Episode 3 – Addiction as the Nervous System’s Survival Strategy
In this episode Dr. Michael Barta lays out a neurobiological, trauma-informed framework for understanding addiction as the nervous system’s attempt to survive. Rather than blaming willpower or moral weakness, Dr. Barta explains how early experiences shape the autonomic nervous system, how that produces intimacy disorder, and why addictive behaviors (porn, sex, drugs, etc.) become “borrowed regulation.” He also describes the Reconnection Model® and the four pillars (authenticity, vulnerability, transparency, presence) that restore the social engagement system through lived relational experience.
What you’ll learn:
- Why addiction “makes sense” neurobiologically and how survival—not weakness—drives it.
- The three autonomic states (social engagement, sympathetic activation, dorsal vagal shutdown) and how trauma shifts state-regulation.
- What “borrowed regulation” means and why quick fixes fail.
- How practicing co-regulation and the four pillars rewires the nervous system for safety and connection.
- Practical next steps: assessment, group work, intensives, and aftercare that build lasting change.
- Why addiction “makes sense” neurobiologically and how survival—not weakness—drives it.
- The three autonomic states (social engagement, sympathetic activation, dorsal vagal shutdown) and how trauma shifts state-regulation.
- What “borrowed regulation” means and why quick fixes fail.
- How practicing co-regulation and the four pillars rewires the nervous system for safety and connection.
- Practical next steps: assessment, group work, intensives, and aftercare that build lasting change.
Listen, share, and subscribe if this episode helped you. Learn more & take Dr. Barta’s assessment at drmichaelbarta.com.