『Lisa A Romano Breakdown to Breakthroughs』のカバーアート

Lisa A Romano Breakdown to Breakthroughs

Lisa A Romano Breakdown to Breakthroughs

著者: Lisa A. Romano
無料で聴く

今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Lisa A. Romano is a globally recognized Breakthrough Life Coach, award-winning author, and a leading expert in emotional recovery. Named the #1 Most Influential Person of 2020 and one of the World's Most Inspiring Women of 2023, Lisa has dedicated her career to helping others break free from the chains of codependency and narcissistic abuse. As the creator of the Conscious Healing Academy, she has developed a groundbreaking approach to emotional recovery that focuses on healing the deep-rooted causes of the false self so as to make a path forward to the authentic self. Lisa's work is driven by her belief in the transformative power of an organized mind. She teaches that true healing begins when individuals can confront and dismantle the subconscious beliefs that keep them trapped in patterns of self-sabotage and emotional pain. Through her coaching, writing, and educational programs, Lisa empowers her clients to awaken to their authentic selves, guiding them on a journey of self-discovery and personal empowerment. With a mission to help others live above the veil of consciousness, Lisa's influence extends far beyond her coaching practice. Her insights and teachings have inspired millions worldwide to take control of their lives, break free from toxic relationships, and embrace a path of self-love and true fulfillment. Contact coach@lisaaromano.com or visit https://www.lisaaromano.com to learn about how Lisa and her team can assist with your expansion of consciousness despite a painful past.© 2024 個人的成功 心理学 心理学・心の健康 自己啓発 衛生・健康的な生活
エピソード
  • Why You Cant Set Healthy Boundaries: Hidden Ways You Speak to Yourself Keep You Stuck
    2026/03/30

    If you struggle to set boundaries even after learning how, this episode explains why understanding boundaries is different from feeling safe enough to hold them.

    Many people don't break their boundaries because others overpower them.
    They break them because of what happens inside their own mind.

    The moment you try to say no, an internal dialogue begins:

    "You're being selfish."
    "You're overreacting."
    "They'll be hurt."
    "You'll regret this."

    So the boundary collapses — not from pressure outside, but from language within.

    For adults shaped by emotional inconsistency, approval once meant safety.
    And the brain still treats harmony as protection, even when it costs self-respect.

    In this episode we explore:

    • why people-pleasers struggle to hold boundaries
    • the subconscious self-talk that creates guilt and second-guessing
    • how childhood conditioning wires fear of disappointing others
    • why you explain yourself instead of stating your needs
    • how inner dialogue overrides logic and keeps patterns repeating

    You don't lack strength.
    You lack internal permission.

    Boundaries fail when the mind argues against the self.

    If you've ever thought:
    "I know what I should say but I can't say it"
    or
    "I set boundaries and then immediately feel guilty"

    This episode will help you understand the psychological conflict happening beneath the behavior — and why changing your inner language changes your external life.

    Healthy boundaries are not learned through scripts.
    They're learned when your mind stops negotiating against you.

    ✨ Learn more about my work and resources:
    here

    ✨ Explore the 12 Week Breakthrough Coaching Program:
    here

    Topics:
    healthy boundaries, boundary guilt, people pleasing recovery, codependency healing, self abandonment, fear of rejection, emotional conditioning, inner critic, childhood trauma patterns, adult children of dysfunctional families, nervous system safety, relationship anxiety, self healing, codependency, codependency recovery, self recovery

    続きを読む 一部表示
    15 分
  • Why Narcissistic Mothers Hurt the Ones They Love
    15 分
  • Why You Shouldn't Try to Get Closure From a Narcissist
    2026/03/16

    If you feel a strong urge to explain yourself to a narcissist or finally have the conversation that fixes everything, this episode will help you understand why that pull exists — and why it rarely brings relief.

    Many people healing from narcissistic abuse or codependency believe the relationship could change if they could communicate clearly enough… calmly enough… lovingly enough.

    But the need to be understood is often not about communication.

    It is about emotional survival wiring.

    When connection once depended on managing another person's reactions, the brain learned to negotiate for safety.
    So even after awareness, part of you still believes the right words will end the confusion.

    In reality, explaining yourself often strengthens the trauma bond instead of resolving it.

    In this episode we explore:

    • why you feel compelled to confront a narcissist
    • why narcissists don't process accountability the way you expect
    • the psychology behind seeking closure from someone who can't provide it
    • how communication becomes regulation-seeking
    • why no contact feels harder than staying in the cycle

    You are not weak for wanting to talk it out.
    You are responding to a learned attachment survival pattern.

    Healing begins when understanding yourself replaces needing them to understand you.

    If you've ever thought:
    "Maybe if I just said it better they would finally hear me"
    or
    "I need closure before I can move on"

    This episode will help you understand why the cycle continues — and how stepping out of it is not avoidance, but recovery.

    You are not giving up.
    You are ending a negotiation your nervous system was never meant to win.

    And thresholds don't feel safe — because they're new.

    ✨ Learn more about my work and resources:
    https://www.lisaaromano.com

    ✨ Explore the 12 Week Breakthrough Coaching Program:
    https://www.lisaaromano.com/12-wbcp

    Topics:
    narcissistic abuse recovery, codependency healing, trauma bonding, closure after toxic relationships, no contact guilt, emotional attachment patterns, people pleasing, boundaries, adult children of dysfunctional families, self abandonment, nervous system healing

    続きを読む 一部表示
    25 分
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