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The Human Intimacy Podcast

The Human Intimacy Podcast
Author: Humanintimacy
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Description
Intimacy is a fundamental human experience that goes far beyond romantic relationships. Join us as we dive into the deep and multifaceted layers of human connection, exploring everything from friendship and family bonds to self-love and vulnerability.
Through thought-provoking conversations with experts, personal stories, and practical advice, we’ll uncover the secrets to nurturing meaningful relationships in a fast-paced digital world. From exploring trust and fostering emotional intimacy to navigating conflicts and rediscovering oneself, we’re here to discover the essence of what it means to truly connect with others and ourselves.
Whether you’re seeking to improve your relationships, gain insights into human behaviors, or simply crave a meaningful conversation that enriches your understanding of human connection, you won’t want to miss a single episode of The Human Intimacy Podcast.
Through thought-provoking conversations with experts, personal stories, and practical advice, we’ll uncover the secrets to nurturing meaningful relationships in a fast-paced digital world. From exploring trust and fostering emotional intimacy to navigating conflicts and rediscovering oneself, we’re here to discover the essence of what it means to truly connect with others and ourselves.
Whether you’re seeking to improve your relationships, gain insights into human behaviors, or simply crave a meaningful conversation that enriches your understanding of human connection, you won’t want to miss a single episode of The Human Intimacy Podcast.
87 Episodes
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Defining Your North Star: Understanding Core Values in Relationships (Episode 87)
Summary
In Episode 87 of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis explore the foundational role of core values in shaping identity, intimacy, and relational harmony. The conversation begins with reflection on gratitude and personal grounding, then transitions into how understanding one’s guiding principles—or “North Star”—influences emotional awareness, sexual decision-making, and conflict resolution.
They discuss how early family, cultural, and religious influences shape our beliefs about what’s “good” or “bad,” often leaving individuals unaware of their authentic values. MaryAnn introduces examining our internalized “shoulds” to uncover inherited rules that may no longer serve us. Dr. Skinner emphasizes that defining values is a process of personal ownership, not external expectation, and that clarity enables healthy boundaries and more honest relating.
The episode also covers what happens when partners’ values diverge—inviting curiosity, vulnerability, and respectrather than control or shutdown. Through clinical examples (anger, sexuality, secrecy), they show how self-awareness and emotional safety foster compassionate dialogue, and when persistent value gaps may signal deeper incompatibility. Takeaway: intimacy thrives when both partners pursue honest dialogue, self-reflection, and compassion, recognizing that values can evolve with growth and healing.
Resources
Show Notes & Assignments: HumanIntimacy.com/Podcast (values discovery prompts)
Books & Frameworks:
The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work — John Gottman
Hold Me Tight — Sue Johnson
The Gifts of Imperfection — Brené Brown
Atlas of the Heart — Brené Brown
The Body Keeps the Score — Bessel van der Kolk
Quick Reflection Exercise
List three “should” statements guiding your choices.
Ask: Where did this belief come from? Does it fit who I want to be now?
Note how keeping vs. releasing it would affect your relationship.
From Hijacked to Healing: Navigating Triggers, Sobriety, and Repair after Sexual Betrayal
Summary
Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis break down what “being triggered” actually is—the body’s alarm system firing after a stimulus—and how it can hijack thinking and push couples into fight/flight/freeze. They map the reaction sequence (stimulus → thoughts/emotions → chemical surge → flooding) and explain why triggers can surface even years into recovery (Hebbian learning: “neurons that fire together wire together”).
You’ll learn a practical path to move from reactivity to response: (1) name the trigger (“name it to tame it”), (2) notice where it lives in your body, (3) regulate—timeout, breath, movement, journaling, nature, (4) co-regulate with a sponsor or safe person, (5) practice self-compassion instead of shame, and (6) return for a repair conversation when both are calm. They coach the betraying partner to avoid minimizing or weaponizing the trigger and to offer steady presence and comfort. The episode closes with a preview of RISE: Hope and Healing After Sexual Betrayal, a new podcast + course focused on the early stages of betrayal trauma.
Resources
Immediate Tools & Guides
4-7-8 breathing or box breathing (physiological down-regulation)
Personal “Co-Regulation Plan” (top 3 people to call/text; what to say; where to go)
Trigger Journal template (stimulus → body sensations → emotions → meaning → next right step)
Time-Out/Time-In agreements for couples (when, how, and how to re-engage)
Books & Key Concepts Mentioned
Dan Siegel — The Whole-Brain Child / “Name it to tame it” (emotion labeling)
John Gottman — “Flooding” and physiological self-soothing
Patrick Carnes — Don’t Call It Love (addiction & long-term change)
Roy Baumeister — Ego depletion/decision fatigue (why long triggered states backfire)
Francine Shapiro — EMDR (trauma processing)
Bessel van der Kolk — The Body Keeps the Score (body-based trauma responses)
Kristin Neff — Self-Compassion (skills for reducing shame)
Stephen Porges / Deb Dana — Polyvagal-informed regulation & co-regulation
Hebbian learning (“neurons that fire together wire together”)—why old cues retrigger
Therapeutic & Community Supports
EMDR-trained therapist; trauma- and betrayal-informed clinicians (CPTT/CSAT)
Peer support: 12-step groups (S-Anon, SA/SAA/SLAA) or therapist-led betrayal groups
Sponsor/mentor system for both partners (borrow a regulated nervous system)
Related Episodes / Programs
Human Intimacy Podcast #50 — Navigating Triggers in Public
RISE: Hope & Healing After Sexual Betrayal — new podcast + course (early-stage betrayal trauma: triggers, PTSD responses, stabilization, and repair)
Breaking Free from Shame: How It Shapes and Strains Our Relationships
Summary
In this episode, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis, LCSW, dive deep into the destructive cycle of shame and its profound impact on relationships. Shame, often rooted in early childhood experiences, can silently disconnect partners—pulling one inward while leaving the other feeling abandoned and unseen.
Together, Kevin and MaryAnn explore:
How shame manifests in the body and nervous system as an automatic protective response.
The cycle of shame between betrayed partners and those who have acted out, and why both can feel isolated and misunderstood.
The difference between guilt ("I made a mistake") and shame ("I am a mistake").
Practical steps to recognize, name, and address shame—such as identifying its origins, noticing its physical cues, and finding safe spaces to share vulnerably.
The role of vulnerability, responsibility, and self-compassion in breaking free from shame’s grip and restoring intimacy.
Listeners will walk away with a clearer understanding of how shame disconnects us from those we love, and with tools to begin shifting toward presence, confidence, and connection.
📚 Resources
Books & Research
The Gifts of Imperfection by Brené Brown – A guide to embracing self-compassion and resilience.
Daring Greatly by Brené Brown – On the power of vulnerability in relationships.
Power vs. Force by David R. Hawkins – Exploring emotional energy levels, including shame as the lowest.
Childhood and Society by Erik Erikson – Psychosocial developmental stages, including shame vs. initiative.
The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk – On trauma, the nervous system, and body memory.
Therapeutic Tools
Emotional Floatback Technique – Tracing current shame responses back to earlier life experiences.
Acknowledge, Validate, Reassure (AVR) – A communication tool to reduce shame and increase connection.
Support Groups & 12-Step Programs – Safe spaces to share struggles, reduce secrecy, and experience acceptance.
Practical Applications
Notice physical shame signals (flushed cheeks, tight stomach, loss of eye contact).
Give shame a voice—safely name it out loud to lessen its power.
Replace shame with responsibility: shift from self-condemnation to ownership of mistakes.
Cultivate self-compassion: learning to sit with suffering without rejecting yourself.
Learn more @Humanintimacy.com
Making Sense of and Responding to Tragic and Traumatic Events
Special 9/11 & Charlie Kirk Shooting Edition
In this special edition of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis, LCSW, reflect on the recent shooting at a university event where Charlie Kirk was injured, alongside the anniversary of 9/11. Together, they explore the rippling effects of tragedy and violence—how fear, anger, sadness, and numbness can show up differently for each person.
Kevin shares his personal experience as a parent whose daughter was present on campus during the shooting, describing the fear, violation, and anger that came with the uncertainty of her safety. MaryAnn connects this to past events like Columbine and 9/11, highlighting how communities and families are profoundly changed by trauma.
The conversation unpacks:
The 10–80–10 rule of human response to crisis: most freeze, some help, and some escalate.
How anger often masks deeper grief or fear, and why making sense of emotions is critical.
Practical steps for processing trauma—journaling, sitting with your body’s sensations, giving emotions language, and seeking safe spaces for group debriefing.
The dangers of media overexposure (“alone with media”) and “pain shopping,” which can reinforce trauma instead of fostering healing.
The healing power of action, connection, and vulnerability—whether by helping others, checking in on a neighbor, or simply sitting in presence with someone who is hurting.
The episode closes with a reminder, inspired by Fred Rogers: in times of tragedy, look for the helpers and be a helper.Healing happens through compassion, community, and connection—not isolation.
📚 Resources Mentioned
The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk, M.D. – Understanding how trauma lives in the body and the importance of movement/action.
Peter Levine’s Somatic Experiencing – Insights into trauma, the freeze response, and the need for movement.
Joseph LeDoux’s research on trauma and neural pathways – Why taking action helps break the cycle of fear and rumination.
Fred Rogers’ “Look for the Helpers” quote – A timeless reminder of resilience in the face of tragedy.
Join us at HumanIntimacy.com to learn more about healthy relationships and healing from life traumas.
Distraction, Devices, and the Disconnection Dilemma
Episode #83
📘 Episode Summary
In this episode of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis explore how today’s digital world is pulling our attention away from what matters most. From doom-scrolling and constant notifications to the rise of AI chatbots, they unpack how technology is reshaping our focus, relationships, and even the ways children develop social and emotional skills.
Drawing on insights from Johann Hari (Stolen Focus), Cal Newport (Digital Minimalism), and Claire Morrell (The Tech Exit), the conversation highlights how endless distraction contributes to anxiety, depression, and disconnection—and how intentional choices can help us reclaim presence and intimacy.
Listeners will gain practical self-evaluation questions, learn strategies for setting healthy boundaries with devices, and be invited to reflect on whether their attention is flowing toward the people and values that matter most.
📚 Recommended Resources
Johann Hari — Stolen Focus: Why You Can’t Pay Attention
Cal Newport — Digital Minimalism: Choosing a Focused Life in a Noisy World
Jean Twenge — iGen: Why Today’s Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy
Claire Morrell — The Tech Exit: A Practical Guide to Freeing Kids and Teens from Smartphones
Bessel van der Kolk — The Body Keeps the Score (on how stress and trauma—including digital overload—affect the body)
Pew Research Center — studies on screen time and adolescent mental health
Ethics and Public Policy Center — Technology and Human Flourishing Project (Claire Morrell’s research)
Additional Resources:
Humanintimacy.com/Reclaim
Facing the Storm:
Emotional Ownership as a Path to Healing
In this episode of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis, LCSW, dive into the powerful concept of emotional ownership. They discuss why betrayal often sparks a safety-seeking response—over-monitoring, controlling, or trying to manage a partner’s behavior—and why that’s a natural trauma reaction but unsustainable long term.
Drawing on the buffalo and cow metaphor, they invite listeners to “face the storm” of emotions rather than avoid them. The conversation explores how shifting from blame (“You made me…”) to ownership (“I feel…”) empowers healing, restores boundaries, and opens the door to deeper connection. Whether in the aftermath of sexual betrayal or in everyday relationship struggles, emotional ownership offers a path to move from survival mode to resilience.
The episode closes with a reflective question for listeners: Can your partner fix your emotions? Share your thoughts with the team at questions@humanintimacy.com.
📚 Resources Mentioned
Book: Treating Trauma from Sexual Betrayal by Dr. Kevin Skinner – understanding trauma responses and healing.
Book: Treating Sexual Addiction: A Compassionate Approach to Recovery by Dr. Kevin Skinner – how emotional ownership relates to recovery.
Boundaries Course: Human Intimacy Boundaries Course – tools for identifying and practicing healthy boundaries (humanintimacy.com).
Concept: Locus of Control – learning what’s within your reach to influence.
Metaphor: The Buffalo and the Cow – choosing to face emotions rather than prolong suffering.
12-Step Principle: “Stay on your side of the street” – focusing on your growth instead of managing your partner’s.
Sexual Fantasies:
Healthy Intimacy or Hidden Escape?
In this episode of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis take a deep dive into the complex and often misunderstood world of sexual fantasy. Together, they explore important questions: When are fantasies healthy? When do they become problematic?
Dr. Skinner explains that fantasy is a normal part of human sexuality and even essential for arousal, but emphasizes the importance of safety, trust, and presence in a relationship. MaryAnn highlights how childhood experiences, shame, and unmet needs can shape fantasies, sometimes leading them to serve as escapes from pain rather than tools for connection.
The conversation covers:
The difference between healthy and unhealthy fantasy.
How betrayal trauma complicates trust when it comes to fantasy.
Why understanding your “arousal template” matters.
How vulnerability and communication can turn fantasy into a tool for intimacy rather than a source of division.
The risks of sexual shame and the importance of creating safe, nonjudgmental dialogue.
Whether you’re curious about your own fantasies, navigating betrayal trauma, or seeking to strengthen intimacy with your partner, this episode provides a thoughtful, compassionate perspective on one of the most vulnerable aspects of human sexuality.
📚 Resources Mentioned & Recommended
The Couple’s Guide to Intimacy: How Sexual Reintegration Therapy Can Help Your Relationship Heal – Drs. Bill & Ginger Bercaw
Mating in Captivity – Esther Perel
The Seven Types of Intimacy in Action (upcoming book) – Dr. Kevin Skinner
IITAP (International Institute of Trauma & Addiction Professionals) – https://www.iitap.com
For questions or topic suggestions: questions@humanintimacy.com
The Human Intimacy Podcast #80:
The Hidden Cost of Secrets in Relationships
In this episode of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis, LCSW, unpack the complex world of secrecy in relationships—why we keep secrets, what it does to us internally, and how it affects intimacy with our partners.
They explore the hidden weight of secrecy and self-deception, showing how carrying secrets impacts not only relationships but also personal health, emotional well-being, and even the body. The conversation highlights:
The psychology of secrecy — why people hide, lie, or deceive in the name of "protection."
The toll on the body and mind — from anxiety and ulcers to exhaustion and emotional distance.
The role of shame and fear — how vulnerability and the fear of rejection fuel secrecy.
The ripple effects on intimacy — why hiding erodes trust and connection over time.
Steps toward healing — the importance of accountability, support networks, and learning to share in safe, structured ways.
Dr. Skinner and MaryAnn also discuss research insights (Pennebaker, Levine, Carnes, Lemke, Brown) and real-world examples, weaving in practical tools for couples and individuals navigating the painful terrain of secrecy and betrayal.
Listeners will leave with a deeper understanding of why secrecy is so destructive—and hopeful strategies for stepping into authenticity, vulnerability, and healthier intimacy.
📚 Resources & References
Dr. James Pennebaker – Research on expressive writing and the health costs of secrecy (Opening Up by Writing It Down).
Dr. Peter Levine – In an Unspoken Voice (on the physiology of unprocessed emotions).
Dr. Patrick Carnes – Foundational work on addiction and recovery; the impact of secrets and lack of structure in relapse.
Dr. Anna Lembke – Dopamine Nation (on honesty, vulnerability, and the risks of overexposure).
Dr. Brené Brown – Daring Greatly (on vulnerability, shame resilience, and “spotlighting”).
Thich Nhat Hanh – Teachings on deep listening and authentic presence in relationships.
It Didn’t Start With You:
Breaking Generational Patterns
and Healing the Past
Summary:
In this episode of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis explore the powerful concept of generational patterns and how our family history shapes our lives. Drawing on insights from Mark Wolynn’s book It Didn’t Start With You, they discuss the science of epigenetics, the influence of cellular memories, and how unresolved trauma, behaviors, and strengths can be passed down for generations. Through personal stories and client experiences, they show how mapping a genogram can reveal inherited patterns in health, relationships, addictions, and emotional responses. Most importantly, they share practical ways to break unhealthy cycles, embrace healthy habits, and become the “chain breaker” for future generations.
Listeners will come away with tools for self-discovery, compassion toward their family history, and actionable steps to transform inherited patterns into a healthier legacy.
Suggested Resources:
Book: It Didn’t Start With You: How Inherited Family Trauma Shapes Who We Are and How to End the Cycle – Mark Wolynn
Book: The Body Keeps the Score – Dr. Bessel van der Kolk
Website: FamilySearch.org – Free tool for building family trees and discovering ancestral stories
Article: “What is Epigenetics?” – CDC resource
Tool: Genogram templates (available through many therapy and family mapping resources)
Practice: Daily mindfulness or meditation for emotional regulation
Exercise: Create your own genogram noting health history, relationships, addictions, and major life events across at least three generations
Rebuilding Us: Turning Conflict into Connection
Podcast Summary:
In this episode of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis dive deep into the essential relationship cycle of rupture, repair, responsibility, and rebuilding. Drawing from their personal experiences and clinical work, they explore how every relationship inevitably encounters conflict—not because something is wrong, but because two different people are sharing life together.
Dr. Skinner and MaryAnn emphasize that conflict is often not about the surface issue (like toothpaste or hair gel), but rather unmet expectations, unspoken needs, and internal narratives we build over time. Using real-life stories and examples, they explore how couples can move beyond blame and defensiveness by embracing self-awareness, honest communication, and compassion—for themselves and each other.
The episode also introduces the powerful concept of the “we problem,” encouraging couples to see relational issues as shared challenges rather than individual failures. Through intentional communication, ownership of feelings, and regular expressions of gratitude, couples can strengthen their bond and build a relationship that thrives—even after betrayal or rupture.
Whether you’re newly married or have been together for decades, this episode is filled with practical wisdom and hopefor anyone who wants deeper, healthier, more resilient intimacy.
Key Concepts Covered:
Rupture is inevitable, but repair is a learned skill.
What we fight about is often not the real issue—it’s unmet expectations or a need to feel heard and valued.
True intimacy requires vulnerability, humility, and responsibility.
“I” statements are powerful tools for conflict resolution.
Shifting from a “you vs. me” to a “we” mindset transforms how couples face challenges.
Emotional honesty means recognizing your own triggers before projecting onto your partner.
Gratitude and daily appreciation can reignite positive connection.
Healing after betrayal demands both partners do their inner work while also working on the relationship.
Recommended Resources Mentioned:
Books:
The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work by Dr. John Gottman (Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse framework)
Never Split the Difference by Chris Voss (Empathy in high-stakes communication)
Facing the Shadow by Dr. Patrick Carnes (betrayal and relationship recovery)
Courses & Tools:
HumanIntimacy.com — Online course: How to Communicate When You Don’t Know What to Say (Dr. Kevin Skinner)
Reclaim: Healing from Betrayal and Rebuilding Your Life – Podcast and course
Therapeutic Concepts Referenced:
Gottman’s Four Horsemen: Criticism, Contempt, Defensiveness, Stonewalling
Positive and Negative Sentiment Override (Dr. John Gottman)
“We problems” vs. individual blame
Emotional regulation and co-regulation
Self-awareness before communication
Reflection Questions for Listeners:
What’s a recurring conflict in your relationship that might be about something deeper than the surface issue?
How do you typically respond when you feel misunderstood—and what might a more self-aware response look like?
What are three things your partner has done this week that you could show appreciation for?
Finding the Why:
The Courage to Understand Betrayal
When betrayal strikes, one of the first—and most painful—questions we ask is: Why?
Why did they do this?
Why am I reacting this way?
Why does it still hurt?
In this weeks episode of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis explore the emotional terrain beneath the question “Why?”—from both sides of betrayal. Whether you're the partner who was betrayed or the one who acted out, this conversation invites you to pause, look inward, and begin to understand the deeper patterns, pain, and unmet needs that often lie beneath surface behaviors.
This episode is about more than answers. It’s about reclaiming clarity, self-awareness, and hope. It’s about finding the courage to ask honest questions—and the grace to explore them without judgment.
Key Points from the Episode:
The “Why” Is Often Complex:
There's rarely a single reason behind betrayal. Stress, disconnection, childhood trauma, and emotional avoidance often intersect.
Understanding ≠ Justifying:
Explaining why something happened isn't about excusing it—it's about owning the story with honesty and accountability.
Betrayed Partners Need to Know Why:
Many betrayed partners seek the “why” not to forgive, but to feel safe—so it doesn’t happen again.
Anger as a Messenger:
Anger often masks deeper emotions like fear, grief, or feeling unlovable. Recognizing this helps both partners move toward healing.
The Power of Insight:
Recovery deepens when individuals identify their emotional triggers, patterns, and the moments they cross internal boundaries.
The “Five Whys” Technique:
Asking “Why?” five times in a row helps uncover the root belief or fear behind a reaction or behavior.
The Body Remembers:
Emotional memories can be stored somatically. Sometimes the why is felt before it's fully understood cognitively.
Self-Compassion Matters:
Whether you’re uncovering your own “why” or hearing your partner’s, approach the process with curiosity—not judgment.
Tools & Resources Mentioned:
Journaling Prompts for Insight:
“What was I feeling right before I acted out or shut down?”
“What does this experience say about me—and is that really true?”
“What need was I trying to meet?”
The 5 Whys Exercise (inspired by Toyota problem-solving method)
Morning Pages – from The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron
A daily writing practice to uncover unconscious thoughts and patterns.
Books Referenced:
The Body Keeps the Score by Dr. Bessel van der Kolk
The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg
Willpower by Dr. Roy Baumeister
Mindsight by Dr. Daniel Siegel
Takeaway Message:
Understanding your why—whether you’re the one healing from betrayal or the one seeking to make things right—is an act of courage. It’s not about blame. It’s about seeing clearly, feeling deeply, and choosing to heal with intention.
For more information about Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn’s work please visit HumanIntimacy.com
The Healing Power of Honesty:
Trauma, Truth, and Relationship Repair
Episode Summary:
In this episode of The Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis take a deep dive into the role of honesty in trauma recovery and relational healing. The conversation begins with MaryAnn recounting a personal traumatic experience of being held at gunpoint and how it changed her sense of safety and interaction with the world. Together, they explore how honesty with ourselves and others helps reprocess trauma, fosters emotional congruence, and sets the foundation for mental and relational well-being.
The discussion expands to topics such as the danger of minimizing experiences, the impact of secrets in relationships, the importance of safe disclosure, and the difference between radical honesty and emotionally responsible honesty. They address the nuances of when, how, and why to tell the truth—whether in moments of betrayal or in everyday interactions. Drawing from clinical experience and research, the hosts emphasize that honesty isn’t just about facts—it’s a healing process that reconnects us to ourselves and to those we love.
Key Themes Covered:
Trauma and the importance of finding safety after harm
Emotional congruence and the danger of self-deception
How dishonesty (even subtle) erodes trust and mental health
The role of disclosure in healing betrayal trauma
How to be honest without overwhelming or harming others
The neuroscience of honesty and emotional regulation
Rupture and repair as foundations for resilient relationships
Balancing rigorous honesty with emotional responsibility
Resources Mentioned:
Quote by David Viscott:
“If you lived honestly, your life would heal itself.”
Book: Facing Codependence by Pia Mellody
Explores how early life experiences shape adult behavior and emotional health.
Book: Dopamine Nation by Dr. Anna Lembke
Highlights how honesty activates the prefrontal cortex, aiding in emotional regulation and reducing compulsive behavior.
12-Step Traditions:
Emphasis on "rigorous honesty" and the adage “We are as sick as our secrets.”
Peggy Vaughan’s Research on Disclosure:
Found that 86% of couples who openly talk about the details of betrayal stay together, compared to 55% who do not.
Clinical concept: Rupture and Repair
Healthy relationships aren't free of conflict; they thrive through honest repair.
Therapeutic concept: Congruence (from Carl Rogers)
Healing begins when our internal experience aligns with our external expression.
Story from Patrick Carnes:
A family laughing about a traumatic event illustrates the confusion caused by cognitive dissonance and emotional invalidation.
Call to Action:
Take a moment to reflect:
Where might you be avoiding honesty with yourself or someone close to you?
Are there unspoken truths or emotions that need a safe space to be acknowledged?
Consider journaling or speaking with a trusted person or therapist about your experience.
Being honest doesn’t mean being harsh—it means being real. And in that reality, healing begins.
Facing Fear:
What’s Holding You Back from Healing and Connection?
Episode Summary:
In this episode of The Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn discuss a powerful and universal emotion—fear—and how it shapes our decisions, relationships, and personal growth. From the fear of being seen, rejected, or betrayed, to the fear of facing consequences or being alone, fear often acts as both a protector and a prison.
Dr. Skinner opens with a personal story from his teenage years rogueing potatoes—a vivid metaphor for rooting out danger before it spreads. Together, he and MaryAnn explore how fear manifests physiologically through the autonomic nervous system, how it can become embedded through trauma or cultural messaging, and how it often drives behavior unconsciously.
The episode dives into:
How fear shows up in relationships after betrayal
Why deception, gaslighting, and shame are often rooted in fear
How childhood and intergenerational fear shape our worldview
The difference between healthy fear and chronic fear
The importance of boundaries as a path to safety and freedom
A practical process for confronting fear: Find it, Face it, Flip it
The value of fear as a gift that invites curiosity and awareness
Listeners are encouraged to reflect on their own fears, identify where they might be living in survival mode, and consider what conversations or choices fear might be preventing them from having.
Resources Mentioned:
Polyvagal Theory – Dr. Stephen Porges: Understanding how the autonomic nervous system influences our sense of safety and connection.
Internal Family Systems (IFS) – Dr. Richard Schwartz: Fear as a protector part within us that seeks to avoid pain or danger.
Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) – Dr. Sue Johnson: How anxiety and fear impact attachment bonds and communication.
Survivor’s Club by Ben Sherwood – A book on resilience and how people survive traumatic events like plane crashes.
Recovery Capital Framework – Key elements for long-term recovery from addiction and compulsive behaviors.
12-Step Groups – The value of community, accountability, and confronting fear in healing from addiction or betrayal.
Trauma-Informed Therapy – When fear is rooted in unresolved trauma, professional support can be vital for recovery.
The Mask and the Mirror:
Seeing Yourself Clearly After Betrayal
In this raw and revealing conversation, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaels explore what happens when betrayal, addiction, secrecy, or early trauma fracture your sense of identity. Whether you’re a betrayed partner or someone who has acted out, this episode is an invitation to step out from behind the mask and face the mirror—to look honestly and compassionately at who you are, how you’ve been shaped, and who you’re becoming.
Together, Dr. Skinner and MaryAnn unpack how false identities are built from shame, secrecy, survival roles, or social expectations—and how reclaiming your identity starts by connecting with your core worth. They explore how trauma disrupts identity formation, why authenticity is essential for intimacy, and how rediscovering your core self is key to lasting healing.
You’ll hear personal stories, including a moment of vulnerability from MaryAnn about holding a sign that read “Porn hurt me,” and reflections on what it means to be seen, valued, and known—without hiding.
Whether you feel lost in who you’ve become or you’re just beginning to rediscover who you really are, this episode is a guidepost to help you move forward with clarity, courage, and compassion.
Topics Covered:
Identity loss after secrecy, betrayal, or compulsive behaviors
How early trauma and sexual exposure can disrupt self-identity
The difference between false self and authentic self
Why intimacy requires honesty and congruence
Coupleship identity before and after betrayal
Core beliefs like “I’m not enough” and their influence on behavior
The role of neuroplasticity in healing identity (Joe Dispenza)
Internal Family Systems (IFS) and the concept of core self
The challenge of letting go of survival-based roles or secondary gains
How to begin reclaiming and rewriting your identity
A practical reflection exercise to uncover who you are today
Resources Mentioned:
Joe Dispenza – On autopilot living and the science of change
Quote referenced: “90 to 95% of what we do is on autopilot.”
Key concept: neuroplasticity and habit stacking in identity transformation
Brené Brown – On shame, secrecy, and vulnerability
Quote: “Shame thrives in secrecy, silence, and judgment.”
Internal Family Systems (IFS) – Exploring the parts of self
Discussion of “core self” vs. protective parts shaped by trauma
Barna Research (2016) – On changing cultural attitudes toward pornography
Mentioned study: Teens reported it was more morally wrong to not recycle than to watch porn
Patrick Carnes, Don’t Call It Love
Cited research on identity shifts post-recovery
Key insight: Sober individuals often look back on their past selves with disdain due to identity incongruence
Reflection Assignment:
Title: "The Mask and the Mirror"
Draw or describe two masks:
The mask you show the world
The mask you wear internally
If you’re spiritually inclined, consider a third:
How does your Higher Power see you?
Journal Prompt:
Who am I without secrecy or shame?
What is one belief I’ve carried about myself that no longer serves me?
If I fully embraced my worth, how would I see myself differently?
Bonus Question:
How did betrayal or secrecy shift my identity—and how do I want to reclaim it?
To learn more about healing and recovery, please visit www.humanintimacy.com
In this powerful and emotionally rich episode of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis shift the focus from trauma to transformation. While past episodes have explored the symptoms of post-traumatic stress following betrayal, this conversation is all about post-traumatic growth—the process of finding meaning, strength, and purpose through adversity.
MaryAnn shares her personal journey from betrayal and pain to advocacy and healing, culminating in a major Supreme Court ruling protecting children online—an experience that represents a full-circle moment in her growth process. The discussion weaves in key psychological theories, including Viktor Frankl’s Man’s Search for Meaning, the Post-Traumatic Growth Inventory, and Carol Dweck’s Growth Mindset, all while grounding the conversation in the realities of lived experience.
Listeners will be inspired to see their own hardships not as dead ends but as turning points—opportunities to grow, to give back, and to reclaim a sense of self and connection.
Resources Mentioned in This Episode:
Post-Traumatic Growth Inventory
Developed by Richard Tedeschi & Lawrence Calhoun to measure personal growth following trauma.
Learn more
Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl
A classic on finding purpose through suffering, based on Frankl’s time in a concentration camp.
Mindset by Carol Dweck
Introduces the concept of a “growth mindset”—how we can view challenges and setbacks as opportunities for growth.
Window of Tolerance by Dr. Dan Siegel
A framework for understanding how much emotional stress we can manage before becoming dysregulated.
12-Step Programs
Emphasized as a tool for spiritual growth, community support, and emotional healing in recovery.
Crumbaugh and Maholick’s Work on Existential Meaning
Theories around life purpose and navigating crossroads in life.
Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton
U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding Texas’ age-verification law for online pornography—a pivotal moment in MaryAnn’s advocacy journey.
Learn more @ https://www.humanintimacy.com/pages/home?preview=true
The Disclosure Process:
When Honesty Opens the Door to Healing
Episode Summary:
In this deeply compassionate and informative episode of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaels explore one of the most difficult but essential stages in healing from betrayal trauma—the disclosure process. Beginning with the devastation of discovery (D-Day), they walk listeners through the emotional aftermath, the common patterns of staggered and trickle disclosure, and the powerful, structured process of a formal therapeutic disclosure. They explain how this process—consisting of a disclosure statement, an impact letter, and an emotional restitution letter—can move couples toward clarity, trust, and reconnection when handled with care and preparation.
Dr. Skinner shares research insights from Jennifer Schneider and Peggy Vaughan, emphasizing the high percentage of couples who found healing and stability after going through a formal disclosure. The conversation also highlights when disclosure is not appropriate—particularly when divorce is imminent or used for legal leverage.
Whether you’re navigating betrayal trauma or supporting someone who is, this episode offers validation, hope, and practical guidance for one of the hardest conversations a couple can have.
Resources Mentioned:
Formal Therapeutic Disclosure Process
Step 1: Full behavioral disclosure facilitated by therapists
Step 2: Impact Letter from the betrayed partner
Step 3: Emotional Restitution Letter from the partner who acted out
Research Cited:
Dr. Jennifer Schneider – Found 90–93% of participants who completed a disclosure were glad they did
Dr. Peggy Vaughan – Found 86% of couples who discussed the details of infidelity were still together, compared to 55% who did not
Key Terms Defined:
Staggered Disclosure
Trickle Disclosure
Shock vs. Stealth Discovery
Safety Seeking Behavior
Locus of Control
Zeigarnik Effect (the mind’s tendency to fixate on incomplete stories)
Related Courses by Dr. Skinner at Human Intimacy:
Building Boundaries After Betrayal
Couple Communication and Reflective Listening
How to Communicate When You Don’t Know What to Say
When Your Partner Won’t Engage:
Breaking the Cycle of Disconnection (Part 2)
📝 Episode Summary:
In Part 2 of this powerful series on emotional regulation and effective communication, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaels dive deeper into what happens between partners when conflict escalates—and how to interrupt destructive patterns before more harm is done.
They explore the importance of calling a timeout when either partner is flooded, how to pre-agree on safe ways to pause conversations, and how to return with emotional regulation and self-awareness. The episode highlights key tools like reflective listening, part-based language, and empathy-building through self-inquiry.
From managing physiological signs of stress to tracing emotional triggers back to past wounds, this episode offers a practical roadmap for repairing conflict and building trust—even when conversations are hard. You’ll walk away with language, tools, and hope that deep emotional connection is possible with preparation and practice.
📚 Resources & Tools Mentioned:
HumanIntimacy.com Resources:
Test Your Relationship (Assessment)
How to Communicate When You Don’t Know What to Say (Course by Dr. Kevin Skinner)
Boundaries and Communication (Course by MaryAnn Michaels)
The Communication Course (MaryAnn Michaels)
Core Concepts Covered:
Emotional Flooding: Recognizing signs (e.g., heart rate above 100 BPM) and pausing accordingly.
Timeout Agreements: Pre-agreed-upon plans to pause difficult conversations with a set return time.
Training Wheels Communication: Using index cards, scripts, or notes to aid vulnerable conversations.
Reflective Self-Inquiry: Questions like “Where have I felt this before?” and “What story am I telling myself?”
Parts Language: Naming the internal parts that are activated in conflict (“A part of me felt abandoned…”).
Empathic Imagination: Asking, “I wonder what my partner was thinking or feeling?”
The Zeigarnik Effect: The need to close emotional loops to find peace and resolution.
Post-timeout Reflection: Asking, “Did we resolve this?” and celebrating progress made together.
When Your Partner Won’t Engage (Part 1):
Breaking the Cycle of Disconnection
In Part 1 of this two-part series on The Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis dive into one of the most common yet painful relationship challenges: emotional disengagement. Whether it's a partner who won’t talk, shuts down, or avoids hard conversations, this episode unpacks the underlying reasons—like past criticism, emotional wounding, and lack of safety—and offers a compassionate and practical path forward.
Drawing from Dr. Sue Johnson’s work on attachment patterns, John Gottman’s research on emotional flooding, and the Zeigarnik effect, this episode helps listeners recognize the “dance” of disconnection and how to begin stepping out of it. You'll learn why defensiveness and shame can derail conversations, why some questions get asked again and again, and how slowing down and checking in with yourself can begin to change the entire communication dynamic.
This foundational conversation sets the stage for Part 2, where Dr. Skinner and MaryAnn will explore what to do after a timeout—how to mentally and emotionally prepare to re-enter a difficult conversation with clarity, empathy, and effectiveness.
Key Topics Discussed:
Emotional disengagement and communication breakdown
Why safety is essential for vulnerability
Attachment cycles and the “emotional dance” (Sue Johnson)
The Zeigarnik effect and why unresolved issues stay active
Defensiveness, shame spirals, and emotional flooding (John Gottman)
The role of belief systems (“You don’t listen to me,” “I don’t matter”)
The importance of timing, tone, and non-reactivity
Suggested Resources Mentioned:
Free Mini-Course: Seven Essential Skills for Healthy Communication
– humanintimacy.com
– Tools for reflective listening, validating emotions, and clear expression.
Mini-Course: How to Communicate When You Don’t Know What to Say
– Practical guidance for emotionally charged conversations.
YouTube Channel:
– Dr. Kevin Skinner on YouTube
– Watch, comment, and engage with this and future episodes.
Email Questions:
– Reach out with thoughts or questions: questions@humanintimacy.com
Researchers & Models Referenced:
Dr. Sue Johnson (Emotionally Focused Therapy)
Dr. John Gottman (Emotional flooding and timeouts)
Zeigarnik Effect (Unfinished emotional business)
Next Episode (Part 2) Preview:
Title: When Your Partner Won’t Engage (Part 2): How to Reconnect After Taking a Timeout
In the follow-up episode, Dr. Skinner and MaryAnn continue the conversation by exploring how to effectively return to a difficult discussion after stepping away. You’ll learn what to do during a timeout, how to calm your nervous system, and how to re-enter with empathy, clarity, and emotional regulation.
Would you like a short version for show notes or a version formatted specifically for YouTube?
Words That Shape Us:
Rethinking the Language We Use in Relationships
In this thought-provoking episode of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis explore the powerful impact of the words we use in our relationships. From misunderstood terms like gaslighting, addiction, and defensiveness to therapeutic concepts like parts work, triggers, and intimacy, they unpack what these words really mean and why clarity matters.
Drawing from decades of clinical experience, Dr. Skinner explains how language—used consciously or not—can either create emotional safety or reinforce shame and confusion. MaryAnn adds vivid examples of how common phrases and labels can trigger strong emotional responses, especially when they’ve been used harmfully in the past.
The episode invites listeners to be more intentional about their communication—pausing to clarify meanings, owning emotional experiences instead of blaming others, and understanding the deeper messages behind the words. Listeners will come away with a richer appreciation of how language shapes healing, self-awareness, and human connection.
Resources Mentioned in the Episode:
Richard C. Schwartz, Internal Family Systems Therapy — foundational model for understanding "parts" of the self
Brené Brown — referenced for her work on shame and how addiction is often about numbing and disconnection
Key books: The Gifts of Imperfection, Daring Greatly
Malcolm Gladwell, Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking — explains unconscious decision-making and rapid intuitive responses
Gavin de Becker, The Gift of Fear — explores how intuition and implicit memory keep us safe
Joseph LeDoux — neuroscientist referenced for research on the brain’s fear pathways and emotional processing (notably how we feel before we think)
Dr. Kevin Skinner
Treating Trauma from Sexual Betrayal
PTSD Assessment for Betrayed Partners
Denial and Blame Scale (early scale now recognized as assessing gaslighting behaviors)
Seven Types of Intimacy course — mentioned in the discussion on redefining intimacy beyond sex
Podcast Episode: Making Love and Other Non-Sexual Activities (December 2024 / January 2025)
🎙️ The Human Intimacy Podcast:
Grieving What Was—and What Wasn't: Finding Meaning in Loss
📝 Episode Summary:
In this deeply moving episode of the Human Intimacy Podcast, Dr. Kevin Skinner and MaryAnn Michaelis explore the often-unspoken grief that arises not only from death but from lost experiences, missed relationships, betrayal, and the life we thought we would have. Together, they discuss how grief shows up in unexpected ways—through sadness, anxiety, depression, and even numbness—and why it's essential to give it language, space, and presence.
From betrayal trauma to the ache of unmet childhood needs, Dr. Skinner and MaryAnn reflect on how grief is not something we simply get over, but something that transforms us. They invite listeners to “buffalo up,” facing the emotional storms head-on to lessen their long-term impact and discover the healing that can come from being seen, supported, and present with our pain.
This episode affirms that grief is both individual and shared—and through empathy, ritual, and support, we can move from suffering to strength. Whether you're mourning a loved one, a lost relationship, or simply the life you didn’t get to live, this conversation offers tools, language, and hope.
📚 Resources & References Discussed:
Dr. Edith Eger – The Choice
Grieving for what happened and for what didn’t happen.
Dr. Elizabeth Kübler-Ross – Five Stages of Grief
Originally developed for death-related grief, but elements show up in all forms of loss.
"Buffalo vs. Cow" Metaphor – Facing emotional storms head-on instead of running from them to shorten their impact.
Ted Wiard – Burbles of Emotion (from grief training at Willow House)
Describes grief as emotional bubbles that unexpectedly surface.
Grief Rituals – Writing, symbolic goodbyes, or creating new experiences to process loss.
Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (U.S.): 📞 988 – For anyone in crisis or supporting someone in distress.
💬 Key Takeaways:
We grieve both what happened and what never did—and both types deserve space.
Grief often shows up disguised as anxiety, depression, or numbness.
Healing begins by naming our losses and making space to feel them.
Support from others—through presence, not solutions—is essential in the grieving process.
Transformation and post-traumatic growth are possible. Grief changes us, and often, it refines us.