The Human Work
Pain has a way of making the human mind ask one immediate question: whose fault is this? When we experience grief, betrayal, fear, trauma, helplessness, or emotional overwhelm, we often move toward blame. We blame ourselves, another person, God, life, or the world around us. But what if blame is not simply about morality or weakness? What if it is a nervous system strategy attempting to create certainty, safety, and control in the middle of chaos? In this episode of The Human Work, Whitney Hancock and Jeri Peterson explore the deep relationship between suffering, blame, attachment, and emotional regulation. Together they discuss why the brain reaches for certainty during distress, how childhood attachment wounds shape adult reactions to pain, and why emotions like anger, criticism, and contempt often protect something much softer underneath. They also explore: * Why helplessness feels intolerable to the nervous system * How self-blame can create an illusion of control * Why emotional flooding collapses curiosity and complexity * The connection between criticism and dysregulation * How grief and pain become distorted when carried alone * The role of co-regulation, safe attachment, and presence in healing * Why vulnerability feels terrifying but is necessary for connection This conversation blends interpersonal neurobiology, attachment theory, trauma work, and real clinical insight into a deeply human discussion about suffering, relationships, and healing. If you have ever found yourself stuck in blame, criticism, shame, or emotional overwhelm, this episode offers a compassionate framework for understanding what may be happening underneath—and how healing often begins not with certainty, but with safe connection. www.dynamiccoloradosprings.com From Dynamic Counseling in Colorado Springs, CO
4 episoder
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