You walk into the room, and there's your partner - the person you love - but after last night's fight, just the sight of them sets off the alarm bells in your body. If you've ever felt that, you're not broken, and you're not alone. It's one of the most human things there is. In this episode, I'm back with Dr. Peter Levine - developer of Somatic Experiencing and author of Waking the Tiger - for his fourth visit to Relationship Alive, and our most personal conversation yet. We get into what actually helps when the person closest to you becomes the one your nervous system reads as dangerous: how to settle yourself first, lead with a little honest vulnerability, and find your way back to each other after conflict. Then, in a very practical part two, Peter shows how to work with those moments when just your partner's voice or face leaves you tense or shut down: how to gently separate the feeling in your body from the story you're telling about it, take each other's hand, and walk toward the hard thing together. Along the way Peter shares, with remarkable openness, the story behind his new memoir and what he's learning about living - and loving - fully in his later years. This one is close to my heart, because it lives right at the place I care about most: regulation as the foundation, and the deeper repair, trust, and reconnection it makes possible. You'll discover: Why the same partner who holds your happiest memories can also trigger fight-or-flight, and what to do in that exact moment The simple, honest thing to say when you're too activated to talk well ("I just realized I'm activated right now - can we come back to this in a few minutes?") How to separate the body sensation from the story, so an old trigger starts to loosen its grip How to be the steady, present anchor when your partner is the one working through something hard Why doing your own work first is often what makes coming back together actually possible Whether you're in a rough patch, rebuilding after a rupture, or you just want to be able to stay connected when things get charged, I think you'll find a lot here to hold onto. Content note: Around the 18-minute mark, Peter shares openly about severe childhood trauma, including sexual abuse, as part of the larger story of how he worked through it - revisiting a positive memory to renegotiate the trauma and put it in the past where it belongs. If that's tender for you, you can skip from about 18:05 to about 19:40 to move past the hardest part and into how he healed. (I also flag this in the episode itself with a short heads-up around 17:37, right before the section.) Take good care of yourself. Peter and I had such a good conversation that we decided to co-teach a workshop called Regulate to Communicate - all about how to stay present and relaxed no matter how challenging the situation gets. If that sounds like it could help, you can find the details here:https://www.neilsattin.com/workshop Claim your Free Top 3 Communication Secrets here:https://www.neilsattin.com/relate You don't have to do it alone. Join the Relationship Alive & Thrive Community for affordable support:https://www.neilsattin.com/thrive Want to regulate your nervous system, and develop rock-solid emotional resilience?https://www.neilsattin.com/connected This is Peter's fourth time on the show. Here's how to find our earlier conversations: Peter 1 (Episode 29): https://www.neilsattin.com/peter1 Peter 2 (Episode 127): https://www.neilsattin.com/peter2 Peter 3 (Episode 198): https://www.neilsattin.com/peter3 Learn more about Peter Levine, Somatic Experiencing, and his books - including Waking the Tiger and his new memoir, An Autobiography of Trauma: A Healing Journey:https://www.somaticexperiencing.com