Hoarding and Co-Regulation: How Relationships Calm the Nervous System

The science of co-regulation and how safe relationships directly reduce Hoarding at a neurological level.

Co-regulation — the calming of our nervous system through connection with a regulated other — is one of the most powerful and underappreciated hoarding interventions.

What Co-Regulation Is and Why It Matters for Hoarding

Humans are social mammals whose nervous systems are literally designed to be regulated through connection. When someone calm and safe is with us, our nervous systems naturally mirror theirs.

This is why hoarding tends to worsen in isolation and improve with genuine connection.

Co-Regulation in Hoarding Treatment

The therapeutic relationship provides co-regulation — a calm, regulated presence that directly helps the client's nervous system settle during hoarding.

Safe relationships in daily life serve the same function. This is part of why social isolation is so damaging for hoarding.

Building Co-Regulatory Relationships for Hoarding

  • Identify people whose presence tends to calm rather than activate your hoarding
  • Intentionally spend time with these people during difficult hoarding periods
  • Pets provide co-regulation for many people with hoarding
  • Therapeutic relationships (therapist, psychiatrist) provide professional co-regulation

Related Resources

Bringwise

Turn psychology into daily habits

5 minutes a day. Science-backed insights you can actually use.

Download Free