Épisodes

  • When Love Feels Like Fear: Understanding Disorganized Attachment
    Jan 23 2026

    Episode Summary:

    In this episode of Rewired for Love, host JaCarie Owens dives into disorganized attachment, the attachment style formed when the person you needed for safety was also the source of fear.

    JaCarie breaks down why disorganized attachment creates the push-pull pattern of craving love but not feeling safe in it, and how complex trauma, emotional instability, and generational survival can wire the body to associate closeness with danger.

    Through powerful storytelling, nervous system education, and inner child healing work, this episode gives listeners the language to name their experience without shame and offers practical steps to begin rewiring their relationships toward calm, steady, secure love.


    Key Takeaways:

    • Disorganized attachment is the fear of abandonment and fear of engulfment at the same time.

    • It forms when love and danger were mixed together in childhood.

    • The push-pull pattern is a nervous system response, not a personality flaw.

    • Many disorganized responses reflect trauma parts competing for control.

    • Marginalized communities may experience layered complex trauma that intensifies attachment confusion.

    • Healing is possible through repeated cues of safety, not self-blame.

    • Calm can feel unfamiliar at first, but it is what the nervous system truly needs.


    Reflection and Practices from the Episode:

    • Grounding in the body to calm the attachment alarm system.

    • Naming what is happening without shame (this is fear, this is not truth).

    • Identifying trauma parts with curiosity instead of judgment.

    • Replacing chaos with steady partners and consistent behavior.

    • Shifting from shame language to compassion language.

    • Inner child practice to create internal safety and reassurance.


    Connect With Us:

    • Write to Us: rewiredforlovepodcast@gmail.com

    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/RewiredForLovePodcast

    • YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RewiredForLovePodcast

    • TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rewiredforlovepodcast


    Timestamps:

    00:00 Introduction to disorganized attachment and what it means

    03:00 How disorganized attachment forms from complex trauma and instability

    05:00 Story example: Siri and the push-pull pattern in adulthood

    07:00 What disorganized attachment looks like in the nervous system (fight, flight, freeze, fawn)

    09:00 What this attachment style truly longs for and needs

    10:00 How to start healing: grounding, parts work, and repeated safety

    12:00 Inner child practice and replacing shame with compassion


    Music Credits: Music by FASSounds from Pixabay

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    16 min
  • When Avoidance Feels Like Control: Understanding the Avoidant Attachment Style
    Jan 16 2026

    Episode Summary:

    In this episode of Rewired for Love, host JaCarie Owens breaks down avoidant attachment, the misunderstood attachment style that often hides behind independence, emotional control, and “I’m fine” energy. JaCarie explores how avoidance is not coldness or a lack of need, but the management of need, shaped by early experiences where support felt unreliable, and vulnerability did not feel safe.

    Drawing from The Pain We Carry by Natalie G., this episode highlights how complex trauma, generational survival patterns, and racialized stress can lead to emotional numbness, self-reliance, and shutdown as protection.

    Listeners will learn how avoidant attachment shows up in relationships, what avoidant partners often feel but do not say, and practical steps to heal by increasing emotional capacity, reconnecting with the body, and releasing shame around needing others.


    Key Takeaways:

    • Avoidant attachment is not the absence of need, it is the management of need.

    • Many avoidant patterns come from early emotional neglect, dismissal, or inconsistency.

    • Avoidance often looks like independence, but it is usually protection.

    • Trauma often teaches disconnection from self before disconnection from others.

    • Many people in marginalized communities learn adaptive emotional distancing for survival.


    Reflection and Practices from the Episode:

    • Reconnecting with the body through grounding and noticing shutdown cues.

    • Allowing micro moments of vulnerability rather than emotional overexposure.

    • Practicing naming emotions instead of disappearing emotionally.

    • Challenging shame beliefs such as “I should not need anyone”.

    • Visualizing and supporting the younger self who learned to stay strong and self-contained.


    Connect With Us:

    • Write to Us: rewiredforlovepodcast@gmail.com

    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/RewiredForLovePodcast

    • YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RewiredForLovePodcast

    • TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rewiredforlovepodcast


    Timestamps:

    00:00 Welcome and episode introduction

    01:10 What avoidant attachment really is and why it gets misunderstood

    03:30 How complex trauma shapes emotional shutdown and hyper independence

    06:15 Example story: Marcus and what avoidant attachment looks like in adulthood

    09:00 What avoidant partners often feel but rarely say

    10:00 Healing steps: body reconnection, micro vulnerability, releasing shame

    13:00 Guided reflection and inner child practice

    15:00 Closing thoughts and next episode invitation


    Music Credits: Music by FASSounds from Pixabay

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    17 min
  • Why Love Feels Like Anxiety: Understanding the Anxious Attachment Style
    Jan 9 2026

    Episode Summary:

    In this episode of Rewired for Love, host JaCarie Owens explores why love can feel overwhelming, activating, and anxiety-inducing, especially for people with anxious attachment and relational trauma. JaCarie breaks down how attachment wounds form, how trauma lives in the body, and why our nervous system often reacts before our logic can catch up.


    Using real-life examples, cultural context, and compassionate nervous system education, this episode helps listeners understand that anxious attachment is not a flaw but a survival response shaped by inconsistency, loss, and chronic stress.


    Listeners are guided through practical tools for grounding, self-compassion, and beginning the process of rewiring attachment patterns toward safety and security.


    Key Takeaways:

    • Anxious attachment develops when love is felt to be inconsistent or unpredictable.

    • Trauma lives in the body, which is why anxiety shows up before logic.

    • Love can feel unsafe when the nervous system associates closeness with survival.

    • Cultural and generational trauma can intensify attachment anxiety.

    • Overthinking, reassurance seeking, and fear of abandonment are protective strategies.

    • Healing anxious attachment starts with safety, not self-judgment.

    • Secure attachment is built through repeated experiences of calm and consistency.


    Reflection and Practices from the Episode:

    • Naming anxiety as a nervous system response rather than a personal failure.

    • Grounding the body through breath, touch, and safety cues.

    • Practicing receiving care without earning or performing for it.

    • Offering compassion to the younger parts of yourself that learned to stay alert.

    • Communicating needs in relationships without shame.


    Connect With Us:

    • Write to Us: rewiredforlovepodcast@gmail.com

    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/RewiredForLovePodcast

    • YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RewiredForLovePodcast

    • TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rewiredforlovepodcast


    Timestamps:

    00:00 Introduction and recap of the Rewired for Love foundation

    02:00 Why love feels like anxiety and how anxious attachment forms

    06:00 How trauma and the nervous system shape relationship patterns

    10:00 Anxious attachment in daily life and relationships

    13:00 Grounding tools and nervous system regulation

    16:00 Inner child and parts work for attachment healing

    18:30 Reframing connection and practicing secure attachment

    21:00 Weekly reflection, affirmations, and closing


    Music Credits: Music by FASSounds from Pixabay

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    23 min
  • Welcome to Your Safe Space on the Internet
    Dec 30 2025

    Episode Summary:

    In this introductory episode of Rewired for Love, your host JaCarie Owens, a Licensed Mental Health Counselor, EMDR-trained coach and consultant, welcomes you into a safe and compassionate space to explore relational trauma, attachment wounds, and the nervous system responses that shape how we love and connect.

    JaCarie explains why so many adults repeat unhealthy relationship patterns, shut down, over-function, or chase unavailable love, and reminds listeners that they are not broken. Instead, many of us are simply carrying old wiring that we were never taught how to heal. This podcast will guide you toward secure, grounded, emotionally safe relationships through education, reflection, and loving accountability.


    Key Takeaways:

    • You are not broken. Many behaviors come from survival wiring developed earlier in life.

    • Childhood coping strategies can become barriers in adult relationships.

    • Healing involves learning secure love and regulating the nervous system.

    • Culture and generational beliefs shape how we see love, vulnerability, and strength.

    • Honest self-reflection paired with compassion supports real growth.

    • This podcast is a safe and supportive place for authentic healing work.


    Connect With Us:

    • Write to Us: rewiredforlovepodcast@gmail.com

    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/RewiredForLovePodcast

    • YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RewiredForLovePodcast

    • TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rewiredforlovepodcast


    Timestamps:

    00:00 Welcome to Rewired for Love + who this podcast is for

    01:10 Meet your host, JaCarie Owens

    02:30 Why old emotional wiring shapes our relationships

    03:45 What you can expect from this space moving forward


    Music Credits: Music by FASSounds from Pixabay

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    6 min