When Your Body Says No: How to Hold Space Without Losing Yourself

25/06/2025 6 min
When Your Body Says No: How to Hold Space Without Losing Yourself

Listen "When Your Body Says No: How to Hold Space Without Losing Yourself"

Episode Synopsis

When your body says no, do you listen? In this episode of the Contentment Creator Podcast, Ellen Broen breaks down how to honor your body’s wisdom in relationships, parenting, and entrepreneurship—without guilt or self-abandonment. 💛Discover how to hold space without holding everything, and how to tell the difference between fear, resistance, and your body’s clear no. You'll learn practical tools for staying present, self-connected, and boundaried, even in moments of emotional overwhelm.Whether you're a parent, partner, or creative entrepreneur, this episode offers powerful insights into:Emotional regulation through nervous system attunementHow to tell when your body says no vs. when fear is speakingPracticing boundaries in relationships with clarity and compassionBuilding conscious connection without self-sacrificeUsing body cues as real-time data in emotional decision-making🎯 Join the Contentment Creator email list for exclusive, early-bird updates at https://tinyurl.com/thecontentmentcreator👇 Like, comment, and subscribe if you want more content on navigating creative life with contentment and courage. And don’t forget to share this with someone who needs to hear it.🔗 Join the movement: Subscribe and turn on notifications so you never miss an episode from Ellen Broin and the Contentment Creator community.✅ Key Takeaways:Learn to recognize when your body says no before your mind catches up — a key to healthy emotional boundaries.Self-attunement is a non-negotiable for conscious connection—it's what allows you to hold space without holding everything.Conscious connection doesn’t mean merging; it means staying rooted in yourself while engaging with others.Fear and resistance feel different than embodied clarity—and this episode teaches you how to tell the difference.Presence isn’t performative; it’s rooted in nervous system awareness and real self-honoring.