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Your Body Remembers Every Argument That Never Got Resolved

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Manage episode 484745568 series 2978399
Content provided by Dr. Nima Rahmany. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Nima Rahmany 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.

I watched a client break down in tears yesterday
during our session.

She's a successful executive,
runs a team of 40 people,
has multiple degrees...
and still freezes like a deer in headlights
when her partner raises his voice even slightly.

"I know it's ridiculous," she told me.
"I'm not afraid of him.
He's never hurt me.
But my body just... shuts down.
I either go completely silent or say things I regret later."

If this sounds familiar to you–
know there's a reason for this,
and it has nothing to do with how "strong" or "evolved" you are.

Your Nervous System Never Graduated Childhood

When you get triggered in conflict,
your body doesn't know it's 2025.

Your nervous system is still operating on programming
it received decades ago.

Think of those moments as a kid
when there was tension or conflict at home.
What happened next matters more than most people realize:

Did someone help you return to calm after the storm?
Or were you left to figure it out yourself?

For most of us—
especially high-achievers who pride ourselves
on handling everything independently—
we never learned how to move
from that heightened state of activation
(fight-or-flight) back to safety.

Instead, we got stuck in one of two trauma responses:

Hypervigilance: Always on edge, quick to react,
body constantly scanning for danger

Shutdown: Freezing, people-pleasing,
disconnecting from your emotions

Both have the same root:
Your nervous system never learned
the most critical emotional skill of all—
how to repair after rupture.

The Truth About Why Conflict can be terrifying

I meet so many accomplished people who:

Can navigate corporate boardrooms effortlessly
but fall apart during arguments with loved ones

Excel at crisis management at work
but avoid even minor disagreements at home

Can solve complex problems for clients
but freeze when their partner seems upset.

If you can relate to this, know that

It's not your fault.
Seriously.

If you were raised in an environment where conflict either:

Escalated without resolution, or

Was completely avoided and suppressed...

...then your nervous system was trained
to view conflict as an existential threat
rather than a normal part of human connection.

Think about it.

As children, we're completely dependent
on our caregivers for survival.

When conflict erupted,
if nobody helped you return to safety afterward,
your developing brain coded a powerful message:

Conflict = Danger = Possible Abandonment = Death.

I’m not talking theory here.
It's neurobiology—specifically polyvagal theory,
which explains how our nervous systems respond to perceived threats.

The "Other" Childhood Trauma Nobody Talks About

There's something else I've noticed
in my work with high-achievers:
sometimes the problem isn't obvious conflict or abuse.
Some were never allowed to experience conflict at all.

They were coddled, protected, put on a pedestal.
Their parents rushed to fix every problem,
shield them from every difficulty,
smooth over every rough edge.

This type of childhood leaves just as deep a mark
on the nervous system.

I call it "the golden cage.

"Because when you're infantilized like this,
you never develop the emotional muscles needed to:

Handle disappointment (called “frustration tolerance”)

Navigate disagreement (called “capacity for difference”)

Self-regulate during stress

Trust your own capacity to weather emotional storms.

These all the hallmarks of being a mature and secure human being.
So you could still be a surgeon– but you enter adulthood
expecting your partner to regulate your emotions for you,
because you never had the chance to learn how.

Again—not your fault.
But definitely your responsibility to address now.

The Missing Piece: Co-Regulation Before Self-Regulation

One of the most healing moments in my own journey
was realizing something so simple yet profound:

Children don't learn to self-regulate first.

They are supposed to learn to co-regulate with a trusted adult.

This is why I told my client yesterday something that stopped her in her tracks:

"The reason you can't self-soothe during conflict
isn't because you're broken or weak.
It's because you never had the foundational experience
of being soothed by someone else during conflict."

She just stared at me.
Twenty years of therapy talking about her pain,
and no one had ever said this to her.

The truth is, your nervous system
is designed to learn regulation through relationship.
Not books. Not meditation apps.
Not self-help courses.
Not even through chatGPT.

Through actual, messy,
in-the-moment repair with another human being.

Becoming Trigger-Proof: The Path Forward

I have a four-year-old son.
Sometimes I raise my voice when I'm frustrated (I'm human).

When this happens,
he immediately goes into fight-or-flight—
his little nervous system detecting potential danger.

The critical moment isn't the rupture.
It's what happens next.

I get down at his level.
I make eye contact.
I regulate my own breathing first.
Then I help him regulate his.
We repair.

Through this cycle—rupture, then repair—
I'm teaching him something I never learned as a child:
Conflict isn't the end of connection.
It's part of it.

And here's what I discovered in my own healing journey:
It's never too late to teach your nervous system this lesson.

The path to becoming trigger-proof
isn't about never getting triggered (that's impossible).
It's about:

  • Recognizing when you're in fight/flight/freeze/fawn.
  • Having tools to come back to safety—
    first with help, then on your own
  • Practicing repair after rupture
    until your body knows,
    on a cellular level,
    that conflict doesn't mean death

This is deeper than anger management techniques
or communication skills.

This is rewiring your nervous system's
fundamental operating instructions.

And when it clicks,
you start noticing some profound shifts.

You can disagree without dissociating.
You can hear criticism without collapsing.
You can express needs without exploding.

This is the foundation of true emotional freedom—
and the gateway to the connected,
authentic relationships you've always wanted.

Not because you've eliminated conflict,
but because you've made conflict safe.

Emotional safety is what we are all looking for.
We simply haven’t learned how to create it for ourselves first.

But the good news is,

you CAN.

Your wingman on the adventure,

Nima

___________________________________________________

P.S. If reading this made your chest tighten
or brought some emotions up,
your nervous system is likely telling you something important.

I'm currently offering "Trigger-Proof Pathway"
sessions for those ready to understand
and transform their conflict patterns.

In this 45-minute session
(valued at $497 but free for the right candidates),

I'll:

Map your specific nervous syste...

  continue reading

378 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 484745568 series 2978399
Content provided by Dr. Nima Rahmany. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Nima Rahmany 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.

I watched a client break down in tears yesterday
during our session.

She's a successful executive,
runs a team of 40 people,
has multiple degrees...
and still freezes like a deer in headlights
when her partner raises his voice even slightly.

"I know it's ridiculous," she told me.
"I'm not afraid of him.
He's never hurt me.
But my body just... shuts down.
I either go completely silent or say things I regret later."

If this sounds familiar to you–
know there's a reason for this,
and it has nothing to do with how "strong" or "evolved" you are.

Your Nervous System Never Graduated Childhood

When you get triggered in conflict,
your body doesn't know it's 2025.

Your nervous system is still operating on programming
it received decades ago.

Think of those moments as a kid
when there was tension or conflict at home.
What happened next matters more than most people realize:

Did someone help you return to calm after the storm?
Or were you left to figure it out yourself?

For most of us—
especially high-achievers who pride ourselves
on handling everything independently—
we never learned how to move
from that heightened state of activation
(fight-or-flight) back to safety.

Instead, we got stuck in one of two trauma responses:

Hypervigilance: Always on edge, quick to react,
body constantly scanning for danger

Shutdown: Freezing, people-pleasing,
disconnecting from your emotions

Both have the same root:
Your nervous system never learned
the most critical emotional skill of all—
how to repair after rupture.

The Truth About Why Conflict can be terrifying

I meet so many accomplished people who:

Can navigate corporate boardrooms effortlessly
but fall apart during arguments with loved ones

Excel at crisis management at work
but avoid even minor disagreements at home

Can solve complex problems for clients
but freeze when their partner seems upset.

If you can relate to this, know that

It's not your fault.
Seriously.

If you were raised in an environment where conflict either:

Escalated without resolution, or

Was completely avoided and suppressed...

...then your nervous system was trained
to view conflict as an existential threat
rather than a normal part of human connection.

Think about it.

As children, we're completely dependent
on our caregivers for survival.

When conflict erupted,
if nobody helped you return to safety afterward,
your developing brain coded a powerful message:

Conflict = Danger = Possible Abandonment = Death.

I’m not talking theory here.
It's neurobiology—specifically polyvagal theory,
which explains how our nervous systems respond to perceived threats.

The "Other" Childhood Trauma Nobody Talks About

There's something else I've noticed
in my work with high-achievers:
sometimes the problem isn't obvious conflict or abuse.
Some were never allowed to experience conflict at all.

They were coddled, protected, put on a pedestal.
Their parents rushed to fix every problem,
shield them from every difficulty,
smooth over every rough edge.

This type of childhood leaves just as deep a mark
on the nervous system.

I call it "the golden cage.

"Because when you're infantilized like this,
you never develop the emotional muscles needed to:

Handle disappointment (called “frustration tolerance”)

Navigate disagreement (called “capacity for difference”)

Self-regulate during stress

Trust your own capacity to weather emotional storms.

These all the hallmarks of being a mature and secure human being.
So you could still be a surgeon– but you enter adulthood
expecting your partner to regulate your emotions for you,
because you never had the chance to learn how.

Again—not your fault.
But definitely your responsibility to address now.

The Missing Piece: Co-Regulation Before Self-Regulation

One of the most healing moments in my own journey
was realizing something so simple yet profound:

Children don't learn to self-regulate first.

They are supposed to learn to co-regulate with a trusted adult.

This is why I told my client yesterday something that stopped her in her tracks:

"The reason you can't self-soothe during conflict
isn't because you're broken or weak.
It's because you never had the foundational experience
of being soothed by someone else during conflict."

She just stared at me.
Twenty years of therapy talking about her pain,
and no one had ever said this to her.

The truth is, your nervous system
is designed to learn regulation through relationship.
Not books. Not meditation apps.
Not self-help courses.
Not even through chatGPT.

Through actual, messy,
in-the-moment repair with another human being.

Becoming Trigger-Proof: The Path Forward

I have a four-year-old son.
Sometimes I raise my voice when I'm frustrated (I'm human).

When this happens,
he immediately goes into fight-or-flight—
his little nervous system detecting potential danger.

The critical moment isn't the rupture.
It's what happens next.

I get down at his level.
I make eye contact.
I regulate my own breathing first.
Then I help him regulate his.
We repair.

Through this cycle—rupture, then repair—
I'm teaching him something I never learned as a child:
Conflict isn't the end of connection.
It's part of it.

And here's what I discovered in my own healing journey:
It's never too late to teach your nervous system this lesson.

The path to becoming trigger-proof
isn't about never getting triggered (that's impossible).
It's about:

  • Recognizing when you're in fight/flight/freeze/fawn.
  • Having tools to come back to safety—
    first with help, then on your own
  • Practicing repair after rupture
    until your body knows,
    on a cellular level,
    that conflict doesn't mean death

This is deeper than anger management techniques
or communication skills.

This is rewiring your nervous system's
fundamental operating instructions.

And when it clicks,
you start noticing some profound shifts.

You can disagree without dissociating.
You can hear criticism without collapsing.
You can express needs without exploding.

This is the foundation of true emotional freedom—
and the gateway to the connected,
authentic relationships you've always wanted.

Not because you've eliminated conflict,
but because you've made conflict safe.

Emotional safety is what we are all looking for.
We simply haven’t learned how to create it for ourselves first.

But the good news is,

you CAN.

Your wingman on the adventure,

Nima

___________________________________________________

P.S. If reading this made your chest tighten
or brought some emotions up,
your nervous system is likely telling you something important.

I'm currently offering "Trigger-Proof Pathway"
sessions for those ready to understand
and transform their conflict patterns.

In this 45-minute session
(valued at $497 but free for the right candidates),

I'll:

Map your specific nervous syste...

  continue reading

378 episodes

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