EPISODE · Jun 19, 2026 · 35 MIN
Shame Spirals Interrupt: How to Redirect with Five
from C-PTSD: Let's Make Sense Of This Sh*t · host Gregory
In this episode, discover a simple five minute practice designed to catch shame spirals early before they take over your afternoon. Complex trauma often brings sudden waves of self blame that feel automatic and overwhelming yet remain a normal response rather than a personal flaw. The approach stays practical and gentle using recognition of what is happening followed by a quick grounding step to redirect attention. Listeners learn how these spirals gain speed through old nervous system patterns triggered by small events like a missed text or brief comment. The tool helps shorten the loop without forcing positivity or erasing every feeling. By meeting the wave where it starts the practice returns some steadiness so the rest of the day feels more manageable even when past experiences still echo. This episode offers clear steps anyone can try during daily routines like walking or waiting in line. What You'll Learn: • Reduce shame spiral length with one repeatable daily tool • Recognize early signs before self blame takes full hold • Shift attention using grounding to calm body responses • Separate shame from guilt for clearer next steps • Build steadiness over weeks through consistent short practice Key Insights • Shame acts as the bridge turning small events into self attack • Body sensations and racing thoughts form a fast feedback loop • Naming the spiral without judgment interrupts automatic patterns • Self compassion paired with sensory focus changes episode outcomes • Old protective wiring explains why neutral moments feel threatening Recommended Resources: • Daring Greatly by Brené Brown (2012) • Andrews study on shame in Journal of Traumatic Stress (2000) • Wong and Yeung self compassion study in Mindfulness (2018) • National Center for PTSD 5-4-3-2-1 grounding guidelines (2021) • International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation sensory anchor guidelines (2020) Coming Up Next Tune in next time to explore how emotional flashbacks connect to daily triggers and practical ways to regain choice after they land. 📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at [email protected]. 💛 Join Our Supporters Club ($3 a month) 💛 Ad-free listening + early episodes — help keep independent media alive. Click Here: https://www.spreaker.com/podca...
What this episode covers
In this episode, discover a simple five minute practice designed to catch shame spirals early before they take over your afternoon. Complex trauma often brings sudden waves of self blame that feel automatic and overwhelming yet remain a normal response rather than a personal flaw. The approach stays practical and gentle using recognition of what is happening followed by a quick grounding step to redirect attention. Listeners learn how these spirals gain speed through old nervous system patterns triggered by small events like a missed text or brief comment. The tool helps shorten the loop without forcing positivity or erasing every feeling. By meeting the wave where it starts the practice returns some steadiness so the rest of the day feels more manageable even when past experiences still echo. This episode offers clear steps anyone can try during daily routines like walking or waiting in line. What You'll Learn: • Reduce shame spiral length with one repeatable daily tool • Recognize early signs before self blame takes full hold • Shift attention using grounding to calm body responses • Separate shame from guilt for clearer next steps • Build steadiness over weeks through consistent short practice Key Insights • Shame acts as the bridge turning small events into self attack • Body sensations and racing thoughts form a fast feedback loop • Naming the spiral without judgment interrupts automatic patterns • Self compassion paired with sensory focus changes episode outcomes • Old protective wiring explains why neutral moments feel threatening Recommended Resources: • Daring Greatly by Brené Brown (2012) • Andrews study on shame in Journal of Traumatic Stress (2000) • Wong and Yeung self compassion study in Mindfulness (2018) • National Center for PTSD 5-4-3-2-1 grounding guidelines (2021) • International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation sensory anchor guidelines (2020) Coming Up Next Tune in next time to explore how emotional flashbacks connect to daily triggers and practical ways to regain choice after they land. 📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at [email protected]. 💛 Join Our Supporters Club ($3 a month) 💛 Ad-free listening + early episodes — help keep independent media alive. Click Here: https://www.spreaker.com/podca...
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Shame Spirals Interrupt: How to Redirect with Five
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