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When a Memory Hits You Like Fear

When a Memory Hits You Like Fear

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Episode Summary:
This episode cracks open one of the most frightening and misunderstood parts of grief: when a memory hits your body like a shock. You're sitting still, lost in a moment with your person, and suddenly your stomach drops, your breath tightens, your heart races, and you remember all over again that they died. It feels like you're grieving in two places at once.

Sharon Brubaker takes you inside the neurobiology behind that jolt. She breaks down how the hippocampus pulls old memories like scenes from a movie, why the amygdala tags those memories as danger, and how your brain fires survival signals long before you can think. This isn't denial and it isn't weakness. It is your nervous system trying to protect you from emotional injury, and it moves faster than the rest of you can keep up.

Through real-life examples and clear teaching, Sharon explains why certain memories hit harder, why they cycle over and over, and why it feels like the loss is happening in real time even years later. Most importantly, she shows you what it takes to calm the system that's been stuck on high alert and how real healing begins when you learn to process the pain—rather than waiting for it to fade on its own.

Key Points Discussed:
• Why your brain drops you into old memories without warning
• How the hippocampus and amygdala replay emotional pain as if it's happening now
• Why the body reacts before the mind understands
• What reconciliation shock is and why it feels like losing your person twice
• How unresolved emotion keeps your nervous system stuck in survival mode
• Why memory jolts soften once grief pain is processed
• What Processing the Pain of Grief teaches your brain to finally settle

Journal Questions:
• What memory pulls your body into a sudden drop
• What part of that memory still feels emotionally unresolved
• How does your body respond before your mind catches up
• What does the second wave feel like when the truth hits
• What would change in your life if your brain learned to soften these jolts

Conclusion:
These memory shocks don't mean you're going backwards. They don't mean you're in denial. They are the biology of grief doing what it was never taught to do differently. When you learn how to process the pain, the brain finally stops hitting the danger button every time you touch the past. Your system settles. The memories soften. The grief stops feeling like an ambush.

This is the work. This is the shift. This is where healing begins.

Contact Us:

Ready to calm your grief brain and learn how to process the pain, not just survive it

Join Sharon Brubaker inside Processing the Pain of Grief, her live classroom where you learn what your brain is doing, how grief works in the body, and how to move the pain out instead of holding it in.

Learn more and get support inside The Grief School community.

Website: thegriefschool.com

Contact: info@thegriefschool.com

TikTok, YouTube, Instagram: @thegriefschool

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