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Why Was It So Hard to Love Me, Mom?

Why Was It So Hard to Love Me, Mom?

 From the moment I could understand love, I was taught that it had to be earned, not freely given. My mother, diagnosed but unwilling to accept her Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), lived in a world of emotional extremes: love and hate, tenderness and cruelty, all colliding in an unpredictable storm. And I was at the center of it.

What It Means to Be the Target

Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a mental health condition characterized by intense and unstable emotions, impulsive behaviors, and difficulty maintaining relationships. Those who suffer from it experience extreme emotional swings, impulsivity, and a deep need to control. When left untreated, their anger is spilled onto those closest to them.

In my mother’s world, I was the one who bore the weight of it all. One moment, I was her best friend; the next, I was the cause of all her suffering. A sigh, a moment of affection from my dad, a glimpse of independence, anything could set her off. And once it did, there was no predicting how fast, how intense, or how long her wrath would last.

She made me believe I was impossible to love. In fact, she told me that to love me unconditionally, she would have had to be God.

For years, I carried that belief, allowing it to shape my entire existence. I was convinced that love would always be painful and to be loved meant I must endure the suffering. That is why I swore I would never have children. I refused to bring a life into a world where love was something to fear. I believed the cycle of hurt was inevitable.

But God had other plans.

A Love That Changed Everything

The moment I became a mother, everything shifted. When I held my children for the first time, I experienced something I had never known before: 💗 unconditional love. Pure and overwhelming. For the first time, I understood that love was never meant to be earned through pain.

God gave me the most precious gift: my boys. They are living proof that the cycle of abuse ends with me. I made a choice, one my mother never did. Instead of passing down pain, I am passing down love, compassion, closeness, and grace. My children will never have to question if they are worthy of love. They know they are deeply and fiercely loved.

Breaking Free

Recently, I took the steps to free myself from the lie that love and pain must coexist. I stepped out of a love life that was defined by suffering and into a life that is all my own. One rooted in truth, in the words of our Heavenly Father and what He says about love. And He says I am loved. 

By opening my heart to the understanding that love is possible, I also recognize that I am not her.

I am my own person, with autonomy, and I do not have to take her or her words with me any longer. Although this journey has not been easy, there are moments when kindness and care still feel unfamiliar, even frightening. When someone cares for me without hurting me, it feels foreign. Sometimes, I slip back into old patterns, believing I must create suffering for myself if I want to receive love in any form.

But I am learning. Every day, it gets better. And I hold on to the hope that one day, I will experience love without fear and fully live in the glory of that truth.

Your Turn to Heal

Healing is a journey, not a destination. If this resonates with you, take a deep breath and ask yourself: What version of love were you taught that no longer serves you?

Your past does not define your future. You are worthy of a love that does not hurt. If you feel safe, share your thoughts below, or simply hold this truth close to your heart.

Why am I still here?

Why am I still here?

 ….

From the moment I entered this world, I was a mistake. A burden.
“Unwanted. Unloved.” These words became the silent echoes that shaped my existence.

My childhood is a scattered puzzle, pieces lost to time and secrecy. What I do know is that my biological father was a heroin addict, consumed by darkness, while my mother, battling her own demons, resented me. That resentment placed me in unsafe, traumatic situations, including time spent with my  biological father. Diagnosed with borderline personality disorder, though she never accepted it, my Mom’s struggles became the undercurrent of my life, pulling me into a chaos I could never escape.

To live without unconditional love is to move through life searching for something you have never known. Studies show that childhood trauma leaves lasting damage, making its victims more vulnerable to habitual abuse.

I am living proof of this truth.

Yet amid the instability, one person chose me: my Dad. Though my brothers carried his blood, he gave me a place in his heart. His love was the closest thing to unconditional that I had ever known, and for that, I am forever grateful.

But love, as I understood it, was always laced with pain. I learned that love and abuse were inseparable, that affection would always come with suffering. The idea that someone could love me without hurting me felt foreign, Impossible. That belief led me into relationships that mirrored my past. Repeated cycles of mistreatment, violence, and debilitating suffering. One relationship nearly ended my life. Deep down, I believed I was inherently flawed, destined for pain. The message ingrained in me for decades was clear: I was bad, and bad people deserved punishment. Forty-four years of abuse cemented that belief.

I live with C-PTSD, a diagnosis that explains my daily experiences but does little to ease the burden. Labels don’t erase the weight of what I’ve endured, nor do they undo the years of damage.

As if fate had not tested me enough, two car accidents left me with 30% permanent brain damage. For years, I was a shadow of myself, trapped inside a body that no longer functioned. Basic tasks like driving, cooking, reading, even standing, became impossible. My world shrank, my independence stripped away. Yet, within the wreckage of my mind, a single, thought emerged: “This can’t be the only purpose of my life. ” Driving became my focus. Not because I needed to go anywhere, but because it symbolized my fight to reclaim my life.

There have been so many moments when I should not have survived. Some, at my own hands.

And yet, here I am.

Every day, I wrestle with the same questions: Why? Why did I survive? Why was I born? Why am I still here? The battle within me is relentless, a constant pull between despair and purpose. I haven’t found a clear answer yet. Maybe I never will.

But perhaps the answer isn’t something grand or extraordinary. Maybe it’s something much simpler.

Maybe survival itself is the purpose. Maybe every scar, every hardship, and every moment I’ve endured exists for one reason: I am alive. And as long as I am alive, I have a chance to experience something lovely, something sweeter.

Perhaps my tomorrows will be filled with goodness, leaving despair where it belongs … in the past.

Maybe, just maybe, something beautiful still awaits us all.

Maybe that’s why I am still here.

An Invitation to Healing

Healing isn’t a destination … it’s a journey. What is one truth you are ready to embrace about yourself today? Whether you write it down, whisper it to yourself, or share it here, know that you are seen, and your story is far from over.

Finding My Place: The Power of Chosen Family

Finding My Place: The Power of Chosen Family

A Life of Isolation

Growing up amidst continual trauma, I learned to survive, not to belong.

I always felt like an outsider, watching from the edges as everyone else moved through life effortlessly belonging. Perhaps being adopted added to this feeling … a quiet, persistent question of where I truly belong.

I longed for deep connections, to be truly seen and valued, to feel real to those around me. But no matter how much I yearned for it, connection always felt just out of reach. Over time, I began to believe that I didn’t belong anywhere, that there was no space for me to be fully myself.

This belief that I didn’t belong became my truth, and I lived as though it were the only reality.

The Cost of Loneliness

That belief shaped everything.

It dictated the relationships I had, the way I let people treat me, and the way I saw myself. I accepted friendships with people who only kept me around for what they could take from me. I allowed people to cross my boundaries, use me, and hurt me all because I thought that was the cost of being included.

If I wasn’t worthy of true connection, then at least I could be useful.

My friendships were built on imbalance. My relationships were built on betrayal. I surrounded myself with people who saw me as less than, and because I believed I was, I let them. Boyfriends cheated. Friends stole. And every day, I woke up with a hollow ache that told me I was alone, even when I wasn’t.

The weight of it all was unbearable. Drugs became my great escape. They dulled the loneliness, blurred the reality of my existence, and for a moment, I didn’t have to feel how deeply disconnected I was from the world around me. But even in that haze, the longing for real connection never disappeared.

Breaking the Cycle

Then, when I was 30, my mom died and something shifted. The code that had governed my entire existence began to crack. Being separated from her forced me to consider a possibility I had never allowed myself to believe: maybe, just maybe, what she had said about me wasn’t the full truth.

It was time to confront the demons of my mother.

Her vindictive nature hadn’t just fractured our relationship; it had created deep divides within our entire family. Her anger and desire for revenge at one time were directed at her sisters, and as a result, the aunts and uncles who had once been a constant presence in my life were suddenly erased. We were expected to act as if they were strangers, as if their love and presence had never mattered.

Through therapy, I began to understand that connection and belonging didn’t mean I have to remain tethered to people simply because I always had. It didn’t have to be rooted in blood.  And just because my biological family wasn’t a tangible option, that didn’t mean I was destined to be alone.

I had the chance to seek out where I truly belonged. The world was vast, filled with people who could become my tribe.

And so, I began my search.

Finding My Chosen Family

I can’t always explain to those who come from families with unconditional love why friendships mean as much to me as family … but they do.

Over the past 20 years, I have had the privilege of calling the most incredible people my friends. I have found people who see me for exactly who I am … all of me. The messy, the loud, the broken. The kind, the silly, the driven. Every part of me.

And each of them brings something into my life that I couldn’t live without.

They show up. Not out of obligation, but because they genuinely care. They’re at my kids’ games and baptisms, cheering just as loudly as if they were bound to us by blood. They carve out time for standing get-togethers, making sure we stay connected no matter how busy life gets. They champion every business venture I take on, celebrating my wins and encouraging me through the setbacks.

And when I suffered my brain injury, they were there. Driving me to appointments. Sitting beside me in the hardest moments. Believing in my recovery even when I struggled to believe in it myself. Unlike the past, where love often felt conditional, their support came without expectations, without judgment … only unwavering presence.

They love me, not because they have to, but because they choose to.

With every new step alongside my tribe, my heart has come to understand what it means to belong. What it means to be truly seen and still loved. I never worry that I am too much or unwanted with them. I know that we are equally valued in each other’s lives.

But this hasn’t always been easy.

Romantic relationships have often been strained by this bond. Most people understand the importance of family, but how do you explain that my friends are my family? That there isn’t some kind of hidden agenda? That I need them as much as you need your mom or brother.

My friends are my brothers, sisters, mothers & fathers. Our love is familial.

For some partners, this was too much to accept. Some relationships didn’t survive, because I could not … I would not … give up my support system, my lifeline, my chosen family.

The Power of Connection

Science and faith both affirm what we instinctively know: we are not meant to exist in isolation.

Studies show that human connection improves mental health, increases longevity, and strengthens resilience. The human brain is wired for belonging; social bonds reduce stress, regulate emotions, and even contribute to physical healing. We thrive when we are supported, seen, and valued within a community.

I have experienced this firsthand.

When I was at my lowest, disconnected from myself and the world, it was my friends who became my lifeline. The people who showed up for me, time and time again, through my darkest days. They helped me move, showed up in moments of crisis, and, more than that, wanted to spend time with me simply because they enjoyed my presence. They reminded me that I was worth something even when I couldn’t see it for myself. When I felt like giving up, it was their unwavering presence that pulled me back.

Biblically, connection is the very foundation of creation. We are called to love one another, to bear each other’s burdens, and to live in fellowship. Jesus himself modeled the power of community, surrounding himself with people who walked with him, supported him, and carried his message forward.

There is a reason we heal better together.

Studies have shown that people who have strong social connections recover from trauma more effectively, have lower rates of anxiety and depression, and even heal faster from physical illness. Love, encouragement, and belonging are not just emotional needs; they are biological and spiritual necessities.

Healing isn’t just about overcoming the past … it’s about discovering where we truly belong.

Together, We Heal

I used to think being strong meant handling everything on my own. That if I could just learn to not need anyone, I would be ok.

But the truth is, individually, we survive. Together, we thrive.

We heal in relationships, in the spaces where we are fully known and still fully loved. When we embrace true connection, we become stronger, not just as individuals, but as a collective. We lift each other. We carry each other. And we remind each other that we are never alone.

True connection is not just a luxury; it is essential.

And when we allow ourselves to step into spaces where love and belonging exist, we don’t just heal … we are transformed.

“When two givers indulge in a connection, it’s like magic. It’s alchemy. I water you, you water me. We never drain each other; we just grow.”

Your Turn to Reflect

What struggles have shaped the way you connect with others? Have you had to unlearn beliefs about love, friendship, or belonging? If you feel safe, share your thoughts below—or simply hold this truth close: Your past does not define your ability to belong. You are worthy of connection, of love, and of a place where you are seen and valued.

Lost, Found, and Forever Loved: This Is Why I Believe

Lost, Found, and Forever Loved: This Is Why I Believe

My faith and belief in God are as unconventional as my life itself.

My faith isn’t something neat or structured. It isn’t something I can package into a perfect explanation. But it is deeply real. It has been my anchor, my survival, the thread that has held me together when everything else unraveled.

 

What follows is my attempt to share what faith means to me and why I believe.

I don’t follow Jesus because I was raised to. I don’t cling to faith because I fear the alternative. My upbringing did not include Sunday school lessons or prayers before dinner. Both of my parents came from religious backgrounds, but because of their own experiences, they chose not to raise us within any belief structure. Today, I remain the only believer in my immediate family.

 

At 20 years old, I found myself pregnant with my first son. It was not planned, but never would I call it a mistake. I was a lost and lonely girl searching for love anywhere I could find it. That search led me to the dimly lit, cloud-filled rooms of drug use, where my own mind was muted, and the substances I took were free to consume me.

And then, in the middle of that haze, I found out I was pregnant.

By the grace of God, the desire for drugs disappeared in an instant. My mind cleared, my body sobered, and my heart became consumed with only one thing … this life growing inside me. I had never wanted children, never imagined myself as a mother, and had never considered how I would raise a child. But suddenly, nothing else mattered.

When my son was born, I experienced a love so overwhelming, so all-consuming, that it terrified me. I held him in my arms, his perfect little heart beating against my chest, and I knew, I could not fail him. I could not be the reason he ever felt the kind of pain I had carried my whole life. The weight of that realization crushed me. How could I protect him from the hurt I knew too well? How could I raise him when I still felt so lost?

At the time, I had just been hired at my first salon. It was obvious to anyone who met me that I was wandering, searching, untethered. The owner of the salon was a believer. Not the kind who preached at people, but the kind who lived his faith through love. His ministry wasn’t behind a pulpit; it was in the way he treated people, the way he made everyone feel seen. He made it his mission to bring the love of Jesus to anyone and everyone. He never forced, never judged, never pressured… only loved.

 He invited me to church more times than I could count, and for a long time, I resisted. I expected judgment, condemnation, rejection. But eventually, I went. Sitting in the very last row, ready to walk out at any moment, I braced myself for words that would feel foreign, harsh, unwelcoming.

But that didn’t happen.

Instead, I heard words that spoke to my soul. Words I had always felt but never let myself believe. It wasn’t foreign. It wasn’t scary. It didn’t attack me like I had expected. It felt like home.

For the first time, I didn’t feel like an outsider looking in, I felt seen and known.

Because I wasn’t raised in church and had never opened a Bible before, I had no framework for what a believer was meant to be. I didn’t filter scripture through the lens of tradition or religious expectations. Everything I learned was new to me, and because of that, every word felt raw, unfiltered, and deeply personal.

As I read, the stories began to come to life. I had incredible people around me who never made me feel ignorant or unworthy. They answered my 3 AM phone calls when I had questions, sat with me as I wrestled with the hard parts, and never once made me feel like I had to believe a certain way to belong. In fact, it felt like they were learning alongside me, as if my wrestling with faith somehow deepened their own understanding.

That’s the thing about God.

His goodness is for everyone, always. It isn’t reserved for the perfect or the ones who seem to have it all figured out. It reaches into the most broken places, into the lives of those who feel unworthy, and reminds us that we have always been enough. No one is a mistake. Every part of us matters. And together, we are more magnificent than we ever could be alone.

The more I read, the more I saw a single, undeniable thread woven through the entire Bible …

LOVE.

Love that is patient, love that is relentless, love that chooses us even when we don’t choose ourselves. Love that does not waver when we fall short, but instead calls us to rise again. God’s unconditional, unwavering love for every single person on this planet was written on every page. I didn’t see the condemnation and wrath I had always heard about. I didn’t see a rigid set of rules meant to control people. What I saw were real, flawed human beings, walking through seasons of pain and joy, failure and redemption. And in every moment, through every high and low, there was God’s love.  Steady, unshaken, and always present.

I didn’t see hatred for those who lived differently. I didn’t see people being cast out for their imperfections. I didn’t see a God who demanded perfection in order for someone to matter. I saw broken people being loved, lifted up, and embraced exactly as they were. And in their stories, I saw pieces of myself. I saw how their struggles, their resilience, and their faith had been recorded not as rules to follow, but as a guide, one that was meant to remind me that I was never alone in my own journey.

When I reached the Gospels, Jesus came to life for me.

His words weren’t just teachings; they were a reflection of the kind of love I had always longed for. A love that did not demand perfection but instead welcomed me as I was, flaws and all. Until then, He had been more of a vague, distant figure. But reading about Him … His words, His actions, the way He moved through the world … something shifted inside me. Here was this man, born into poverty, with no status or privilege. A child, just like every other child, unique and full of purpose. He had no wealth, no power by the world’s standards, yet His presence and love changed everything. And the more I read, the more I realized, this was the love I my heart so desperately longed for,  the love I had always hoped existed.

People like me, the ones who felt damaged, the outliers, the ones who had lost themselves along the way, were the very ones Jesus sought out first. The broken, the hurting, the wandering souls weren’t overlooked or cast aside. They were seen. They were chosen. They were the ones He called to Himself, the ones He wrapped in love and healed. The only people He ever corrected were those who saw themselves as righteous, those who used religion as a weapon rather than a place of refuge.

He taught that each person is uniquely created, loved without condition, and designed for connection. We are not meant to live isolated, self-contained lives. We were created for connection, for community, for the kind of love that holds us together when we feel like falling apart. Our healing is not just for us, it ripples outward, touching the lives of those around us. Each of us holds something essential, something that contributes to the well-being of all. When one of us is hurting, we all feel it. When one of us is lifted, we all rise. We matter as individuals, but together, we are what makes us human.

That’s the very purpose of our existence … to love and to be loved. 

To me, this is what it means to be a follower of Christ. It is not about rules, appearances, or trying to fit into a religious mold. It is about LOVE. Unshaken, unconditional, and freely given. It is about seeing people as Jesus saw them, without judgment or condemnation, but with compassion and grace. It is about knowing that faith is not about figuring it all out, but about trusting that love is the answer.

This is what faith means to me. It is the quiet knowing that even in my worst moments, I am not forsaken. It is the assurance that grace is not just a word, but a reality that continues to reshape me every single day. It is the belief that no one is beyond redemption, that no one is unseen, that we are all part of something greater than ourselves. It is the knowing that even in the darkest moments, we are not alone. And that no matter how lost we may feel, love is always calling us home.

Starting Over: The Lonely, Unfamiliar Path of Healing

Starting Over: The Lonely, Unfamiliar Path of Healing

Do you think of healing as a journey? Me too.

But what no one tells you is that it feels less like following a well-marked path and more like being dropped into an unfamiliar world without a map.

For so long, I operated on a radar tuned to recognize certain types of people and situations … ones that matched what I had always known. This wasn’t conscious; it was survival. The dynamics, the personalities, the chaos … it all felt familiar, even when it was unhealthy. But when you choose healing, that radar gets shut off. Suddenly, what was once familiar no longer feels desirable, yet the opposite is foreign. The people I used to be drawn to? I don’t want that anymore. But who do I seek instead? And how do I even find them when my entire way of navigating the world has been dismantled?

Feeling Like an Outsider in Your Own Life

You don’t realize how much you relied on that internal radar until it’s gone. Now, I walk through the world, observing but not always understanding. I see interactions, unspoken nuances, and social cues that seem effortless to others, yet I feel disconnected. I can’t read people the way I once could, and I don’t fully trust myself to navigate this new reality.

The spaces I once found comfort in now feel suffocating. The relationships I once fought for now feel misaligned. I used to mistake intensity for connection, unpredictability for passion. Now, I crave stability, but I don’t yet know how to recognize it.

Healing means unlearning patterns that were once my lifeline, and that unlearning can feel isolating. It is a disorienting paradox: knowing you no longer want what once felt safe, yet not knowing where your new home is.

The Loneliness of Healing

Healing is lonely.

Not because you are meant to be alone, but because stepping away from what is harmful often means walking into the unknown without company. You become acutely aware of how much of your life was built around things that no longer serve you. And the painful part? At first, you don’t know what to replace them with.

It’s tempting to return to the familiarity of old wounds, to surround yourself with the same people, even if they hurt you, to seek out the same relationships, even if they drain you. Because at least in that world, you knew how to exist.

But healing means resisting the pull of what once destroyed you, even when the alternative feels like floating in nothingness.

Praying for a New Reality

In my uncertainty, I turned to prayer. I asked God to show me the people in this world who do not seek to harm others. People who, before, I had never even noticed. 

He answered.

I began to see kindness in a stranger’s smile, connection in a genuine conversation, and the presence of people who are safe. But even with these new connections, I catch myself hesitating, second-guessing, scanning for what I might be missing below the surface.

Healing is not just about finding new people … it is about learning to believe that goodness exists without a hidden agenda. It is about allowing yourself to receive kindness without suspicion. It is about relearning what it means to be safe.

The Reality of Starting Over

Healing is not just about undoing the damage of the past, it is about learning how to live differently in the present. It is about rebuilding your instincts, trusting yourself in ways you never have before, and accepting that for a while, you might feel completely lost.

At times, this new reality may feel unnatural and overwhelming. The discomfort of unlearning old survival patterns and stepping into something unfamiliar can be disorienting. But you are not lost … you are in transition. You are between the life you once knew and the life you are creating, and while that space can feel like free-falling, it is proof that you are no longer stuck.

You know you don’t want to go back, and you know you can’t.

The version of yourself that tolerated harm, accepted pain as love, and clung to the familiar even when it hurt, that version of you is no longer in control. But without the past guiding you and without a fully formed vision of your future, you may feel like you are drifting without direction.

This is where you have to dig deep and have faith in the hope that is promised to us all.

You have to trust that even though this new reality feels uncomfortable now, one day, it will feel like home. The uncertainty, the loneliness, and the moments of doubt are not signs of failure … they are signs of growth. The life you are stepping into may feel foreign today, but with time, it will become familiar. What feels unnatural will one day feel safe. What feels like isolation will, one day, be filled with connection.

The only thing you can do is move forward, even if you stumble. Even if you take uncertain steps. Even if you have to rebuild yourself one small decision at a time. Because the only way to find your new home is to keep walking toward it.

A Reminder to Carry With You

  • You are not lost; you are exploring new ground.
  • The fear of the unknown does not mean you are in danger.
  • The fact that you are here, choosing to navigate a new way of being, means you are healing.
  • You don’t have to have all the answers to be moving in the right direction.

Healing is a series of small, uncertain steps into a future that is still unfolding. Keep walking.

Your Turn to Reflect

Healing is not easy, and the road forward can feel lonely and uncertain. But you are not alone in this journey. If this resonates with you, I invite you to reflect and share:

  • What has been the hardest part of your healing journey?
  • Have you ever felt lost while trying to move forward?
  • What helps you keep walking even when the path is unclear?

 

You Are Not Failing, You Are Healing

You Are Not Failing, You Are Healing

The Illusion of the Healing Glow-Up

Healing is often painted as a beautiful transformation, a magnificent rise from the ashes, a radiant glow-up where everything falls into place, and the pain of the past vanishes into the abyss.

But if you’ve ever truly fought to heal, you know this version of the story is a lie.

Healing doesn’t feel like a glow-up. It feels like a demolition.

When Life Falls Apart

This is where I am now.

Recently, I went through a devastating life change. My world of ten years: my hopes, my dreams, my future, my heart, everything I knew, disappeared overnight. Nothing felt real except the deep ache in my soul.

Sadness, at some point, becomes exhausting. Crying no longer brings relief. Avoiding life fuels more anxiety than peace. And the heart still longs for connection. It was in that space, in the depths of loneliness, that I decided it was time to face whatever keeps leading me back to this place.

To do this required unraveling the only life I had known, confronting an identity built on survival, and standing in the wreckage with no certainty of what comes next. But for those healing from trauma, uncertainty and danger are often experienced the same way. The unknown doesn’t feel like possibility … it feels like a threat.

When the Past Resurfaces

There’s a moment in every healing journey when, without warning, it happens. It could be a song, a scent, a passing comment, or nothing you can consciously pinpoint, yet suddenly, you are back in a space from your past. It’s as if all the progress you’ve made, all the experiences your healing self lived, were nothing more than a dream. In that moment, life feels like it’s being lived through the lens of your former self.

I am on the other side of one of these experiences right now. The wound is still fresh.

At first, I didn’t understand why it was happening. All I knew was that my mind and body felt the way they did when I was around people who had traumatized me in the past. But there was no reason … legitimately no real reason … for feeling this way. I wasn’t in danger. I wasn’t in the past. And yet, my body told a different story.

To protect myself, I made a decision I now regret, I withdrew completely from a situation that was actually beneficial for my growth. I pulled away, convinced that I couldn’t trust goodness, that people did not truly value me, and that healing wasn’t working for me.

Thankfully, the situation was resolved. My apology was accepted. Disaster was averted. But the experience left me shaken, forcing me to explore and understand why I was still self-sabotaging. Why was everything I knew as truth and fact yesterday unable to override my fear of a nonexistent danger today?

Understanding the Mind’s Need for Safety

God knew I needed my specific therapist if I was going to stay alive, I truly believe that. Plus, I’ve kept him very busy for 15 years so I have data to support that 🙂 He helped me understand something interesting: the mind craves safety, predictability, and control because trauma strips these things away. When faced with uncertainty, the brain perceives it as a direct threat. Fear takes over, and the survival instincts that once shielded you resurface, making you react as if you are still in the past where they were first needed.

The unknown doesn’t feel like possibility; it feels like danger.

For those, like me, who have spent years dissociating, reconnecting with the body can feel overwhelming and foreign. Somatic experiences: physical sensations tied to trauma- often arise before the mind even registers what is happening. When you’ve lived detached from your body for so long, feeling these sensations can be terrifying. The mind and body instinctively agree to override logic and protect at all costs.

Thankfully, my therapist gives me the guidance and tools to help retrain my system to recognize real danger versus perceived danger. That is what healing looks like for me.

Healing Is Not About Forgetting

Healing doesn’t mean you’ll never feel the weight of your past or return to it. It doesn’t mean you’ll wake up one day and suddenly be “over it.” As I shared, some days will still feel unbearable. Some days, healing won’t feel like progress at all.

But healing isn’t linear. The goal isn’t moving on or forgetting … it’s about learning to understand your fears and casting them free with love.

A Reminder to Carry With You

  • The fact that you feel your pain means you’re no longer running from it. That is progress.
  • The fact that you recognize old patterns means you’re aware of them. That is growth.
  • The fact that you are still here, still trying, still moving forward despite it all that is transformation.

Your Turn to Reflect

Healing is not linear, and it does not always feel like progress. But every moment of awareness, every step you take, is a part of your transformation.

What has been the hardest part of your healing journey? Have you ever felt like you were moving backward, only to later realize you were actually growing?

If you feel safe, I invite you to share your thoughts or experiences. Your story might be exactly what someone else needs to hear today.

You Are Not Failing You Are Healing.