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Breaking Generational Patterns: Building Resilience & Post‑Traumatic Growth with Dr. Carol Chu‑Peralta

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Manage episode 523499396 series 3610486
Content provided by Dr. John Dyben and Dr. Rachel Docekal, Dr. John Dyben, and Dr. Rachel Docekal. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. John Dyben and Dr. Rachel Docekal, Dr. John Dyben, and Dr. Rachel Docekal or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of The Hanley Effect, hosts Dr. John Dyben and Dr. Rachel Docekal sit down with clinical psychologist Dr. Carol Chu‑Peralta, PhD., Founder & Clinical Director of the Center for Resiliency, to unpack the science and practice of bouncing back after trauma.

What We Discuss

  • Resilience, defined: Not a personality trait, but a capacity to respond effectively to stress, and it can be developed.
  • How to build it (especially in kids): Allow “life experiments” (small, everyday challenges) so children practice recovering and problem‑solving.
  • Post‑traumatic growth: The shift from feeling stuck in symptoms to reclaiming agency and integrating new resources.
  • Intergenerational transmission of trauma: How unaddressed trauma responses can pass behaviorally and biologically across generations, and how to interrupt the cycle.
  • Trauma is subjective: Two people can face the same event and have different outcomes; it’s about whether the stressor exceeds one’s current capacity.
  • A helpful analogy (STAIR‑NST): Two houses on the same shoreline, one on stilts, one on bricks, weather the same storm differently; foundations = internal resources.

Dr. Carol also shares her own path, from early trauma work to launching a group practice during the pandemic when requests for care surged. Her message to anyone who’s curious but hesitant: you don’t need a label to ask for help, and you don’t have to be in crisis to start.

About Our Guest

Dr. Carol Chu‑Peralta is a Clinical Psychologist and Founder of the Center for Resiliency, specializing in trauma, parenting, anxiety, depression, and neuro/psychological evaluation. Trained at NYU and Bellevue Hospital, she helps individuals and families break generational patterns and build durable emotional resilience.

Resources & Contact

  continue reading

58 episodes

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iconShare
 
Manage episode 523499396 series 3610486
Content provided by Dr. John Dyben and Dr. Rachel Docekal, Dr. John Dyben, and Dr. Rachel Docekal. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. John Dyben and Dr. Rachel Docekal, Dr. John Dyben, and Dr. Rachel Docekal or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of The Hanley Effect, hosts Dr. John Dyben and Dr. Rachel Docekal sit down with clinical psychologist Dr. Carol Chu‑Peralta, PhD., Founder & Clinical Director of the Center for Resiliency, to unpack the science and practice of bouncing back after trauma.

What We Discuss

  • Resilience, defined: Not a personality trait, but a capacity to respond effectively to stress, and it can be developed.
  • How to build it (especially in kids): Allow “life experiments” (small, everyday challenges) so children practice recovering and problem‑solving.
  • Post‑traumatic growth: The shift from feeling stuck in symptoms to reclaiming agency and integrating new resources.
  • Intergenerational transmission of trauma: How unaddressed trauma responses can pass behaviorally and biologically across generations, and how to interrupt the cycle.
  • Trauma is subjective: Two people can face the same event and have different outcomes; it’s about whether the stressor exceeds one’s current capacity.
  • A helpful analogy (STAIR‑NST): Two houses on the same shoreline, one on stilts, one on bricks, weather the same storm differently; foundations = internal resources.

Dr. Carol also shares her own path, from early trauma work to launching a group practice during the pandemic when requests for care surged. Her message to anyone who’s curious but hesitant: you don’t need a label to ask for help, and you don’t have to be in crisis to start.

About Our Guest

Dr. Carol Chu‑Peralta is a Clinical Psychologist and Founder of the Center for Resiliency, specializing in trauma, parenting, anxiety, depression, and neuro/psychological evaluation. Trained at NYU and Bellevue Hospital, she helps individuals and families break generational patterns and build durable emotional resilience.

Resources & Contact

  continue reading

58 episodes

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