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The Art of Attunement in Relationships

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Release Date: 03/12/2026

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More Episodes

Most relationship advice focuses on communication skills or conflict resolution.

But underneath both of those is something even more fundamental: attunement.

In this episode, I talk about why attunement — the ability to notice and respond to what the people around us actually need — is the real foundation of healthy relationships.

Whether it’s with a partner, a child, or a friend, our nervous systems are constantly responding to each other. When we ignore that reality, we end up trying to correct behavior instead of understanding what’s actually happening underneath it.

And often, what’s happening is simple: someone is dysregulated.

In this conversation, I share a few moments from parenting recently that completely shifted how I approach difficult situations with my kids. Instead of focusing on correcting behavior, I started asking a different question:

What does this nervous system need right now?

That shift has changed the way I show up as a parent — and the way I think about relationships in general.

Because when we focus on attunement instead of control, we stop trying to force people into who we think they should be and start responding to who they actually are.

In this episode we talk about:

  • Why attunement is the real marker of a healthy relationship

  • How nervous systems influence behavior in families and partnerships

  • The difference between correcting behavior and responding to dysregulation

  • Why trying to change people often backfires in relationships

  • How accepting someone as they are can actually create more peace

  • The role of co-regulation between partners and within families

  • Why many people — especially women — burn out trying to regulate everyone else

  • Simple rituals of regulation couples can use to stay connected

  • The importance of weekly relationship check-ins to stay attuned

Healthy relationships aren’t built in moments of crisis.

They’re built through small systems that keep people connected, regulated, and aware of each other’s needs.

When those systems exist, relationships become a place that restores us instead of draining us.

Learn more about working with Leanne Peterson:
https://www.leannepeterson.com/


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