Episode 6 - What Safety Feels like
What does safety feel like in the body? And how do we know when we have left connection and moved into protection? In this episode of Reconnection Podcast, Dr. Michael Barta breaks down the lived, physiological experience of safety and why it is essential for healing intimacy disorders and compulsive sexual behavior.
Dr. Barta explains why safety is a body experience, not a cognitive choice. He describes the green zone of the social engagement system, where the body relaxes, the breath softens, and connection becomes possible. He also unpacks the red zone of sympathetic activation and the blue zone of shutdown, explaining how trauma disrupts our ability to remain regulated and why the nervous system defaults into old protective patterns.
Listeners will learn how to recognize protective states like controlling, withdrawing, shutting down, or pretending to be fine, and how to return to connection using grounding, breath, presence, and the four pillars of the Reconnection Model: authenticity, vulnerability, transparency, and presence.
Healing is not about forcing calm. It is about building internal safety through repeated experiences of connection. Dr. Barta shares how living from authenticity brings a deep sense of relief, how agency is rebuilt, and how practicing emotional and psychological safety with ourselves becomes the foundation for safe, healthy relationships with others.
What you will learn:
- What safety feels like inside the nervous system
- How protection shows up in the body and behavior
- How to move from survival states into connection
- Why trauma disables the social engagement system
- How the four pillars restore regulation and trust
- Why internal safety must be established before relationship repair
- How to rebuild agency and meet your own emotional needs
This episode provides a compassionate, trauma informed, neurobiological understanding of recovery and offers practical tools for cultivating safety, presence, and real connection.
Learn more at drmichaelbarta.com and share this episode with someone who may benefit from understanding what safety really feels like.