You understand yourself better. Your life still feels the same.
For many people, therapy is genuinely helpful. They gain insight. Language. Context. Compassion for their history. And yet, after all that work, there is also sometimes a sense of disappointment.
Because the reactions you were trying to solve still happen. The same patterns resurface under pressure. And the body does not seem to care how much has been understood it still doesn’t really feel safe.
First of all, this is not an uncommon response. And it does not mean therapy failed or that it wasn’t a good investment or that you didn’t do it right. It’s just a sign that maybe there is something else required too.
What therapy often does well
Therapy excels at meaning-making. It helps us understand why patterns formed. It contextualises behaviour, which is really important. And it reduces shame by making our responses understandable, rather than unusual.
For many, this is life-changing – for me, it certainly was. But even though it can have a huge impact, sometimes therapy alone is incomplete.
Why insight does not automatically change response
Most insight lives at the level of narrative – it’s in your mind. So, it’s a cognitive process that doesn’t make it out of your head. But a lot of the responses and behaviours that we set out to change through therapy are rooted in our bodies. And when we are under pressure, our bodies (the nervous system) default to what we know through repetition, not what we have just learned.
So while the story makes sense to us cognitively, the reaction persists because the repetition is rooted in the physical. This gap is often misinterpreted as resistance or avoidance. We tend to shame ourselves for this and, in some instances, I’ve had clients whose therapists shamed them for it (unacceptable). But in reality, this isn’t about you not doing something you could if you wanted to, it is a capacity issue.
Where people quietly lose trust in themselves
When understanding does not translate into change, we often turn inward. They assume we are not trying hard enough. Or that something is uniquely wrong with us. This self-doubt can be more destabilising than the original pattern and it can really damage hope, especially if you had everything riding on therapy as your way forward.
What’s important to remember is that the problem was never a lack of insight. It was a missing layer of support. So, it’s that support that you really need to implement for yourself if change is going to stick.
What shifts when the body is included
When the nervous system is addressed directly, you are turning your attention to the second part of the story – the place where so many of our habits and pain is really stored: the body. When you include this, alongside insights, then you have a really good chance that change will stick.
Not because the past is erased, but because the present feels more resourced. The body learns that old threats are no longer current. And when the body learns that it stops trying to drag you back to your old reactions as the solution to those old threats. Instead, there is space for something new.
As a result, insight becomes usable. Reactions slow. Choice returns. And that big shift that you were hoping for with therapy actually has the space and the resources to manifest.
Nervous system regulation is one of the five pillars of resilience because it’s so vital for helping us to leave the past behind. If you’ve ever felt like you just keep getting pulled back to old reactions, feelings and pain then we need to chat. Book a free intro call today.