Listen "The Aftershock of Shame in Repair"
Episode Synopsis
The fight is over, but your body hasn’t gotten the memo. The air feels heavy. You’re calm enough to regret what happened, but your nervous system is still running the emergency drill. In that “aftershock window,” shame convinces you that fixing the relationship immediately is the only way to feel safe.But urgency isn’t intimacy.In this episode, Dr. Rachel Orleck explains how shame masquerades as responsibility—fueling rushed apologies, over-functioning, or emotional withdrawal—and why those survival strategies keep real repair out of reach. Instead of erasing your reaction with self-blame, you’ll learn how to slow down, regulate, and repair in a way that actually lands.You’ll LearnWhat the aftershock window is and why it mattersHow shame disguises itself as accountabilityWhy “performance apologies” erode trust instead of repairing itHow to tell when your body and your relationship are both ready for repairThe Two Green Light Check for knowing when to re-engageA simple, one-breath repair framework that builds safety instead of pressureKey Quotes“Urgency is not intimacy.”“Shame convinces you that the only way to prove care is to punish yourself.”“You can’t build safety while you’re busy destroying yourself.”“Accountability is forward-facing; shame keeps you locked in the past.”TakeawayRepair doesn’t require a grand gesture—it requires regulation, pacing, and honesty. Check for two green lights: one from your body, one from your bond. Then keep your repair small, specific, and steady. That’s what teaches your nervous system that love can survive imperfection.Listen now to learn how to calm the aftershock of shame and create repairs that actually rebuild connection.Free Resources:Break the Cycle: 7 Day Email Course to Break the Conflict Cycle
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