Future You: How to Bargain with the Future to Become Your Best Self
Future-self work helps you break patterns, make aligned choices, and reduce the gap between who you are and who you want to be. By imagining your future self clearly, practicing small daily shifts, and acting with purpose, you build integrity and long-term change.
Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, Naples Integrated Recovery
Free Won’t: Using Your Prefrontal Cortex Veto
Explore how determinism, neuroscience, and Stoic philosophy shape the debate on free will, highlighting the power of “free won’t” — the ability to pause, veto impulses, and choose intentional action. Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, Naples Integrated Recovery
Allowing Your Emotions: Why Feeling is the First Step Toward Healing
Emotions don’t disappear when ignored—they resurface through anxiety, burnout, and disconnection. Healing begins by naming what you feel, creating space for vulnerability, and getting curious instead of suppressing. Emotional honesty restores clarity and regulation.
Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP
Naples Integrated Recovery
Breaking Free from the King Baby Syndrome in Recovery
“King Baby” describes the immature ego patterns that fuel addiction—craving comfort, resisting limits, and avoiding accountability. Recovery grows when you trade control for honesty, regulate emotions, and meet the wounded inner child with structure and humility. That’s where real freedom begins.
Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP
Naples Integrated Recovery
Handling Your Partner’s Bad Mood Without Losing Yourself
When your partner is in a bad mood, it’s easy to take it personally. But true emotional resilience comes from differentiation—the ability to stay grounded without absorbing their emotions. Learn how to support your partner without losing yourself, set healthy boundaries, and navigate emotional space with trust and respect. Strengthen your relationship by balancing empathy with self-care. Brian Granneman, MA, LMHC, CAP, CCTP — Naples Integrated Recovery.

