Episodi

  • Big Feelers and Processors - Communication Dynamics
    Jan 17 2026

    Understanding each other shouldn’t feel this hard — but when one partner is a Big Feeler and the other is a Big Processor, communication can get tangled fast. In this episode, I break down the emotional and cognitive wiring behind these two styles, why they clash, and how couples can finally start hearing each other again.

    Whether you’re navigating conflict, trying to reconnect, or simply wanting to understand your partner on a deeper level, this episode gives you practical tools you can use today.

    Click below to watch the full episode on YouTube:

    https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLu_wRb72Oq6Htdb7EFHkzF1EyAApKfP7D

    For relationship courses and free downloadable resources visit www.relationstitch.com
    To schedule a therapy session visit www.clydefraley.com

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    16 min
  • Why You Always Fall for the Wrong Person (Psychology Explained) Ep. 10
    Jan 3 2026

    Why You Always Fall for the Wrong Person (Psychology Explained)

    In this episode of the RelationStitch podcast, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Clyde Fraley and his wife Stephanie dive deep into the psychology behind our relationship choices. Following up on a conversation with Bishop Dr. Larry G. Mack, they answer viewer questions about Attachment Theory, trauma, and breaking unhealthy patterns.

    Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/nGytnOfEJrI?si=su2BK_soonyXAB28

    The "Why" Behind Your Choices

    A viewer named Jerry asked a profound question: "I grew up without a mother... am I looking for a mother figure?" Clyde confirms that we often seek out what we missed in childhood. He references Harry Harlow’s monkey experiments, which proved that the need for emotional comfort (love) is just as vital as nutrition [03:53].

    • Familiarity vs. Chemistry: Clyde warns that we often mistake "familiarity" for "chemistry." If you grew up in a chaotic home (e.g., with an alcoholic parent), you might subconsciously choose a chaotic partner because it feels "normal" to your nervous system [06:49].

    Rewiring Your Brain (Neuroplasticity)

    Can we change who we are attracted to? Yes.

    • Trauma Pathways: Every trauma creates a neural pathway that tells your brain what to fear. However, through Neuroplasticity, you can rewire your brain by experiencing safety in new relationships. Healing happens when you choose a partner who is consistent and safe, slowly teaching your brain that you don't need to be in survival mode [16:34].

    Practical Tools for Conflict

    The Fraleys offer concrete advice for handling arguments without destroying the relationship:

    • The Safe Word Rule: Use a safe word (like "Avocado") before you "flip your lid." It takes 20 minutes for cortisol and adrenaline to leave your system, so you must take a break to regain your logic [24:05].
    • Know Your Partner: If your partner has an Anxious Attachment style, do not leave the house during a timeout. Stay in the other room or the backyard. Leaving can trigger abandonment wounds and make the fight worse [24:56].

    Hacking Your Happiness

    Clyde shares how to naturally boost your mood using "Happy Chemicals" [28:48]:

    • Dopamine: Achieve small goals or create art.
    • Oxytocin: Cuddle your partner or pet a dog.
    • Serotonin: Get some sunlight or take a shower.
    • Endorphins: Eat chocolate or spicy food!

    Resource: To dig deeper, check out Clyde’s Romance and Attachment Theory Workbook, available now. at www.relationstitch.com

    Click below to watch the full episode on YouTube:

    https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLu_wRb72Oq6Htdb7EFHkzF1EyAApKfP7D

    For relationship courses and free downloadable resources visit www.relationstitch.com
    To schedule a therapy session visit www.clydefraley.com

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    36 min
  • Why Your Childhood is the Blueprint for Your Marriage Ep. 9
    Jan 3 2026

    Why Your Childhood is the Blueprint for Your Marriage

    After an eight-month hiatus, Episode 8 of the RelationStitch podcast marks a powerful return. Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Clyde Fraley and his wife Stephanie are back behind the microphones with a testimony of resilience.

    Clyde shares his journey of recovering from a life-altering medullary stroke—a battle that required him to relearn how to walk and talk. But he didn't just recover; he wrote a book. This episode dives into the core of that new resource: Attachment Theory.

    Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/OKEFjPXwT9w?si=XtXcki5pm7ymd3VN

    Why "Attachment" Matters

    Clyde explains that while there is no "silver bullet" for marriage, understanding Attachment Theory is the closest thing to a roadmap. It answers the question: Why does my spouse react that way?

    • The Context of Trauma: We often judge our partners' behavior without understanding their history. Clyde notes that childhood trauma isn't just a memory; it is implicit memory stored in the body, driving reactions we often don't understand [14:52].
    • The Four Styles: Clyde outlines the four main attachment styles—Secure, Avoidant, Anxious, and Disorganized. Knowing your partner’s style helps you stop taking their triggers personally.

    Personal Confessions

    In a moment of vulnerability, Clyde admits he leaned toward an Avoidant/Disorganized style early in their marriage. He recalls pulling away when Stephanie tried to kiss him—not because he didn't love her, but because intimacy felt unsafe due to his past. For Stephanie, viewing this through a Secure lens, it felt like rejection. Understanding his style changed everything [08:58].

    The New Workbook

    The episode introduces Clyde’s new book, the Romance and Attachment Theory Workbook. It’s designed not for clinicians, but for couples to:

    1. Identify their style using a simple quiz.
    2. Understand the "Adverse Childhood Experiences" (ACE) score and how it impacts adult health [11:28].
    3. Navigate "Pairings": How does an Anxious person love an Avoidant person? The book offers specific roadmaps for these dynamics [20:31].

    Moving Forward

    Clyde emphasizes that your attachment style is a starting point, not a life sentence. With a trustworthy partner who can "hold the room" for your story, you can heal and move toward security together.

    Get the resource: The workbook is available now at ClydeFraley.com or on Amazon.

    Click below to watch the full episode on YouTube:

    https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLu_wRb72Oq6Htdb7EFHkzF1EyAApKfP7D

    For relationship courses and free downloadable resources visit www.relationstitch.com
    To schedule a therapy session visit www.clydefraley.com

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    28 min
  • Marriage & Ministry: When "Doing Good" Hurts Your Family Ep. 8
    Jan 3 2026

    Marriage & Ministry: When "Doing Good" Hurts Your Family

    In this insightful episode of the RelationStitch podcast, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Clyde Fraley addresses a sensitive but critical topic: Church Burnout and Religious Trauma.

    With recent headlines shaking the faith community, Clyde dives into a common struggle for many couples: the tension between serving the church and protecting the marriage.

    Watch the full video here: https://youtu.be/fzUOR4QcegU?si=4qaIU42LS7Fwv8bo

    The Trap of Over-Serving

    Clyde responds to a viewer who feels that serving in church is actually driving their family apart. He identifies a dangerous cycle where "Kingdom work" is used to justify neglecting the home.

    • The Priority Shift: Clyde is clear: God → Family → Church. If you are sacrificing your marriage or your children on the altar of ministry, the priorities are out of order [03:56].
    • The 20/80 Rule: In many churches, 20% of the people do 100% of the work. This leads to burnout, where faithful volunteers are "taxed" until they resent the very place that should bring them peace [04:02].

    Gifts vs. Fruit

    A key distinction Clyde makes is between spiritual gifts (charisma, preaching, miracles) and spiritual fruit (love, patience, kindness).

    • Warning Signs: A pastor or leader may have dynamic gifts but lack the fruit of the Spirit behind the scenes. If the leadership style is harsh, demanding, or manipulative (e.g., "If you leave, you lose your covering"), it may be time to reassess your involvement [08:00].
    • Trading Fruit: Clyde warns churches against "trading fruit for fruit"—burning out current members to win new converts, resulting in a net zero for the Kingdom [06:51].

    True Kingdom Work

    The episode concludes with a powerful redefinition of what it means to serve God. It isn't just about how many hours you volunteer.

    • Breaking Curses: Clyde argues that simply being a present, loving father and husband who breaks the generational cycle of divorce or dysfunction is, in itself, profound Kingdom work [21:02].
    • Legacy: "If you do nothing else... but treat your family right... you're crushing it." Building a healthy legacy is the most enduring ministry of all.

    Click below to watch the full episode on YouTube:

    https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLu_wRb72Oq6Htdb7EFHkzF1EyAApKfP7D

    For relationship courses and free downloadable resources visit www.relationstitch.com
    To schedule a therapy session visit www.clydefraley.com

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    24 min
  • Interview with My Mother on Relationships and Parenting Ep.7
    Jan 3 2026

    A Mother’s Wisdom: Breaking Generational Curses & Healing the Past

    In a very special Episode 7 of the RelationStitch podcast, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Clyde Fraley invites a guest with 79 years of life experience: his mother, Fran Motter.

    Moving away from clinical theory, this episode focuses on the raw reality of lived experience. Clyde and Fran open up about their once-tumultuous relationship, the scars of the past, and the power of God to restore broken bonds.

    Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/U3FiNZD1-Ao?si=6Rqshx4kP0Mffbea

    The Power of "Who You Pick"

    Fran begins by emphasizing a simple but critical lesson: Relationships dictate your future. She shares the story of "Mama Rita," a neighbor who loved them and impacted their spiritual walk. As Fran notes, "You can’t just hang around with whoever."

    Breaking Generational Curses

    Fran is vulnerable about her own upbringing in a dysfunctional, abusive home. She admits that she didn't always have the tools to parent perfectly because she had never seen a healthy family dynamic.

    • The Turning Point: Fran recalls seeing her in-laws (Clyde’s grandparents) holding hands and sitting on laps—a display of affection she thought only existed in movies. This vision of love helped her break the cycle of abuse she grew up with [10:51].
    • Legacy Over Perfection: Clyde highlights that God looks at the "generational fruit." While Fran’s parents struggled, she did better, and now Clyde builds on that foundation for his children. Healing is often a multi-generational project [07:44].

    A Miracle of Reconciliation

    The most powerful moment of the episode is the story of how Clyde and Fran healed their relationship. After years of conflict during Clyde’s teen years, Fran felt a divine prompt while watching TV to go into his room and make amends. In an instant, the "chasm" between them was bridged—a testament that it is never too late to repair a relationship with your child [16:00].

    Parenting: Punishment vs. Consequence

    They discuss the evolution of discipline. While Fran was raised with punitive measures, Clyde advocates for allowing "life to be the teacher" through natural consequences, preserving the parent-child connection so kids feel safe asking for help [22:36].

    Fran’s Final Wisdom

    After nearly eight decades of life, Fran’s advice is simple: "Without the Lord, we can do nothing." Parenting is too difficult to navigate alone; we need the security of a Heavenly Father to guide us.

    Click below to watch the full episode on YouTube:

    https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLu_wRb72Oq6Htdb7EFHkzF1EyAApKfP7D

    For relationship courses and free downloadable resources visit www.relationstitch.com
    To schedule a therapy session visit www.clydefraley.com

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    28 min
  • Jealously and Narcissism Ep.6
    Apr 24 2025

    The Green-Eyed Monster & The Ego: Overcoming Jealousy and Narcissism

    In Episode 6 of the RelationStitch podcast, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Clyde Fraley and his wife Stephanie continue their journey through 1 Corinthians 13, tackling three heavy-hitters that destroy connection: Envy, Boasting, and Pride.

    Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/r8K6AFr9-7U?si=fzu4hsP05ope_bmm

    Envy & The "Emotional Embezzlement" Trap

    The Fraleys define envy not just as wanting what someone else has, but as a feeling of rejection when a partner succeeds. Clyde shares a personal story of feeling "left behind" early in their marriage when Stephanie’s career took off first [04:11].

    • Emotional Embezzlement: If left unchecked, envy leads to what Clyde coins "emotional embezzlement." This happens when a partner withdraws emotional investment from the marriage—or sabotages their spouse—to bolster their own fragile ego [08:45].
    • The Social Media Illusion: Envy often stems from comparing your reality to someone else’s highlight reel. As Clyde’s mentor Dr. Mary Nicker noted, "The grass may be greener on the other side, but you haven’t seen their water bill" [13:02].

    Pride, Boasting, and the Narcissism Epidemic

    Moving to "does not boast" and "is not proud," the discussion turns to the modern rise of Narcissism.

    • The Danger of "Always" and "Never": A subtle sign of pride is the use of absolutes in arguments (e.g., "You never listen"). These exaggerations are often rooted in a refusal to see any perspective but your own [22:33].
    • Parenting Pitfalls: Clyde warns that over-validating children and shielding them from failure can breed narcissistic entitlement. Allowing kids to experience healthy failure is crucial for developing resilience and empathy [28:31].

    The Antidote: Humility & Modesty

    The cure for these toxins? Contentment and Humility.

    • Quiet Strength: Clyde uses the analogy of boxers at a press conference: the one boasting is often insecure, while the one who is calm and humble usually wins the fight. Humility is a calm emotional state [26:50].
    • Modesty: is about "lowering the estimate of your own importance" to serve the relationship [27:51].

    Click below to watch the full episode on YouTube:

    https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLu_wRb72Oq6Htdb7EFHkzF1EyAApKfP7D

    For relationship courses and free downloadable resources visit www.relationstitch.com
    To schedule a therapy session visit www.clydefraley.com

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    31 min
  • Love is...Ep.5
    Apr 24 2025

    Love is Patient, Love is Kind... But How?

    In Episode 5 of the RelationStitch podcast, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Clyde Fraley and his wife Stephanie continue their deep dive into the true definition of love. Moving beyond cultural myths, they anchor their discussion in the timeless wisdom of 1 Corinthians 13:4, focusing specifically on the first two pillars: Patience and Kindness.

    Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/QpQgCOVNEvs?si=8zIWEHT_ZWSKpVwn

    Patience: The First Line of Defense

    Clyde notes that patience is listed first for a reason—it supports every other virtue. He defines it not just as waiting, but as maintaining composure without complaint or loss of temper [04:02].

    • The Stress of Waiting: Patience is fundamentally a "time piece." Whether waiting for a medical diagnosis (negative) or Christmas (positive), the act of waiting creates stress. Emotional regulation is key to navigating this stress without taking it out on your partner [07:34].
    • Shift Your Focus: Stephanie suggests a powerful mindset shift: instead of looking for where your partner is failing, look for "glimmers of hope." Focusing on their progress naturally fosters more patience [09:27].

    Kindness: Action Over Politeness

    While "nice" is just a disposition, kindness is an action. It requires selflessness.

    • The King and The Fool: Stephanie shares a brilliant metaphor: "Living inside your spouse is a fool and a king (or queen). Who you speak to is who will show up." Treating your partner with honor pulls the best out of them [15:49].
    • Dispositional Needs: Kindness means understanding your partner's unique "dispositional needs" rooted in their childhood—like why one partner insists on American cheese while the other hates it. Understanding the context of their life breeds compassion [17:31].

    Take the Audit

    The Fraleys recommend a self-audit using synonyms and antonyms. Are you being composed and stable (Patience), or defiant and resistant? Are you tender and benign (Kindness), or cruel and thoughtless? [24:08].

    Click below to watch the full episode on YouTube:

    https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLu_wRb72Oq6Htdb7EFHkzF1EyAApKfP7D

    For relationship courses and free downloadable resources visit www.relationstitch.com
    To schedule a therapy session visit www.clydefraley.com

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    28 min
  • What is Love? Ep.4
    Apr 24 2025

    What is Love, Really? Unpacking the Myths and Realities of Connection

    In Episode 4 of the RelationStitch podcast, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Clyde Fraley and his wife Stephanie tackle one of the most loaded questions in human history: "What is love?"

    While the question might summon lyrics from a 90s dance hit, the Fraleys dig much deeper, exploring why so many of us stay in toxic relationships under the guise of "loving" someone.

    Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/mFxw91scQk0?si=w6pgiDVa_ikTJHnU

    The "Love" Trap

    Clyde opens the discussion with a common scenario from his therapy practice: clients who endure repeated infidelity or abuse because they claim, "I just love them." The hosts argue that this isn't love—it's often a result of conditioned responses from childhood [03:39]. If you grew up associating affection with neglect or chaos, you might mistake abuse for intimacy in adulthood.

    Myths We Believe

    The duo discusses how society distorts our view of relationships:

    • The Disney Effect: Movies often sell a "Prince Charming" narrative that sets impossible standards, leading to disappointment when real life isn't a fairy tale [10:05].
    • Social Media: We are bombarded with narcissistic portrayals of love that prioritize material things and selfish gain over sacrifice [11:02].
    • Sex vs. Love: Culture tries to make sex synonymous with love, but they are distinct. In toxic dynamics, "makeup sex" can actually be part of a Trauma Bond—a cycle of abuse and "love bombing" that creates a powerful, addictive chemical attachment similar to gambling [12:31].

    Finding the Healthy Middle

    So, what does healthy love look like?

    • The Continuum of Self: Clyde references Ross Rosenberg’s work, noting that healthy relationships exist in the balance between Codependency (losing yourself to please others) and Pathological Narcissism (making everything about you) [21:07].
    • Love Languages: While useful, the hosts warn that Love Languages should be used to give selflessly, not weaponized as demands to get what you want [20:03].

    The True Source

    Ultimately, the Fraleys suggest that to find the purest definition of love, we must look beyond Hollywood and psychology to the Bible. They set the stage for their next episode, which will take a deep dive into 1 Corinthians 13 as the ultimate blueprint for healthy connection [24:37].

    Click below to watch the full episode on YouTube:

    https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLu_wRb72Oq6Htdb7EFHkzF1EyAApKfP7D

    For relationship courses and free downloadable resources visit www.relationstitch.com
    To schedule a therapy session visit www.clydefraley.com

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    26 min