Episode 55

Why "It" Felt Like It Didn't Work

You tried something different. Maybe you paused before responding, or finally said the real thing instead of the version that comes out sideways. Your partner still got upset. The conversation still went somewhere you didn't want it to go. And somewhere between the end of that exchange and right now, a verdict assembled itself: it didn't work.

This episode is about what "working" actually means in the context of nervous system change — and why the definition most people are using is quietly making the work harder. Rachel breaks down why one careful conversation that still ends in an argument isn't a failed experiment, why your partner having feelings after you tried something new is not proof the approach failed, and what the nervous system is actually tracking underneath the surface of any relational pattern. This is an episode for the person doing the work — whether or not their partner is doing it alongside them.

The nervous system doesn't change on intention. It changes on evidence — small, repeated, consistent evidence that this relationship is becoming a slightly safer place to be. That's a different timeline than most people are told to expect, and it requires a different metric entirely: not whether your partner calmed down faster, but whether, over time, both nervous systems are trusting the relationship a little more.

Consistency isn't the slow path. It's the only path. And understanding why that's true doesn't make it easier — but it does make it mean something.

Resources

  1. Free Course | Break the Cycle: A self-paced introduction to understanding your patterns and nervous system responses.
  2. Free Training | Why Love Feels Like Too Much: A 10-minute video that explains why you spiral in relationships — and the 3-question nervous system reset to interrupt it.
  3. Private Coaching (Limited Availability): High-touch, individualized support for deep relational pattern change.
  4. The Attachment Revolution Membership — Waitlist: Ongoing education, tools, and live support for building more secure relationships.
  5. Meaningful Journey Counseling (WA residents only): Licensed therapy services for individuals and couples in Washington State.

And if you’re tired of replaying conversations at 2am…

My private audio series When Love Feels Like Too Much is the guided version of this work. Five short episodes. Companion Workbook. Nervous system resets you can actually use in the moment.

This is where we move from understanding the cycle to interrupting it.

[Start here]


Disclaimer

This podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for mental health treatment, therapy, diagnosis, or medical advice. Listening to this podcast does not create a therapist-client relationship. If you are experiencing significant distress, please seek support from a licensed mental health professional or medical provider.

About the Podcast

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Coupled With...
Make Relationships Make Sense

About your host

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Rachel Orleck

Hi, I'm Dr. Rachel! I’m a licensed psychologist, couples therapist, and relationship coach who believes that connection doesn’t come from getting it perfect—it comes from getting real.

Through my work (and let’s be honest, my own life), I’ve seen how easy it is to get stuck in the same arguments, to overthink every word, and to wonder if your relationship is just too much work.

That’s why I created Coupled With…—a space for deep-feeling, growth-minded people who want more clarity, less pressure, and relationships that actually make sense.

When I’m not talking about attachment theory or decoding conflict cycles, you can find me chasing my toddler, sipping lukewarm coffee, or rewatching Buffy the Vampire Slayer or a police drama for the hundredth time.