Forsidebilde av showet Humanly IS Possible

Humanly IS Possible

Podkast av Shaya Hecht, LCSW

engelsk

Helse og personlig utvikling

Tidsbegrenset tilbud

2 Måneder for 19 kr

Deretter 99 kr / MånedAvslutt når som helst.

  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • Gratis podkaster
Kom i gang

Les mer Humanly IS Possible

The H.I.P. Podcast explores complex trauma, attachment, the therapeutic relationship, and what healing actually requires. Hosted by Shaya Hecht, LCSW, founder of H.I.P. Counseling Center (Humanly IS Possible).

Alle episoder

5 Episoder

episode When Attachment Feels Obsessive, Confusing, and Shameful cover

When Attachment Feels Obsessive, Confusing, and Shameful

There's a kind of attachment pattern that feels confusing, overwhelming… and often deeply shameful. In this conversation, Leah shares her experience of growing up highly independent — while also finding herself becoming intensely attached to one person at a time. That pattern followed her into relationships, and eventually into therapy… where things became much more complicated. We talk about: * what it feels like when attachment becomes obsessive or all-consuming * the shame of needing someone "too much" * how independence can mask a deep longing for connection * what can happen when therapy boundaries become unclear or unsafe * and how hard it is to recognize what's happening when you're in it We also explore the subtle (and not-so-subtle) red flags that can show up in therapy — especially when there's a power dynamic — and how easy it is to lose your footing when attachment needs are strong. This is a vulnerable and honest conversation about attachment, confusion, and the longing for connection — and the importance of awareness when something doesn't feel right. If you've ever felt like: "Why am I like this?" "Why can't I let go?" or "This doesn't feel right, but I don't understand why…" you're not alone. Your Voice Matters If this episode brought something up for you and you'd like to share a reflection or response, you're invited to do so below: Click here to leave feedback [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe3MXjjnUhOPYJaopK1ORP1BmSJtdUTBmObq9FOBE3DJHZ3XQ/viewform?usp=header] You can share as much or as little as you want, and you can remain anonymous. Continue the conversation: I share reflections on attachment, trauma, and the therapy relationship on Instagram @shayahecht About H.I.P. Counseling Center: Learn more about our trauma-informed practice and offerings at www.hipcounseling.com [https://www.hipcounseling.com/] or on instagram @hipcounselingcenter. Subscribe & Review: If this conversation resonated with you, please subscribe to the HIP Podcast on your favorite podcast app. Leaving a review helps others who need to hear these stories find their way here.

11. mai 2026 - 1 h 7 min
episode "Feeling Too Much In Therapy": Attachment Trauma, Dependency, and Healing with Tzipora Schiffer cover

"Feeling Too Much In Therapy": Attachment Trauma, Dependency, and Healing with Tzipora Schiffer

Episode Show Notes In this episode of The H.I.P. Podcast, Shaya sits down with Tzipora Schiffer, LCSW, for a deeply honest conversation about attachment trauma, therapy, and what happens when the place meant to heal becomes confusing, painful, or even shaming. Tzipora shares her personal journey — from growing up feeling "fine on the outside but profoundly different on the inside," to years of searching for help without having language for what was actually wrong. She speaks openly about navigating therapy as someone with attachment wounds: the shame of needing connection, the terror of being "too much," and the devastating impact of therapists who were kind but unable to hold clear, safe boundaries. This episode explores how attachment trauma often doesn't come from a single obvious event, but from subtle, repeated experiences of emotional dismissal — and how those wounds are reenacted inside the therapy relationship itself. Together, Shaya and Tzipora unpack why anxiety, obsession, dependency, and fear of abandonment are not signs of pathology, but signals of a nervous system that learned to survive without reliable connection. Tzipora also shares the pivotal moments that led to healing: advocating for her child when professionals were wrong, learning to trust her own inner knowing, and finally experiencing therapy where the relationship itself — not skills, diagnoses, or behavior correction — became the vehicle for change. This episode is for anyone who has ever: * Felt younger than their age in therapy * Been confused or ashamed by how much they needed their therapist * Wondered why therapy didn't help — or made things worse * Struggled to trust their own inner authority * Felt unseen despite "doing everything right" * * Wondered whether secure attachment is still possible after a lifetime of disconnection Key Moments in the Episode 00:00 – Introduction and Tzipora's background 04:30 – "Not having a story" — and still deserving healing 12:10 – When therapy doesn't have language for relational pain 23:45 – Shame, attachment needs, and feeling "too much" 38:20 – Boundaries without attunement (and why they can harm) 55:00 – Advocacy, intuition, and reclaiming inner authority 1:12:40 – Healing through relationship, not compliance 1:25:00 – Closing reflections on therapy, compassion, and growth (Timestamps are approximate and may vary slightly by platform.) What This Conversation Explores * Why attachment wounds often go unnamed * How therapy can unintentionally recreate abandonment * The difference between boundaries and emotional safety * Why dependency isn't created in therapy — it's revealed * How shame blocks healing more than symptoms ever could * What trauma-informed, relational therapy actually looks like * How clients learn to trust themselves again Listener Reflection If this episode stirred something in you, you're not alone. You don't need a dramatic story to deserve care. And healing doesn't mean becoming less needy — it often means finally being met. Your Voice Matters If this episode brought something up for you and you'd like to share a reflection or response, you're invited to do so below: Click here to leave feedback [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe3MXjjnUhOPYJaopK1ORP1BmSJtdUTBmObq9FOBE3DJHZ3XQ/viewform?usp=header] You can share as much or as little as you want, and you can remain anonymous. Continue the conversation: I share reflections on attachment, trauma, and the therapy relationship on Instagram @shayahecht About H.I.P. Counseling Center: Learn more about our trauma-informed practice and offerings at www.hipcounseling.com [https://www.hipcounseling.com/] or on instagram @hipcounselingcenter. Subscribe & Review: If this conversation resonated with you, please subscribe to the HIP Podcast on your favorite podcast app. Leaving a review helps others who need to hear these stories find their way here.

2. feb. 2026 - 1 h 24 min
episode Untangling Anxious Attachment: Navigating Shame and Therapy with Chaya Morgenstern cover

Untangling Anxious Attachment: Navigating Shame and Therapy with Chaya Morgenstern

Have you ever sat in a therapist's office and felt younger than your age, confused by your own reactions, or deeply ashamed of how much you need? For those with attachment trauma, therapy itself can stir up the very wounds it's meant to heal. In this raw and insightful conversation, we give voice to what often goes unspoken inside the therapy room. In this second episode of the HIP Podcast, host Shaya Hecht is joined by Chaya Morgenstern, a social work student with deep lived experience as a therapy client. Together, they explore the complex journey of long-term therapy while navigating shame, self-blame, and an anxious attachment system. They discuss why needing connection can feel deeply shameful, how being a "good client" can be a trauma response (fawning), and the crucial difference between boundaries that create safety and walls around a therapist's heart. This is a conversation about how real healing unfolds through the messy, human process of relationship missteps, rupture, and repair. In this episode, you'll hear about: * The challenging transition from being a client to becoming a clinician. * How early negative therapy experiences can shape your belief that "something is wrong with you." * The moment of discovering what it actually means to feel emotions, not just talk about them. * Why inconsistent connection in therapy can re-trigger attachment wounds. * Navigating the painful end of a long-term therapeutic relationship and finding your own voice. Episode Timestamps: 00:00 – Opening Hook & Introduction to the Topic 03:05 – Chaya's Introduction: From Client to Social Work Student 12:30 – The Role of "Fawning" and Being the "Good Client" 22:15 – Rupture, Repair, and the Therapist's Capacity 35:40 – The End of a Therapeutic Relationship and Finding Closure 50:10 – Key Takeaways for Clients and Therapists 55:00 – Final Thoughts & Outro Your Voice Matters If this episode brought something up for you and you'd like to share a reflection or response, you're invited to do so below: Click here to leave feedback [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe3MXjjnUhOPYJaopK1ORP1BmSJtdUTBmObq9FOBE3DJHZ3XQ/viewform?usp=header] You can share as much or as little as you want, and you can remain anonymous. Continue the conversation: I share reflections on attachment, trauma, and the therapy relationship on Instagram @shayahecht About H.I.P. Counseling Center: Learn more about our trauma-informed practice and offerings at www.hipcounseling.com [https://www.hipcounseling.com/] or on instagram @hipcounselingcenter. Subscribe & Review: If this conversation resonated with you, please subscribe to the HIP Podcast on your favorite podcast app. Leaving a review helps others who need to hear these stories find their way here.

2. feb. 2026 - 1 h 2 min
episode From Chaos To Secure Calm: Hadas's Attachment Healing Journey cover

From Chaos To Secure Calm: Hadas's Attachment Healing Journey

Have you ever sat in a therapist's office and felt like a child, been told you're "too much," or feared your own dependency? When you carry attachment trauma, the therapeutic relationship itself can become the ground where your oldest wounds are painfully and powerfully re-lived. In this first episode of the HIP Podcast, host Shaya Hecht is joined by Hadas, a trauma and somatic coach with deep lived experience as both a client and a clinician. Together, they explore the intense push and pull that defines therapy for the anxiously attached the craving for connection clashing with a terror of needing it. They discuss why common diagnoses often miss the mark, how "self-regulation" must be preceded by "co-regulation," and what it truly takes to build earned security from a foundation of insecurity. This is a conversation that reframes the chaos of therapy not as failure, but as the necessary crucible for profound healing. In this episode, you'll hear about: * Why feeling "crazy" or regressed in therapy can be a sign of deep work beginning. * The critical difference between a therapist who rescues, one who withdraws, and one who provides secure attachment. * How to tell if your "neediness" is a trauma response or a human longing for healthy connection. * Hadas's powerful analogy of the wounded bird, explaining the therapist's role in healing. * The hopeful, lived answer to whether moving from anxious to secure attachment is possible. Episode Timestamps: 00:00 – Opening Hook & Introduction to the Topic 10:15 – Hadas's Story: The Push-Pull of Therapy with Attachment Trauma 22:30 – Co-Regulation vs. Coping Skills: A Paradigm Shift 35:00 – The "Wounded Bird" Analogy for Therapeutic Holding 48:45 – Navigating Rupture and Building Earned Security 58:20 – Key Takeaways for Clients and Therapists 01:05:00 – Final Thoughts & Outro Your Voice Matters If this episode brought something up for you and you'd like to share a reflection or response, you're invited to do so below: Click here to leave feedback [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe3MXjjnUhOPYJaopK1ORP1BmSJtdUTBmObq9FOBE3DJHZ3XQ/viewform?usp=header] You can share as much or as little as you want, and you can remain anonymous. Continue the conversation: I share reflections on attachment, trauma, and the therapy relationship on Instagram @shayahecht About H.I.P. Counseling Center: Learn more about our trauma-informed practice and offerings at www.hipcounseling.com [https://www.hipcounseling.com/] or on instagram @hipcounselingcenter. Subscribe & Review: If this conversation resonated with you, please subscribe to the HIP Podcast on your favorite podcast app. Leaving a review helps others who need to hear these stories find their way here.

2. feb. 2026 - 1 h 13 min
Registrer deg for å lytte
Enkelt å finne frem nye favoritter og lett å navigere seg gjennom innholdet i appen
Enkelt å finne frem nye favoritter og lett å navigere seg gjennom innholdet i appen
Liker at det er både Podcaster (godt utvalg) og lydbøker i samme app, pluss at man kan holde Podcaster og lydbøker atskilt i biblioteket.
Bra app. Oversiktlig og ryddig. MYE bra innhold⭐️⭐️⭐️

Velg abonnementet ditt

Mest populær

Tidsbegrenset tilbud

Premium

20 timer lydbøker

  • Eksklusive podkaster

  • Ingen annonser i Podimo shows

  • Avslutt når som helst

2 Måneder for 19 kr
Deretter 99 kr / Måned

Kom i gang

Premium Plus

100 timer lydbøker

  • Eksklusive podkaster

  • Ingen annonser i Podimo shows

  • Avslutt når som helst

Prøv gratis i 14 dager
Deretter 169 kr / måned

Prøv gratis

Bare på Podimo

Populære lydbøker

Kom i gang

2 Måneder for 19 kr. Deretter 99 kr / Måned. Avslutt når som helst.