The Empty Boat: Learning Not to Take Things Personally
anger, anxiety, relationships, emotions Brian Granneman anger, anxiety, relationships, emotions Brian Granneman

The Empty Boat: Learning Not to Take Things Personally

The Empty Boat parable teaches us not to take life’s bumps so personally. Sometimes anger arises not from what happens, but from the story we tell ourselves about why it happened. By seeing life’s collisions as drifting boats on the river, we can respond with mindfulness, compassion, and freedom instead of reactivity.

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Why “Forever” Doesn’t Work — and What Healthy Love Actually Looks Like
relationships, stress, anxiety, emotions Brian Granneman relationships, stress, anxiety, emotions Brian Granneman

Why “Forever” Doesn’t Work — and What Healthy Love Actually Looks Like

Impermanence shapes every relationship, identity, and stage of life. This article explores why clinging creates suffering, how to honor past versions of yourself without shame, and what it means to choose love and commitment in the present moment rather than chasing permanence.
Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, Naples Integrated Recovery

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Sitting with Uncertainty
stress, anxiety, recovery Brian Granneman stress, anxiety, recovery Brian Granneman

Sitting with Uncertainty

Sitting with uncertainty explores why humans crave certainty, how the nervous system reacts to not-knowing, and why control often replaces truth. Drawing on Zen kōans, addiction recovery, and amor fati, this piece shows how meaning and clarity emerge when we stop resisting uncertainty. Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, Naples Integrated Recovery

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Who’s Driving Your Car? — The Inner Parts That Hijack Your Reactions
anger, anxiety, responsibility, trauma Brian Granneman anger, anxiety, responsibility, trauma Brian Granneman

Who’s Driving Your Car? — The Inner Parts That Hijack Your Reactions

A look at the inner “drivers” that hijack your reactions—anger, fear, shame, revenge—and how IFS helps you shift from parts-led chaos to grounded Self-leadership. Explores recovery identity, emotional protectors, and what it means to take the wheel of your life again. Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, Naples Integrated Recovery

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How Attachment and the Nervous System Amplify Conflict — and When They’re Not the Problem
relationships, stress, emotions Brian Granneman relationships, stress, emotions Brian Granneman

How Attachment and the Nervous System Amplify Conflict — and When They’re Not the Problem

Intimate relationships activate the nervous system faster than logic. This article explains why partners trigger each other so intensely, how attachment patterns and negativity bias shape conflict, and why structure, repair, and reassurance—not insight alone—create real relational safety. Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, Naples Integrated Recovery

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The Legend of Zelda and Growth: Leveling Up Through Life’s Hardest Seasons
stress, anxiety, trauma Brian Granneman stress, anxiety, trauma Brian Granneman

The Legend of Zelda and Growth: Leveling Up Through Life’s Hardest Seasons

How Legend of Zelda mirrors real-life growth: dungeons as the hardest seasons, boss battles as breaking points that reshape you, companions who appear exactly when the chapter requires them, and side quests that give life meaning. A reminder that transformation comes from the journey—not arrival. Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, Naples Integrated Recovery.

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When the Lizard Brain Hijacks an Otherwise Functional Adult
anger, emotions Brian Granneman anger, emotions Brian Granneman

When the Lizard Brain Hijacks an Otherwise Functional Adult

Hardwired reactivity hits first — the amygdala fires in about 12 milliseconds, long before the thinking brain comes online. That’s why even as a licensed, highly trained professional with a full private practice and a life built on responsibility, you can still get hijacked by instinct. The second arrow — the story you tell yourself — is where CBT, neurobiology, and vulnerability work intersect, helping you shift from reflexive reaction to grounded response.

Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, Naples Integrated Recovery

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The Raft: Outgrowing What Once Carried You
addiction, anxiety, emotions, relationships Brian Granneman addiction, anxiety, emotions, relationships Brian Granneman

The Raft: Outgrowing What Once Carried You

A reflection on outgrowing the structures that once held you together — recovery frameworks, identities, relationships, or belief systems — and learning to let go without shame. A grounded look at growth, differentiation, and honoring what carried you without staying confined to it.
Brian Granneman, LMHC, CAP, CCTP, Naples Integrated Recovery

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