerated, and slowly built around because the chemistry feels strong enough to override judgment. Dating patterns often repeat when attraction, familiarity, and the need to be chosen start replacing clear evaluation of fit, consistency, emotional maturity, and real-life compatibility. This episode looks at why people keep working around red flags, unstable behavior, addiction patterns, emotional inconsistency, and relationships that cost more than they give back. It breaks down the corrective experience trap, the difference between chemistry and fit, why values collapse under pressure, and how people slowly adjust to situations they would immediately recognize as unhealthy if someone else described them. The work is learning to stop negotiating with what you already see. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com [http://www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com] Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 [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 [brian@naplesintegratedrecovery.com]

25. juni 202638 min
episode My Dad Was Complicated: Sometimes Hard to Love and Harder to Lose cover

My Dad Was Complicated: Sometimes Hard to Love and Harder to Lose

Father’s Day can bring up grief, anger, resentment, guilt, longing, love, and the old ache of wanting something from a father that never fully came. For people with complicated fathers, the story often carries both gratitude and pain: a dad who provided, sacrificed, worked constantly, paid bills, and created stability, while also feeling emotionally distant, critical, unavailable, or hard to reach. This reflection explores father wounds, emotionally distant dads, grief after losing a parent, workaholic fathers, childhood emotional neglect, adult approval-seeking, resentment, forgiveness, repair, and the process of telling the truth about where we came from. For anyone whose relationship with their dad was complicated, painful, distant, unresolved, loving, or filled with mixed emotions, this gives language to the whole thing. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com [http://www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com] Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 [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 [brian@naplesintegratedrecovery.com]

20. juni 202631 min
episode Curiosity, Certainty, and the Stories We Decide Too Early cover

Curiosity, Certainty, and the Stories We Decide Too Early

Curiosity is often treated like a personality trait, but here it is something much more practical: the ability to pause before the mind turns a reaction into a conclusion. Old experiences, familiar labels, and strong emotions can make a situation feel obvious before it has actually been understood. Certainty feels stabilizing, especially under pressure, but it can also close perception too early. This episode looks at how fixed conclusions form in relationships, recovery, identity, spirituality, and emotional reactions. It explores how useful frameworks can become filters, how even positive labels can become something to defend, and how curiosity helps keep experience from hardening into repetition. The work is learning to stay with a question a little longer before deciding the answer is already known. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com [http://www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com] Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 [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 [brian@naplesintegratedrecovery.com]

18. juni 202636 min
episode Why Smart People Fight the Simple Things That Help Them cover

Why Smart People Fight the Simple Things That Help Them

There is a special kind of rage that happens when you are already activated and someone tells you to breathe. This episode looks at why intelligent, insightful people often resist the simple tools that would actually help them regulate: breathing, pausing, naming the emotion, walking away, sleeping, eating, calling someone grounded, and letting another person be wrong without launching a full courtroom defense. Brian explores nervous system regulation through the plain-language idea of “Amy,” the body’s alarm system, and uses a personal example of explaining as protection after years of feeling misunderstood. The episode breaks down why being right can become its own form of regulation, how contempt can protect an old survival pattern, and why real freedom often means returning to yourself without demanding that someone else finally understand you first. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com [http://www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com] Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 [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 [brian@naplesintegratedrecovery.com]

14. juni 202631 min