
Post Traumatic Growth Starts With Self Attunement
Trauma Rewired
Neuroscience of Co-regulation and Repair
The hosts explain social synapse, brain regions involved in safety, and how co-regulation changes threat processing.
What if the places we have been hurt most, our relationships, can also become the places where we grow? In this episode, we explore relational healing as a powerful driver of post-traumatic growth. Together, we unpack why safe connection can feel threatening after complex trauma, how protective patterns like fight, freeze, and fawn are intelligent adaptations (not personal failures), and why "capacity" is less about willpower and more about what your nervous system can hold in real time. You will hear how micro-moments of self attunement can reduce hypervigilance, build trust from the inside out, and turn insight into embodied change.
In this episode of Trauma Rewired, co-hosts Elisabeth Kristof (founder of BrainBased.com and the Neurosomatic Intelligence Coaching Certification) and Jennifer Wallace (Neurosomatic Psychedelic Preparation and Integration Guide) are joined by Piper Rose, a Neurosomatic Relationship Coach, founder of Shadowplay Coaching, and Director of Operations and Continuing Education at NSI. Piper shares an honest, grounded look at how co-regulation, repair, and "the burden of love" can become a training ground for deeper intimacy, resilience, and self compassion.
Timestamps:
-
00:00 Intro: Why healing is relational, not just individual
-
03:30 Meet Piper Rose and what "Neurosomatic Relationship Coaching" means
-
08:20 Trauma, attachment wounding, and protective F responses in relationships
-
16:10 Reframing patterns as adaptations, not defects, and finding the "gifts" inside them
-
22:40 Neuroscience of connection: co-regulation, threat prediction, and updating the model
-
31:30 Why safe relationships can trigger fear, emotional flashbacks, and vulnerability
-
41:10 Self attunement, needs, and practicing repair in micro-moments
-
49:20 Community, nature, and animals as lower-risk pathways to relational practice
-
56:30 Closing reflections: building trust, capacity, and support beyond one relationship
Key Takeaways:
-
Relational patterns like fight, freeze, and fawn are often strategic survival adaptations, not signs you are "broken."
-
Safe connection can feel dangerous when your nervous system is trained to predict harm in intimacy.
-
"Capacity" is not just skill or knowledge. It is whether your body can access those skills under pressure.
-
Self attunement, like responding to thirst, overwhelm, or startle, builds a foundation for secure internal attachment and clearer boundaries.
-
You do not have to do relational healing alone. Support teams, community, nature, and animals can provide safe enough co-regulation while you build trust.
Resources Mentioned:
-
Free live 90-minute workshop: Neurosomatic.com/Integration
-
NSI Community: Neurosomatic.com
-
BrainBased: BrainBased.com
-
Sacred Synapse: an educational YouTube channel founded by Jennifer Wallace that explores nervous system regulation, applied neuroscience, consciousness, and psychedelic preparation and integration through Neurosomatic Intelligence.
-
Wayfinder Journal: Track nervous system patterns and support preparation and integration through Neurosomatic Intelligence.
- FREE 1 Year Supply of Vitamin D + 5 Travel Packs from Athletic Greens when you use my exclusive offer: https://www.drinkag1.com/rewired
-
Cozolino, L. J. (2014). The Neuroscience of Human Relationships: Attachment and the Developing Social Brain (2nd ed.). W. W. Norton & Company
Call to Action:
Subscribe on your favorite audio platform or join us on YouTube!
👉 For a deeper understanding of integration, join our free live 90-minute Integration Workshop on February 11, 2026, at 12 PM CT. This experiential training covers how the nervous system processes change and how to integrate it effectively. https://neurosomaticintelligence.com/integration/
👉 You can also continue learning tools for nervous system regulation and post-traumatic growth at rewiretrial.com
Disclaimer:
Trauma Rewired podcast is intended to educate and inform but does not constitute medical, psychological or other professional advice or services. Always consult a qualified medical professional about your specific circumstances before making any decisions based on what you hear. We share our experiences, explore trauma, physical reactions, mental health and disease. If you become distressed by our content, please stop listening and seek professional support when needed. Do not continue to listen if the conversations are having a negative impact on your health and well-being. If you or someone you know is struggling with their mental health, or in mental health crisis and you are in the United States you can 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline.
If someone's life is in danger, immediately call 911.
We do our best to stay current in research, but older episodes are always available. We don't warrant or guarantee that this podcast contains complete, accurate or up-to-date information. It's very important to talk to a medical professional about your individual needs, as we aren't responsible for any actions you take based on the information you hear in this podcast.
We invite guests onto the podcast. Please note that we don't verify the accuracy of their statements. Our organization does not endorse third-party content and the views of our guests do not necessarily represent the views of our organization. We talk about general neuro-science and nervous system health, but you are unique. These are conversations for a wide audience. They are general recommendations and you are always advised to seek personal care for your unique outputs, trauma and needs.
We are not doctors or licensed medical professionals. We are certified neuro-somatic practitioners and nervous system health/embodiment coaches. We are not your doctor or medical professional and do not know you and your unique nervous system. This podcast is not a replacement for working with a professional. The BrainBased.com site and RewireTrial.com is a membership site for general nervous system health, somatic processing and stress processing. It is not a substitute for medical care or the appropriate solution for anyone in mental health crisis.
Any examples mentioned in this podcast are for illustration purposes only. If they are based on real events, names have been changed to protect the identities of those involved.
We've done our best to ensure our podcast respects the intellectual property rights of others, however if you have an issue with our content, please let us know by emailing us at traumarewired@gmail.com.
All rights in our content are reserved.


