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Growth in nervous-system capacity is often framed as universally positive — but it comes with consequences that are rarely discussed.
In Episode 32 of Beyond the Spot, Tracy Gantlin-Monroy, MDiv, LPC and Brainspotting trainer explores how increased regulation, embodiment, and internal coherence inevitably change relationships, roles, and relational tolerance. As capacity expands, old dynamics may no longer fit. What was once tolerated may become untenable. What once felt “normal” may now feel misaligned.
Drawing from Brainspotting, somatic psychology, trauma science, and spiritually grounded clinical practice, this episode names the grief, rupture, and clarity that often follow genuine healing. Capacity is not neutral — it reorganizes systems.
This episode is for clinicians, helpers, leaders, and individuals navigating relational shifts after deep healing work, boundary repair, or nervous-system maturation.
By Tracy Gantlin-Monroy, MDiv, LPCGrowth in nervous-system capacity is often framed as universally positive — but it comes with consequences that are rarely discussed.
In Episode 32 of Beyond the Spot, Tracy Gantlin-Monroy, MDiv, LPC and Brainspotting trainer explores how increased regulation, embodiment, and internal coherence inevitably change relationships, roles, and relational tolerance. As capacity expands, old dynamics may no longer fit. What was once tolerated may become untenable. What once felt “normal” may now feel misaligned.
Drawing from Brainspotting, somatic psychology, trauma science, and spiritually grounded clinical practice, this episode names the grief, rupture, and clarity that often follow genuine healing. Capacity is not neutral — it reorganizes systems.
This episode is for clinicians, helpers, leaders, and individuals navigating relational shifts after deep healing work, boundary repair, or nervous-system maturation.