Doing The Work from Naples Integrated Recovery

When You’re Right and Still the Problem

45 min · 24. mai 2026
episode When You’re Right and Still the Problem cover

Beskrivelse

People with addiction histories, trauma adaptation, and high-functioning nervous systems often experience intense anger toward inefficiency, passivity, and incompetence in modern systems. This episode explores contempt, hypervigilance, recovery culture, AA “character defects,” nervous system activation, and why some highly capable people feel constantly enraged by low ownership and bureaucratic absurdity. Real stories from Brian's DCF experience, Lowes returns, and everyday life unpack the hidden cost of living in chronic psychological prosecution mode. 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]

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Alle episoder

72 Episoder

episode Watering Dead Soil is Not Patience: When Waiting is a Waste of Time cover

Watering Dead Soil is Not Patience: When Waiting is a Waste of Time

Patience can become a way to stay stuck. This episode breaks down the difference between slow growth that is actually building capacity and waiting that keeps the same loop alive. Brian looks at relationships, recovery, career frustration, personal development, and the nervous system’s need for closure when the outcome is uncertain. You’ll learn how to assess whether time is increasing honesty, discipline, judgment, tolerance, and steadiness, or whether the same pattern is continuing under better language. The central question is whether roots are forming or the ground has already given you the answer. Watering dead soil is not patience. 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]

10. juli 202627 min
episode Why Inconsiderate People Hit Such a Nerve cover

Why Inconsiderate People Hit Such a Nerve

Why do other people feel so exhausting sometimes? This episode uses Buddhist psychology to break down the aversive temperament: the part of the mind that sees flaws quickly, gets irritated by disorder, and can confuse clear perception with contempt. Using examples from beach crowds, Walmart, airports, AA, and public life, Brian explores why some people experience inconsiderate behavior as almost physically intolerable. The episode also looks at why “that’s my alcoholism” can become too small of an explanation after years of sobriety. The deeper work involves understanding temperament, noticing aversion before it becomes disgust, keeping discernment without feeding contempt, and learning how to stop making peace dependent on everyone else acting right.   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]

7. juli 202645 min
episode You Knew You’d Regret It. You Did It Anyway. cover

You Knew You’d Regret It. You Did It Anyway.

Why do people keep repeating behaviors they already decided to stop? This episode breaks down the neuroscience behind addictive loops, impulsive behavior, craving, dopamine, the orbitofrontal cortex, salience, tolerance, withdrawal, and why insight alone often does not change behavior. Using a simple cereal aisle example, Brian explains how the brain assigns value before conscious reasoning catches up. The episode also explains why recovery has to begin earlier in the sequence: before access, before negotiation, before the craving peaks, and before the old behavior becomes automatic. The real work involves changing the environment, interrupting the loop, tolerating discomfort, and giving the brain repeated evidence that the old behavior is no longer required. 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]

5. juli 202638 min
episode How Your Phone Has Rewired Your Nervous System cover

How Your Phone Has Rewired Your Nervous System

Phones have become more than tools. They sit on the dinner table, beside the bed, in the bathroom, in the car, in the waiting room, and in the hand before most people even realize they reached for them. This episode looks at how phones became pocket-sized dopamine dispensers, training both kids and adults to escape boredom, silence, discomfort, loneliness, and ordinary waiting. The conversation moves through childhood development, addiction, parenting, recovery, relationships, and attention. Kids are losing real-world practice with play, conflict, boredom, repair, and face-to-face connection. Adults are living in the same loop, checking for relief, stimulation, outrage, reassurance, or escape. The deeper work is learning how to stay present in actual life instead of constantly leaving through a screen. 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]

2. juli 202642 min
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