PODCAST · education
Doing The Work: A Naples Integrated Recovery Podcast
by Brian Granneman
Doing The Work: A Naples Integrated Recovery Podcast focuses on the patterns that keep people stuck — the ones that show up in conversations, relationships, habits, and everyday decisions.This isn’t theory and it isn’t motivation. Each episode breaks down what’s actually happening underneath the surface: avoidance, control, people-pleasing, resentment, emotional shutdown, and the ways people stay busy instead of changing anything.Hosted by Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, the show pulls from real clinical experience to track how these patterns form, how they get reinforced, and what it looks like to interrupt them in real time. Topics include trauma, addiction cycles, relationship dynamics, boundaries, and the quieter behaviors that don’t get labeled but still run the show.The focus stays on behavior, not insight. Change doesn’t come from understanding the problem — it comes from what you do next.
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54
What Actually Slows Emotional Reactions and Radical "okay-ness"
Most emotional suffering isn’t caused by pain itself, but by resistance to reality. This episode explores why reactivity escalates when life doesn’t match what the mind wants, and how suffering arises from that gap. Rather than treating emotions as random or overwhelming events, we look at suffering as something patterned—shaped by causes, conditions, and narrowed attention. Awareness reduces reactivity not by numbing feelings or forcing calm, but by widening scope. When impermanence, causality, and non-suffering are brought back into view, emotions lose their authority to dominate the entire mental field. This episode walks through a practical way of relating to suffering that restores agency, clarity, and stability—without bypassing pain or pretending life should be easier than it is. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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53
Why “That’s Just Who I Am” Keeps You Stuck
Most people think their personality is fixed. “I’m anxious," “I’m avoidant,” "I'm sassy," "I'm just honest," “I’ve always been this way.” In this episode, we break down how many of the traits you call identity started as survival strategies. Behaviors that once lowered stress or protected you slowly stabilized into something that feels like who you are. When coping turns into personality, change starts to feel like self-erasure. We look at how roles form inside relationships, why insight alone rarely produces real movement, and what actually has to expand for flexibility to develop. This isn’t about reinventing yourself. It’s about recognizing when you’re defending a strategy that once worked and learning how to stop mistaking output for essence. That’s doing the work. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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52
Why Forgiveness Doesn’t Respond to Force
When forgiveness is pushed before the nervous system has processed what happened, it turns into compliance rather than resolution. This episode looks at why saying the words doesn’t calm the body, why resentment resurfaces after you thought it was handled, and how pressure to forgive often deepens activation instead of relieving it. The focus stays on what actually keeps reactions alive and why forcing forgiveness tends to backfire. Rather than treating forgiveness as a moral requirement or a milestone you’re supposed to reach, this episode traces what brings real settling: understanding the conditions that drove the injury, interrupting retaliatory loops, and letting the system stand down once it no longer reads the threat as active. The result is peace that lasts, because it’s rooted in regulation and clarity rather than obligation. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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51
Why You Get Defensive the Second Someone Criticizes You
Why do otherwise thoughtful, self-aware people become instantly defensive when they receive real feedback? This episode breaks down defensiveness as an identity threat rather than a maturity problem, showing how the brain protects coherence before it allows learning. We look at why people who talk about growth often struggle most with change, how behavior gets fused to self-worth, and why feedback shuts down the moment it feels like a judgment of who you are. The second half focuses on what actually makes feedback usable. Psychological distance lowers reactivity, meaning and purpose stabilize the self, and a larger sense of identity makes imperfection tolerable. Growth doesn’t come from armoring the ego or trying to erase it. It comes from flexibility, from building a self that can hold friction long enough to learn. This episode is about why insight alone doesn’t change people, and what does. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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50
Why Your System Won’t Let You Change (Yet)
You can understand your patterns and still feel your body tighten when something real comes up. You can know why you shut down in relationships, get anxious, or pull away — and still watch it happen. This episode breaks down why awareness doesn’t automatically change your behavior and why your nervous system doesn’t shift just because your thinking does. We get into what actually creates change. Why pushing yourself to heal faster makes it worse. Why hearing “you’re safe now” doesn’t land. And what it takes for those automatic reactions — shutting down, anxiety, pulling away — to finally start loosening over time. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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49
Guest Terry P: Recovery Isn’t Boring — You’re Just in the Wrong Room
In this episode, Brian sits down with Terry P, a connection from early sobriety during the pandemic when both were trying to find something that actually worked. What started as a small Zoom meeting with four guys grew into a global recovery community with over 10,000 people passing through—driven by Terry’s approach of making recovery something people want to be part of instead of something they endure. They break down why so many people walk into meetings and feel disconnected, what separates “checking a box” from actually building a sober life, and how energy, structure, and community change the experience. The conversation moves into the long version of the Serenity Prayer and why ideas like “taking the world as it is” and being “reasonably happy” are directly applicable to anxiety, control, and everyday mental health. They also unpack common relapse patterns like “I stopped” and “I’ve got this,” why there’s no graduating from the steps, what step work looks like years into sobriety, and the daily structure that actually keeps someone sober. The episode closes with a grounded breakdown of the Promises of recovery—not as theory, but as outcomes that show up through consistent action. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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48
Stop Saving Them: Why Families Stay Stuck
Addiction doesn’t stay contained in one person. It reorganizes entire families around survival, silence, control, and roles that outlive their usefulness. This episode breaks down why sobriety often destabilizes relationships, how rescuing and financial over-helping keep systems stuck, and why recovery requires differentiation, boundaries, and tolerating discomfort without control. If things feel harder after the drinking stops, this explains why. Clear, direct discussion of enabling, money, trust rebuilding, and how families move from chaos management to adult functioning without pretending the past didn’t happen. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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47
How Much is Enough? The Hidden Cost of 'Success'
Catching patterns in real time sounds simple until you’re inside one that’s producing results. This episode breaks down how high performance, productivity, and “everything working” can hide a structure that drains you and keeps you from being present in your own life. Using a real clinical schedule and workload as the backdrop, it tracks how burnout, reduced presence, and constant output turn into fatigue quietly—and why awareness alone doesn’t change behavior. The focus shifts to self-correction: recognizing the signal, interrupting the pattern, and making changes before things collapse. This episode walks through overwork, identity tied to performance, nervous system overload, and the decision to change direction without waiting for certainty. It’s about seeing where your current structure leads—and choosing to adjust anyway. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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46
You Don’t Get It Back—You Build Again
Losing everything forces a hard reset. This episode breaks down what happens psychologically when structure disappears and why the instinct to “get back to normal” keeps people stuck. You’ll hear how real change works in practice—no going back, only rebuilding—and why disrupted routines, lost momentum, and unexpected setbacks all run on the same mechanism. We also get into the difference between reacting and adapting, why starting over feels heavier the second time, and the role of self-trust when things don’t go according to plan. If you’re dealing with burnout, relapse, life transitions, or rebuilding after loss, this is a direct look at how to move forward without waiting to feel ready. Check out the website for articles published weekly: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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45
Still Not Enough After You Get It
This episode breaks down a repeatable pattern that shows up in work, recovery, relationships, and therapy: chasing the next thing, avoiding what feels difficult, and missing the structure that keeps recreating the same loop. I walk through how this shows up in my own life and in the people I work with every week, especially when insight is present but behavior stays the same. The focus here is on what actually keeps people stuck: tying relief to the next condition, speeding everything up to avoid discomfort, and assuming the next version will finally land differently. This episode looks at how those patterns drive overwork, pressure, dissatisfaction, and emotional exhaustion, and what starts to change when you catch the loop early enough to do something different in real time. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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44
Oxytocin, Attachment, and Why Chemistry Isn’t the Same as Safety
Why you can’t let go—even when you know better. This episode breaks down why unstable relationships feel so intense, how attachment and stress work together, and why feeling strongly connected doesn’t mean a relationship is actually stable or safe. You’ll hear what this looks like in real relationships, why insight alone doesn’t change the pattern, and how to recognize the difference between activation and stability so you can start making different moves in the moment. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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43
Experience Strength and Hope: Lindsey at One Year Clean and Sober
This episode features a recorded NA speaker meeting from Lindsey, offering a direct account of addiction, consequences, and the shift into recovery. She walks through the patterns that kept her stuck, what led to change, and how sobriety actually plays out day to day. The focus stays on lived experience—how thinking shifts, how responsibility shows up, and what it takes to keep going. The meeting format keeps it grounded and honest, highlighting accountability, repetition, and community in long-term recovery. This is a clear look at what staying sober requires beyond the initial decision. Check out the website for articles published weekly: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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42
First Guest: A Year Sober and Still Figuring It Out (Now the Real Work Begins??)
This episode opens up what one year sober actually looks like in real life—no cleanup, no inspirational arc, no pretending things are resolved. It’s a conversation with someone still in it. Brian sits down with his sister to walk through the internal side of recovery after marijuana-related mental health disruption, including rebuilding trust in your own mind, managing relapse thoughts, and adjusting to an identity that no longer includes substance use. The focus stays grounded in daily experience: what still feels unstable, what improved, and what continues to take effort. The episode moves through the gap between expectations and reality. Sobriety didn’t fix everything. Some patterns stayed, some relationships shifted, and some days still feel heavy. This conversation strips away recovery clichés and replaces them with a more accurate picture of early sobriety—where agency is developing, thinking patterns still need active management, and progress shows up in how someone handles a bad day, not in how they describe a milestone. This is a clear depiction of year one without turning it into a lesson or a success story. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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41
Why You React Before You Think: Polyvagal Theory and the Nervous System Under Stress
This episode breaks down why your body is making decisions before your mind ever gets involved — and why insight alone doesn’t stop reactive patterns in relationships, conflict, or stress. Using Polyvagal Theory as a practical framework, it explains how nervous system states drive behavior under pressure, why people escalate, shut down, or dissociate without meaning to, and how meaning-making often happens after the reaction. The focus is on accuracy, not excuses: understanding how state precedes story, and why trying to “communicate better” fails when physiology isn’t online. The episode also tackles responsibility head-on. It shows where agency actually lives once the nervous system has shifted, why repair is physiological before it’s verbal, and how co-regulation either restores safety or escalates threat without anyone intending it. Rather than offering calming tricks or motivational language, it lays out what “doing the work” really means: regulating before reacting, repairing without justification, holding boundaries without contempt, and choosing stability over vindication. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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40
Epictetus on Letting Go of Anger: Forgiveness Without Lowering Your Standards
This episode explores Epictetus’ sharp, unsentimental approach to forgiveness and releasing resentment without becoming passive, naïve, or self-betraying. Drawing from Discourses and fragments, it breaks down how Stoicism reframes wrongdoing as moral confusion rather than personal offense, and why holding onto anger costs you more than the person who caused the harm. The focus isn’t excusing behavior or lowering standards, but reclaiming emotional sovereignty while maintaining clear boundaries. Rather than centering victimhood, the episode walks through Epictetus’ logic step by step: how distorted judgment leads people to harm themselves first, why virtue—not success or punishment—is the real measure of a life, and how resentment keeps you tied to someone else’s confusion. The result is a grounded framework for letting go of grudges in a way that’s disciplined, clear-headed, and internally stabilizing—without moralizing or spiritual bypassing. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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39
The Roles People Get Stuck In After Trauma
This episode examines complex trauma beyond the usual focus on catastrophic events, tracing how chronic emotional misattunement, unmet developmental needs, and early relational adaptations shape the nervous system and adult identity. It connects addiction, overfunctioning, people-pleasing, burnout, and persistent dissatisfaction to survival strategies that once protected connection and safety. Trauma is framed not as pathology or weakness, but as intelligent adaptation under constraint—and as the hidden driver behind behaviors that are often praised rather than questioned. The episode also explains why insight, discipline, and productivity alone don’t resolve these patterns, and why stillness, intimacy, and rest can feel threatening well into adulthood. It breaks down shame as an operating system rather than an emotion, explores survival roles that organize families and later backfire, and outlines what actually allows complex trauma to heal over time. The focus is on nervous system capacity, relational safety, and integration—not willpower or self-optimization. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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38
No Cows, No Problems: Adaptation After Loss
This episode uses an old Buddhist parable to examine how identity, attachment, and humiliation create suffering long after loss occurs. Through the lens of career collapse, public shame, and forced reinvention, it explores why losing roles and status hurts more than losing security itself. The discussion reframes non-attachment as adaptation under pressure—not detachment or denial, but learning to stop fighting reality once what defined you is already gone. When identity loosens its grip, rebuilding becomes possible without being destroyed by the loss. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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37
Why Most Therapy Fails to Touch the Real Problem
Most therapy focuses on symptoms—anxiety, addiction, relationship distress—without addressing the deeper pressures driving them. This episode breaks down why insight and coping skills often fail when therapy avoids the core realities of being human: mortality, responsibility, isolation, and meaning. It explains how symptoms aren’t signs of brokenness, but strategies for avoiding exposure to these pressures—and why reassurance and over-validation can quietly keep people stuck. The conversation weaves together addiction, trauma, and relationships as different expressions of the same avoidance pattern. Addiction functions as regulation, trauma teaches the nervous system what to avoid, and relationships expose where avoidance finally collapses. This episode reframes healing not as comfort or certainty, but as building the capacity to stay present, take responsibility, and engage life without escape. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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36
Why Groups Change You in Ways 1-on-1 Therapy Can’t
Group therapy creates change through mechanisms that individual therapy alone rarely activates. Drawing on Irvin Yalom’s eleven therapeutic factors, this episode explains why peer groups and recovery communities like Alcoholics Anonymous often accelerate growth by reducing shame, exposing relational patterns, and providing real-time interpersonal feedback. The discussion explores how hope, universality, altruism, interpersonal learning, and group cohesion reshape identity and behavior. It also looks at why rooms like AA meetings produce durable change for many people: relational wounds formed between people often require healing in the presence of other people. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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35
Pleasure Isn’t the Point of Addiction: Why the Brain Keeps Reaching Anyway
Addiction is often misunderstood as a pursuit of pleasure, but that explanation collapses under real scrutiny. In this episode, we unpack why people continue using long after pleasure disappears, even as consequences mount and relief becomes fleeting or nonexistent. The focus is on the brain’s SEEKING system — the circuitry responsible for motivation, momentum, and the sense that something in the future is worth moving toward — and how substances temporarily restore forward motion when that system goes offline due to depression, trauma, chronic stress, or emotional collapse. This episode reframes craving, relapse, and early sobriety by explaining why stopping the substance doesn’t immediately restore motivation, and why abstinence alone can feel flat, empty, or destabilizing. We explore why pressure-based recovery models often backfire, how shame further suppresses seeking, and what conditions actually allow motivation and engagement to return organically. Recovery is framed not as lifelong resistance or moral vigilance, but as restored function — where substances lose relevance because life itself starts pulling again. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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34
How Self-Limiting Beliefs Lock In Your Life
Self-limiting beliefs rarely sound negative. They sound reasonable, mature, and responsible. In this episode, Brian breaks down how phrases like “I’m just being realistic” quietly cap identity, narrow behavior, and manufacture evidence that keeps people stuck. Drawing from lived experience, neuroscience, and Buddhist psychology, the conversation explores how the brain prioritizes consistency over accuracy, why fear often signals identity threat rather than danger, and how people unconsciously organize their lives around ceilings they never consciously chose. This episode isn’t about motivation or positive thinking. It’s about how identity actually changes — not through insight, clarity, or confidence, but through behavior and exposure. We look at why half-commitment protects beliefs, how readiness becomes a delay tactic, and what it means to let old versions of yourself lose authority through action. If you’ve ever felt “clear” about why you’re stuck, this episode explains what’s really happening — and what actually moves the system forward. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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33
Toxic Revenge: Why We Hurt the People We Love When We’re Overwhelmed
Most revenge in relationships isn’t driven by cruelty — it’s driven by pain relief. This episode breaks down the subtle, everyday ways people try to hurt back when they’re overwhelmed: withdrawal, silence, sarcasm, scorekeeping, delayed responses, and emotional coldness. We explore why these behaviors feel automatic, how the nervous system interprets emotional injury as threat, and why revenge is often an impulse to regulate unbearable internal states rather than a conscious desire to harm. This episode examines the biology and psychology underneath revenge, including impulse wiring, dopamine loops, attachment dynamics, and protective parts that activate when shame, abandonment, or humiliation get triggered. We look at why insight alone doesn’t stop these patterns, how impulsive relief trades short-term regulation for long-term damage, and what actually interrupts the revenge loop so repair becomes possible. The focus is on responsibility without shame, regulation over suppression, and choosing connection instead of momentary relief. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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32
Nighttime Rumination: Why Your Brain Won’t Shut Off at Night
If your brain goes into overdrive the moment the lights go out, this episode reframes what’s actually happening. Nighttime rumination isn’t a mental health failure or lack of discipline — it’s a nervous system that never learned when it’s safe to stand down. We break down why thoughts explode at bedtime, why suppression and “calming techniques” often make things worse, and how vigilance gets misdiagnosed as anxiety or overthinking. This episode explains how unprocessed daytime stress accumulates and unloads at night, why safety — not calm — is the prerequisite for sleep, and how most sleep advice accidentally keeps the nervous system activated. The focus isn’t on hacks or fixes, but on understanding the conditioning that makes night feel like a fight, and what actually allows the system to downshift over time. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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31
Why Chemistry Makes Bad Relationship Decisions Feel Right
Many people mistake chemistry for connection, even when it repeatedly leads them toward emotionally unavailable or destabilizing partners. This explores how attraction often organizes around nervous system activation, deprivation, and familiarity rather than safety, presence, or mutual capacity. It breaks down why intensity feels meaningful, how authenticity alone can still pull people into misaligned relationships, and why chemistry frequently reinforces old attachment patterns rather than healthy love. It also examines the shift from being oriented around being chosen to choosing deliberately, using safety, clarity, and emotional resonance as organizing principles instead of urgency or validation. The focus is on understanding what attraction is actually made of, how shame and conditioning shape desire, and why sustainable intimacy grows from inspiration and consistency rather than anxiety and pursuit. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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30
Why We’re So Harsh on Ourselves — And What Self-Compassion Actually Is
Many people are far harsher on themselves than they would ever be toward someone they care about. This explores why internal self-attack feels justified, how judgment shuts down compassion, and why being hard on yourself is often a threat-management strategy rather than discipline. It reframes compassion as a nervous-system function, not a moral add-on or a sentimental practice. The focus is on what self-compassion actually is—and what it isn’t. It breaks down how accountability and compassion work together, why turning temporary states into fixed identities intensifies suffering, and how changing the internal tone toward difficulty reduces shame without removing responsibility. The emphasis is on reducing unnecessary internal harm so growth can actually occur. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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When "Healthy" Relationships Go Quiet: Sex, Silence, and Erosion of Intimacy
Many long-term relationships don’t unravel because of excess desire, but because desire becomes unsafe to talk about. When sex goes quiet, silence often replaces curiosity, and anxiety starts governing intimacy. Unspoken rules around monogamy, loyalty, and “healthy” behavior can turn sexuality into something managed rather than shared, creating distance long before any overt betrayal occurs. Explore how silence, not sex, erodes trust; how commitment quietly turns into ownership when anxiety runs high; and why secrecy often follows years of careful self-censorship. It looks at desire as information rather than threat, and why honest conversation—not control or restriction—is what actually protects intimacy over time. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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28
The Cost of Being Emotionally Available to Everything
Many people aren’t anxious because of personal trauma or immediate danger. They’re anxious because their nervous systems are saturated with constant threat messaging and moral urgency. Continuous exposure to distant suffering without a clear role for action keeps the stress response activated, degrading judgment, patience, and presence over time. This conversation examines how empathy shifts from a human response into a social requirement, how emotional display replaces responsibility, and why caring without limits fragments people rather than helping them act well. It lays out a framework for ordered care rooted in judgment, capacity, and real obligation, showing why limits are not withdrawal but the foundation for ethical action that lasts. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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27
How to Stop Taking the Bait With Condescending People
Condescension isn’t powerful because it’s intelligent — it’s powerful because it destabilizes people who momentarily doubt themselves. This episode breaks down why patronizing behavior gets under your skin, how the reflex to prove yourself to unsafe people hands power away, and why confidence is the wrong target. Drawing from psychology, nervous-system regulation, and real-world relational dynamics, the episode reframes condescension as a regulation problem — not a confidence deficit — and introduces self-trust as the true antidote. You’ll hear practical, in-the-moment strategies for disarming condescending people at work, in families, and around authority figures — without escalating, collapsing, or over-explaining. It covers why silence works, how clarification neutralizes power plays, why intellectual escalation backfires, and how to stop replaying conversations after they’re over. This is for anyone tired of shrinking, performing, or proving — and ready to stay grounded, regulated, and intact when others try to assert quiet dominance. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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26
Happiness Isn’t the Goal — Joy Comes From How You Live
Happiness gets treated like the finish line — something you’re supposed to reach and then hold onto. But happiness is an emotional state, not a stable condition. It rises and falls with sleep, stress, health, relationships, and circumstance. When people aim their lives at feeling happy, they often end up frustrated or self-blaming when those feelings inevitably shift. The problem isn’t effort or mindset. It’s mistaking a temporary state for a sustainable goal. This episode argues for a different target: stability. Not emotional numbness, not forced positivity, but an internal posture that holds when life changes. Joy, in this sense, isn’t a mood — it’s a way of staying oriented under pressure. We explore why chasing happiness makes people brittle, how resilience is built instead through perspective, acceptance, and engagement, and what it looks like to stop organizing your life around how you feel and start organizing it around how you live. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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25
Anger, Acceptance and the Cost of Spiritual Bypass without Boundaries
Anger is often framed as a problem to eliminate, especially in spiritual and recovery spaces that emphasize acceptance at all costs. This episode breaks down why that framing backfires. When anger shows up, it’s often signaling a boundary violation—not a character flaw or spiritual failure. We explore how “acceptance” gets misused to justify exploitation, silence legitimate emotional responses, and train people to tolerate situations that quietly erode their agency. Drawing from Stoicism, recovery work, trauma psychology, and lived experience, this episode clarifies the difference between acceptance and self-abandonment. It examines spiritual bypass, the role of anger as information, and how to work with reality without collapsing your boundaries. This is a grounded look at how real acceptance restores control instead of taking it away—and how learning to stay with anger without acting it out is a core skill for psychological health and long-term recovery. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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24
Who You Become When External Approval Runs the System
Most people don’t realize how much of their life is organized around approval. It runs quietly in the background—editing what you say, how you show up, what you hide, and which parts of yourself are allowed into the room. In this episode, we break down what happens when approval becomes a survival strategy instead of a choice, and how an internal system of protective parts slowly builds what I call the Approval Prison: a way of living that feels safe, acceptable, and exhausting at the same time. Using an IFS lens, this episode explores how managers and firefighters learned early to perform for belonging, how those parts get mistaken for the whole self, and what shifts when Self begins to lead instead. We look at how approval-seeking shapes careers, relationships, identity, and susceptibility to manipulation—and why relationships often reorganize when the performance stops. This isn’t about rebellion or detachment. It’s about stepping out of image management and into a grounded, self-led way of living that no longer requires permission. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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23
The Jealous Shutdown Cycle: When Conflict Comes Out as Distance
This episode breaks down the Jealous Shutdown Cycle—what’s actually happening when a partner pulls away after you spend time with friends or coworkers. Using attachment theory, nervous-system science, IFS, and Gottman research, it explains why jealousy often shows up as withdrawal instead of conflict, and why that silence lands as punishment even when it isn’t intended. You’ll learn how this pattern forms, why it hurts so much, and how couples can interrupt it without shrinking their lives or walking on eggshells. The focus is on naming the pattern, understanding the physiology underneath it, and building predictable repair so jealousy becomes information—not distance. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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22
How Breakups Rewire You: What You Carry Into Your Next Relationship
Breakups don’t just end relationships—they destabilize the nervous system. This episode reframes breakups as attachment injuries that disrupt regulation, threat detection, and identity, explaining why endings feel existential even when they’re clearly necessary. It explores how most people mistake relief for healing, use distraction or bargaining to quiet discomfort, and unknowingly carry unresolved attachment residue into the next relationship. The way a relationship ends doesn’t stay in the past—it becomes the baseline architecture for trust, safety, and connection moving forward. The episode also breaks down grief versus bargaining, why premature forgiveness can backfire, and how self-abandonment inside relationships quietly trains long-term dysfunction. Rather than focusing on blame or closure rituals, it centers agency: where you disappeared, stayed quiet, or overrode your knowing. A “clean ending” isn’t about being amicable or enlightened—it’s about no longer negotiating with the past. When endings are integrated rather than avoided, they increase capacity, not hardness, shaping future relationships with clarity instead of unresolved threat. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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21
Wise Mind After Tragedy
Public reactions to tragedy often collapse into certainty, outrage, and rigid sides. This episode breaks down why that happens using Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), neuroscience, and real-world experience. It explains Emotion Mind, Reasonable Mind, and Wise Mind in plain language, showing how fear narrows thinking, erases dialectics, and replaces analysis with slogans. The focus is not politics or verdicts, but how human brains process threat, authority, agency, and responsibility after a death. Drawing from law enforcement experience and clinical frameworks, this episode examines civilian behavior under fear, officer threat perception, and why “tragic” and “avoidable” can both be true at the same time. The goal is not comfort or moral closure, but accuracy. Listeners are challenged to recognize when fear is driving conclusions, how dialectics prevent distorted thinking, and why Wise Mind is the only state that reduces repetition rather than fueling it. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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20
The Cost of Living Ahead of the Moment: Why Awareness Alone Isn’t Enough
Most people don’t lack awareness — they’re exhausted from living ahead of themselves. This episode breaks down why “be present” advice fails, how attention actually works, and why unfinished moments quietly drain the nervous system. Drawing from psychology, attention theory, and real-world experience, this conversation explains how chronic pre-occupation masquerades as responsibility, why vigilance feels productive but costs more than it gives, and how awareness restores proportionality without forcing calm, insight, or positivity. This episode is about stopping the unnecessary mental load that makes life feel heavier than it needs to be. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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19
Finding the Teacher Within
Many people come to therapy wanting direction. Not because they’re incapable, but because uncertainty feels overwhelming. “Just tell me what to do” sounds like relief when fear is loud and clarity feels out of reach. In this episode, I unpack why that instinct makes sense — and why outsourcing authority, even to a therapist, quietly undermines growth. Real change doesn’t come from being given answers. It comes from learning how to think clearly, tolerate uncertainty, and stay present long enough to hear your own. This episode explores why guidance and control are not the same thing, how dependency forms when authority gets misplaced, and what maturity actually looks like psychologically. Drawing from therapy, recovery, and human development, I argue that the goal isn’t lifelong instruction — it’s internal competence. Healing happens when you stop waiting for permission, stop searching for the “right” answer, and start trusting that you can live with the consequences of your own choices. Finding the teacher within isn’t about doing it alone. It’s about finally letting your own voice lead. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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18
Feeling Stuck? How to Break Free and Move Forward
Feeling stuck doesn’t always look like crisis. Sometimes life is “fine,” functional, even comfortable — but flat. In this episode, I unpack the state psychologists call languishing: that in-between space where nothing is actively wrong, but nothing is pulling you forward either. We talk about why people stay stalled in jobs, relationships, and identities that drain them, how comfort quietly becomes a trap, and why waiting to “feel ready” usually keeps you frozen. Drawing from Stoic principles, lived experience, and psychology, this episode explores how perspective, environment, and physical health shape momentum — and why action, not insight alone, is what breaks inertia. Small steps matter, but sometimes real movement requires changing the conditions around you, not just tolerating them better. Feeling stuck isn’t a failure. It’s information. And learning how to respond to it is how forward motion begins again. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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17
The Empty Boat: Learning Not to Take Things Personally
“Don’t take it personally” sounds simple until you’ve lived in a nervous system shaped by trauma, attachment wounds, or emotional unpredictability. For many people, not personalizing doesn’t feel like maturity—it feels like erasing impact, bypassing accountability, or gaslighting yourself into calm. In this episode, I break down the Taoist–Zen parable of The Empty Boat and explain what it’s actually pointing to: how much of our suffering comes not from events themselves, but from the automatic stories our nervous system assigns to them. This isn’t about emotional numbing or tolerating harm. It’s about learning to separate impact from intention, pausing before meaning gets assigned, and reclaiming sovereignty over your internal world. We’ll talk about why the brain fills ambiguity with personalization, how trauma wires that reflex, when the boat really isn’t empty, and how emotional maturity means setting boundaries without inventing villains. Not taking things personally isn’t self-abandonment—it’s stability rooted in clarity. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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16
Why “Forever” Doesn’t Work — And What Healthy Love Actually Looks Like
Most people cling to the idea of “forever” because it feels safe. But permanence isn’t how human beings, emotions, or relationships actually work. In this episode, I unpack why the promise of eternal love is less about devotion and more about fear—and how insisting that people, feelings, and identities stay fixed quietly sets relationships up to fail. Love doesn’t collapse because things change; it collapses when we demand that they don’t. Healthy love isn’t a fantasy frozen in time. It’s a daily, present-tense choice made by two evolving people. Drawing from personal experience, psychology, and Buddhist ideas of impermanence, this episode reframes commitment as integrity rather than illusion. Not “I’ll love you forever,” but “I choose you today—and I’ll choose again tomorrow if it’s still real.” That’s not less romantic. It’s love grounded in reality. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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15
Sitting with Uncertainty and "Don't Know Mind"
Sitting With Uncertainty explores why the human nervous system craves certainty—and how that craving quietly drives anxiety, impulsive decisions, relationship conflict, and relapse patterns. This episode breaks down the neurobiology of uncertainty, including prediction error, dopamine disruption, and stress responses, explaining why ambiguity feels threatening rather than merely uncomfortable. Through trauma-informed and neuroscience-based insight, the episode reframes uncertainty not as weakness or indecision, but as a biological state the brain can be trained to tolerate. Drawing from Zen tradition, the concept of “don’t-know mind,” and real-world experiences of collapse and rebuilding, this episode shows how growth often begins when certainty fails. It connects ancient wisdom, modern neuroscience, addiction recovery, and emotional regulation into a practical framework for learning to pause instead of panic, stay present instead of forcing outcomes, and build resilience in moments of not knowing. This is a grounded exploration of how sitting with uncertainty becomes a path to clarity, agency, and genuine psychological freedom. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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14
Who’s Driving Your Car? — The Inner Parts That Hijack Your Reactions
This episode digs into the question, “Who’s actually driving the car inside your mind?” Using Internal Family Systems (IFS), I break down how anger, fear, shame, hesitation, and even revenge can hijack the wheel in a split second—leaving you wondering why you reacted the way you did. We look at protectors, firefighters, managers, and the parts of you that step up when you feel hurt, betrayed, embarrassed, or threatened. I share the moment I first learned “there are no bad parts,” and how that shifted my relationship with my own anger and the parts of me built for retribution and self-protection. We also talk about why Self—not ego, not wounded history, not survival strategies—is the one who should be driving. If you've ever looked back and thought, “That wasn’t the version of me I want behind the wheel,” this episode gives you a way to understand what happened and how to get the keys back. You’ll walk away with a practice you can use this week to notice which part is driving and how to let Self lead with clarity instead of fear. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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13
How Attachment Style and the Nervous System Amplify Conflict
Why do relationships sometimes hurt more than they should — and when is that pain actually telling the truth? This episode explores how attachment patterns, negativity bias, and nervous-system threat detection amplify conflict in intimate relationships. You’ll hear why closeness raises emotional stakes, how anxious and avoidant strategies escalate under stress, and where insight helps — and where it can quietly turn into self-blame. The episode also draws a clear line between nervous-system reactivity and real relational problems, emphasizing repair, structure, and accountability rather than minimizing harm. A grounded, neuroscience-informed look at why love alone doesn’t regulate relationships — and what actually creates stability under stress. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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12
The Neuroscience of Suffering: Why Spiritual Principles Can Reduce Pain
Most of the pain you feel isn’t coming from the moment itself — it’s coming from the way your brain interprets the moment. In this episode, we break down the neural circuits behind suffering: the amygdala’s threat response, the insula’s reading of bodily sensations, the dopamine and norepinephrine loops that drive craving and avoidance, the prefrontal cortex going offline under stress, and the default mode network turning discomfort into self-story and catastrophe. And we explore why certain timeless principles — acceptance, clarity, presence, aligned action — reliably calm these systems down. No dogma, no mysticism. Just the biology of why we suffer, and the practical skills that help us stop multiplying the pain. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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11
Dopamine, Drive, and Why You Keep Doing What You Know Is Bad for You
Why you keep doing stuff you know is bad for you comes down to one thing: dopamine. This episode breaks down motivation, procrastination, compulsive habits, burnout, and trauma-driven behavior through the lens of how your nervous system actually works—not the Instagram version, not the lab-coat version. If you’ve ever wondered why you wake up scrolling, chase short-term relief, repeat patterns you hate, or lose momentum halfway through your goals, this is the mechanics behind all of it. We get into dopamine baselines, craving cycles, overstimulation, trauma-linked intensity seeking, and the loop that keeps pulling you toward behaviors you don’t even enjoy anymore. You’ll learn why stability feels uncomfortable, why big achievements crash harder than failures, and how to rebuild motivation without burnout or shame. This episode gives you the real psychology and neurobiology behind drive, discipline, self-sabotage, and why your brain keeps choosing the wrong thing even when you know better. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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10
The Legend of Zelda and Growth: Leveling Up Through Life’s Hardest Seasons
Life’s hardest seasons have a way of feeling like the dungeons from the Zelda games many of us grew up with — dark rooms, tough puzzles, unexpected bosses, and the sense that you’re wildly underprepared. In this episode, Brian breaks down how those game mechanics mirror real growth: the tools you only earn in pain, the companions who show up at the right moment, the side quests that give life meaning, and the arrival fallacy that keeps us chasing the next milestone. A deep dive into leveling up through the hardest chapters of your life. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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9
The Lizard Brain and Second Arrow
In this episode, we break down why your amygdala fires in 12 milliseconds and hijacks your reactions long before your thinking brain comes online. From Publix checkout lines to relationship conflict, we explore the “second arrow,” CBT interpretation loops, vulnerability triggers, and how to shift from reflexive reaction to intentional response. This is emotional maturity through a neurobiological lens — without shame, without spiritual bypassing, just clear, grounded psychology. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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8
The Raft: Outgrowing People, Places, Roles, and Chapters of Your Life
This episode explores a simple story with a lot of psychological weight: the raft you build to survive one season of life isn’t the vessel you’re meant to carry forever. We talk about outgrowing anything that once kept you afloat — relationships, belief systems, workplaces, identities, recovery communities, or roles your family needed you to play. I walk through the parable of the raft in plain language, connect it to real developmental transitions, and break down what differentiation actually looks like in adulthood: letting go without rejecting your past growing without apologizing for it staying grounded even when others misinterpret your change honoring what once protected you without dragging it into every new chapter We also look at the psychology behind why people get uncomfortable when you grow beyond the container you started in — and how to navigate that without defensiveness or contempt. This isn’t an episode about addiction or a single recovery model. It’s a conversation about evolution, identity, and the courage to move forward when a structure has done its job. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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7
Why People Stay Stuck: What Recovery Circles Often Miss
Explore stuck patterns through a fuller lens — not just as “addiction issues,” but as adaptations shaped by trauma, emotional disconnection, and the roles people had to play in childhood. Drawing on clinical experience, long-term recovery, Internal Family Systems (IFS), and the work of trauma experts, this episode breaks down what some recovery circles never talk about: why emotional suppression becomes the core problem, how rapid mood shifts are often misdiagnosed as bipolar disorder when it’s really dysregulation, the purpose our coping tools served, why peer-led programs help but don’t tell the whole story, and what genuine healing actually requires. This is a grounded look at human behavior — beyond slogans, beyond self-blame — toward connection, agency, and the slow rebuilding of a relationship with yourself. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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6
Why We Cave Under Social Pressure — And How to Stop
Why we cave under social pressure, why it feels so hard to say no, and how oversensitivity to shame keeps you stuck in patterns you don’t actually believe in. This episode breaks down the psychological side of people-pleasing, boundary setting, and trusting your instincts — using real-life examples and practical skills to get better at standing your ground without becoming harsh or detached. This is also my first recorded, roughest episode -- recorded with a webcam mic and absolutely no idea what I was doing. It stays, as proof of "do it messy" to get it started and learn how to start to perfect your craft down the road. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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5
What Probably Should’ve Been Episode One
In this "first" episode, I talk about why I create at all — why I write, record, reflect, and share, even if only ten people ever see or hear it. I unpack a previous mentor's, “Who’s your audience?” and the quiet sting behind it, and explain why the work itself matters more than reach, recognition, or applause. This episode explores how creating helps me stay aligned, metabolize my own experiences, and keep my recovery active rather than passive. I also share who this podcast is actually for: people navigating trauma, emotions, relationships, stress, old patterns, and the internal wiring we’re all trying to make sense of. People who sit between frameworks — therapy, self-help, spirituality, recovery — and want something grounded, honest, and integrated. Episode 1 sets the foundation for the entire show: doing the work for alignment, clarity, and growth, regardless of audience size. Check out the website for articles published weekly: www.naplesintegratedrecovery.com Want to work together? I see psychotherapy clients in Florida: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/brian-granneman-naples-fl/1153470 I also offer accountability, coaching, and sober companion services. Send an email: [email protected]
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Doing The Work: A Naples Integrated Recovery Podcast focuses on the patterns that keep people stuck — the ones that show up in conversations, relationships, habits, and everyday decisions.This isn’t theory and it isn’t motivation. Each episode breaks down what’s actually happening underneath the surface: avoidance, control, people-pleasing, resentment, emotional shutdown, and the ways people stay busy instead of changing anything.Hosted by Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, the show pulls from real clinical experience to track how these patterns form, how they get reinforced, and what it looks like to interrupt them in real time. Topics include trauma, addiction cycles, relationship dynamics, boundaries, and the quieter behaviors that don’t get labeled but still run the show.The focus stays on behavior, not insight. Change doesn’t come from understanding the problem — it comes from what you do next.
HOSTED BY
Brian Granneman
CATEGORIES
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