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You are capable, thoughtful, and self-aware — the kind of person who keeps going, keeps functioning, and keeps trying to understand why so much of your life still feels organized around everyone else.

But inside you feel disconnected from your own wants, overly responsible for other people, tired of performing, or caught in relationships where other people’s moods, needs, and reactions seem to take over your own inner life.

This blog is for adults in Michigan and Ohio who learned to survive by becoming who other people needed them to be — and are ready to understand what that cost.

Here, you’ll find language for the adaptations that once helped you get through, clarity about the impact of emotional neglect and relational trauma, and a deeper way to understand the parts of you that are ready to stop organizing yourself around other people and come back to yourself.

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Why It Still Affects You Barbara Nasser-Gulch Why It Still Affects You Barbara Nasser-Gulch

Why Getting Overwhelmed Feels Like The End Of The World

Getting overwhelmed can feel like more than stress. For adults with histories of emotional neglect or complex trauma, ordinary moments can stir an old body memory of having no choice, no support, and no way back to safety. This post explores why overwhelm can feel so frightening, why your nervous system may interpret distress as helplessness, and how stabilization helps your body begin to learn that hard moments do not have to mean you are powerless.

When Your Nervous System Remembers Having No Choice, No Support, And No Way Back To Safety

The email is not the problem. Their tone of voice is not the problem. The unanswered text is not the problem.

The problem is what happens inside you when your nervous system loses access to the present and drops you back into helplessness.

You can be standing in your own kitchen, holding your own phone, reading one ordinary message, and suddenly feel as if the floor has dropped out from underneath you.

A difficult conversation. A child melting down at the end of a long day. A work email that lands with the wrong tone. A partner’s silence. A decision that needs to be made before you feel ready. A bill you were not expecting. A mistake you wish you could undo. A feeling that rises in your body faster than you can explain it.

From the outside, it may look like stress.

From the inside, it can feel much bigger than stress.

It can feel like something inside you has been pulled under. Like your thoughts are moving too fast, your body is too activated, your emotions are too much, and there is no clear path back to yourself.

You may know, intellectually, that the situation in front of you is not catastrophic. You may be able to tell yourself what is reasonable. You may even hear a calm, adult part of you saying, This is hard, but it is not the end of the world.

And still, your body may not believe it.

Because one of the deepest imprints of complex trauma and emotional neglect is helplessness.

Not just fear.

Not only shame or grief.

Helplessness.

The body remembers what it was like when hard things were happening and there was no one to turn to. No real protection. No reliable comfort. No way to make it stop. No room to have a reaction. No adult who could help you make sense of what was happening. No sense that your pain mattered enough to change anything.

And for many people, this helplessness was not formed through obvious danger or crisis.

It was formed through emotional neglect.

Through the repeated absence of comfort, attunement, guidance, delight, repair, protection, curiosity, and warmth.

Through growing up in an environment where your feelings were ignored, minimized, mocked, managed, or treated as inconvenient.

Through needing support and finding no one there in the way you needed them to be.

Through learning, over and over again, that your inner experience was yours to carry alone.

Complex trauma is not only what happened.

It is also what your nervous system had to survive without.

So when overwhelm shows up in the present, your system may not only register, This is hard.

It may register, I am back there.

Back in a place where I have no choice.

No support.

No way through.

No way out.

No way back to safety.

That is why overwhelm can feel so frightening. It is not only the intensity of the present feeling., but the old imprint that comes with it.

For many people with complex trauma and emotional neglect histories, the most terrifying part of being overwhelmed is not the emotion itself. It is the sense that once the emotion arrives, it will take over completely. That there will be no ground underneath you. No way to slow it down. No way to find yourself inside it. No way to be with what is happening without being consumed by it.

This is where many people become afraid of their own inner experience.

They are not dramatic.

They are not too sensitive.

They are not failing at adulthood.

Their nervous system learned, through repeated experience, that distress came without enough support. Pain came without enough help. Need came without enough response. Fear came without enough protection. Aloneness came without enough comfort.

So the body learned to fear not only what happens outside, but what happens inside.

A feeling begins to rise, and the system reacts as though the feeling itself is dangerous.

Sadness feels like collapse.

Anger feels like loss of control.

Fear feels like proof that something terrible is about to happen.

Confusion feels like failure.

Conflict feels like abandonment.

Disappointment feels like being trapped.

Even ordinary uncertainty can carry an old survival message: I cannot handle this. No one is coming. I have to figure this out alone.

This is why stabilization matters so much in complex trauma recovery.

What Is Stabilization?

Stabilization is sometimes misunderstood as the boring part of trauma work. The preliminary part. The coping-skills part. The thing you do before the real work begins.

But stabilization is not filler.

Stabilization is not shallow.

Stabilization is not what you do because you are not ready for deeper healing.

Stabilization is the work of giving the nervous system repeated, lived experiences of support, choice, and agency.

For someone whose body carries the imprint of helplessness, this is not small.

It is profound.

Because trauma teaches through experience. And healing has to reach the body through experience, too.

Insight helps. Language helps. Understanding your story helps. A good therapeutic relationship helps. Co-regulation helps. Community helps. Being witnessed by another human being matters deeply.

And triggers still happen in daily life.

They happen outside the therapy room.

They happen in the car after a hard conversation. In the kitchen while trying to make dinner. In bed at night when your mind will not stop replaying something. In the middle of parenting, working, dating, grieving, deciding, apologizing, waiting, risking, receiving difficult news, or trying to stay present in a relationship when every part of you wants to disappear, defend, please, explain, shut down, or run.

This is why it matters to have ways of supporting yourself in real time.

Not because you should have to heal alone.

Not because self-regulation replaces relational healing.

Not because trauma recovery is supposed to become another self-improvement project.

But because your nervous system needs experiences that contradict the old imprint.

It needs moments where distress rises and something different happens.

A moment where you notice your feet on the floor.

A moment where you feel the chair holding you.

A moment where you slow your breath without forcing calm.

A moment where you orient to the room and remember where you are.

A moment where you place a hand on your chest or your face or your arms and give your body a signal of contact.

A moment where you say, This is a feeling. This is a memory in my body. This is not the whole truth of this moment.

A moment where you do not abandon yourself simply because something inside you is intense.

These moments may not look impressive from the outside. But to the nervous system, they are evidence.

Evidence that there is some choice now.

Evidence that there is some support now.

Evidence that activation does not have to become emergency.

Evidence that you can feel something hard and remain connected to yourself.

Evidence that the present is not the same as the past.

This is how capacity is built.

Not usually in one dramatic breakthrough. Not by finding the perfect tool. Not by becoming permanently calm. Not by mastering your nervous system so well that you never get triggered again.

Capacity is built through repetition.

Small moments of support, practiced over time, begin to create a new expectation in the body.

I can be upset and still have options.

I can be overwhelmed and still find one small point of contact.

I can be activated and still notice where I am.

I can feel fear without becoming completely lost inside it.

I can experience hard things without returning all the way to helplessness.

The Hard Work of Stabilization

This does not mean the work is easy.

For many people, supportive tools can feel strangely uncomfortable at first. They may feel pointless, awkward, irritating, or too small to matter. Sometimes the idea of slowing down and turning toward the body feels threatening because the body has not felt like a safe place to be.

That makes sense.

If your body was where terror lived, where grief got trapped, where anger had to be swallowed, where need went unanswered, and where aloneness became unbearable, then returning to the body gently is not a simple wellness practice.

It is an act of repair.

And for people healing from emotional neglect, that repair matters deeply. Because emotional neglect often teaches you to leave yourself exactly when you most need care. You may have learned to minimize what you feel, dismiss what you need, push through distress, or scan other people for permission to exist. You may have become highly capable on the outside while remaining unsupported on the inside.

Stabilization begins to change that.

Not all at once.

Not perfectly.

But moment by moment, it gives your body a different experience of you.

You are no longer only the one who pushes through.

You are no longer only the one who figures everything out alone.

You are no longer only the one who performs okayness while something inside you is flooding.

You become someone who can turn toward yourself with support.

This is why stabilization is not about forcing yourself to calm down.

It is not about talking yourself out of your feelings.

It is not about using breathing techniques to become more acceptable to other people.

It is not about becoming less needy, less intense, less emotional, or less affected.

It is about building enough internal and external support that your system no longer has to interpret every wave of distress as proof that you are alone and powerless.

A stabilized nervous system is not a nervous system that never hurts.

It is not a nervous system that never reacts.

It is not a nervous system that moves through life in perfect regulation.

A stabilized nervous system is one that has begun to learn: I can come back.

I can move through this.

I can receive support.

I can make a choice.

I can pause.

I can feel what is here without being destroyed by it.

I can be with myself in a way no one knew how to be with me then.

That last part matters.

Because complex trauma and emotional neglect often leave people looking outside themselves for the proof that they are safe, okay, loved, forgiven, wanted, or allowed to exist. There is nothing wrong with needing other people. We are relational beings. We heal in relationship.

But when the body carries helplessness, the absence of another person’s immediate reassurance can feel like danger. Someone else’s mood can become the weather system you live under. A delayed text can become a threat. A disagreement can feel like losing the ground. Another person’s disappointment can feel like annihilation.

Stabilization helps create a little more room.

Room between the trigger and the old conclusion.

Room between the feeling and the fear of the feeling.

Room between someone else’s reaction and your own sense of self.

Room between activation and helplessness.

In that room, healing becomes possible.

A New Experience Is Essential

This is one of the reasons trauma therapy cannot only be about telling the story of what happened. The story matters. Being believed matters. Grieving what was missing matters. Making meaning matters.

But the nervous system also needs new experiences of agency.

It needs to discover, in small and repeated ways, that you are no longer the child who had no option but to endure.

You can leave the room.

You can ask for a pause.

You can feel your feet.

You can name what is happening.

You can reach for support.

You can decide not to answer immediately.

You can take yourself seriously.

You can let a feeling move through you without obeying every command it gives.

You can be kind to the part of you that still expects no help.

These are not small things.

They are the building blocks of safety.

Over time, this is what supportive nervous system work begins to teach:

Hard does not have to mean helpless.

Activated does not have to mean unsafe.

Alone in this moment does not have to mean abandoned.

A feeling can be intense without being endless.

A trigger can be old without being true.

The body can learn something new.

And when the body begins to learn that, deeper trauma work becomes more possible.

Not because you have finally become calm enough to deserve healing.

But because your system has more support for what healing asks of you.

A stabilized nervous system is a nervous system with more room for truth. More room for grief. More room for anger. More room for connection. More room for choice. More room for the self that had to go underground in order to survive.

This is why stabilization is not separate from healing.

It is healing.

Every time you meet yourself with support instead of abandonment, something old is being answered.

Every time you give your body a felt sense of choice, something old is being interrupted.

Every time you stay with yourself through a hard moment, without turning the intensity into proof that you are powerless, something new is being built.

Slowly, the nervous system begins to understand:

This is hard.

But I am not back there.

I am here.

And here, there is support.

Here, there is choice.

Here, there is a way through.

Here, I can come back to myself.

How Therapy Helps

EMDR and trauma-focused therapy can be the place where this begins to happen in a new way. Not just by talking about what happened, but by slowing down enough for your nervous system to have a different experience inside the present moment. A place where you can begin to notice what happens in your body without being rushed, shamed, minimized, or left alone with it. A place where you can learn to meet yourself with the care, steadiness, protection, and compassion you needed then but did not receive.

This is part of what reparenting really means. Not forcing yourself to become instantly calm or perfectly regulated, but learning how to stay with yourself differently when old helplessness rises. Learning how to offer your body cues of safety, choice, and support. Learning how to become, slowly and imperfectly, someone inside yourself who can say: I see you. I believe you. I am here. You are not alone with this anymore.

And sometimes, before you can offer that to yourself, you need to experience it with someone else. In trauma-focused therapy, being met, seen, held, and validated in the moment can become part of the healing itself. Not as an idea. Not as a technique. As an experience your nervous system can begin to take in.

If this is the kind of work you are ready for, you are welcome to reach out for a free consultation to see whether working together feels like a good fit.

I offer virtual EMDR therapy across Michigan, including Metro Detroit and Grand Rapids, and across Ohio, including Columbus. If you’re ready to address the deeper roots of childhood emotional neglect, shame, anxiety, or emotional shutdown, you can schedule a free consultation here.

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Why It Still Affects You Barbara Nasser-Gulch Why It Still Affects You Barbara Nasser-Gulch

When You’re Not Securely Attached To Yourself, Relationships Feel Harder Than They Should

A delayed response, a quiet mood, a canceled plan, or a change in someone’s tone can seem small from the outside — but inside, your body may respond as if something important is at risk. This post explores why relationships can feel so hard when you do not yet feel securely attached to yourself, and how emotional neglect can make other people’s emotions, distance, and separateness feel personal, threatening, or impossible to stop tracking.

When you don’t feel steady inside yourself, disappointment, distance, and other people’s emotions can start to feel like threats to who you are.

You send a text and don’t hear back for a few hours.

You walk into the kitchen and someone you love seems quieter than usual.

A friend cancels plans, and even though her reason makes sense, something in you drops.

A coworker responds with fewer words than normal, and suddenly you are replaying the last conversation, looking for what you may have done wrong.

Someone close to you is sad, irritated, distracted, disappointed, tired, or harder to reach — and before you have had time to think clearly, your body is already trying to solve it.

You may ask what’s wrong.

You may explain yourself.

You may become overly cheerful.

You may go quiet.

You may start scanning their face, their tone, their timing, their energy, their wording.

You may feel the old pressure to fix the atmosphere before it becomes dangerous.

From the outside, nothing dramatic may be happening. No one has yelled. No one has left. No one has said, “I’m upset with you.” But inside, your system is already responding as if something important is at risk.

This is not only about romantic relationships.

It can happen with a spouse or partner, but it can also happen with friends, adult children, parents, siblings, clients, coworkers, church members, or anyone whose opinion, approval, closeness, or emotional state seems to matter.

A delayed response does not feel like a delayed response. It feels like rejection.

A quiet mood does not feel like quiet. It feels like withdrawal.

A disagreement does not feel like two separate people seeing something differently. It feels like danger.

Someone else’s sadness feels like your responsibility.

Their irritation feels like your failure.

Their need for space feels like abandonment.

Their disappointment feels like evidence that you have done something wrong.

And from inside that experience, the problem can look obvious.

They are not listening.

They do not understand.

They do not reassure you enough.

They are not paying enough attention.

They are not giving you what you need.

They are upset, distant, defensive, unavailable, immature, avoidant, or hard to reach — and if they would only soften, explain, respond, engage, repair, open up, or change, then maybe you could finally feel settled.

Sometimes, of course, the other person really is unavailable. Sometimes they are dismissive, immature, defensive, unsafe, chronically avoidant, or unwilling to take responsibility. Those realities matter.

But sometimes the deeper issue is not that the other person is failing to give you what you need.

Sometimes the deeper issue is that you do not yet feel securely connected to yourself.

You do not have enough internal steadiness to stay with yourself when another person is separate from you — when they have their own mood, their own limits, their own needs, their own timing, their own disappointments, their own inner life.

So their separateness does not feel neutral.

It feels personal.

It feels threatening.

It feels like something you have to manage, decode, repair, prevent, or survive.

And when you are not securely attached to yourself, being with other people can start to feel dangerous in ways that are hard to explain.

When Someone Else’s Mood Feels Like Your Emergency

If you grew up with emotional neglect, you may have learned very early that connection was something to monitor.

You may not have had the kind of steady emotional presence that helped you feel held, known, protected, and guided from the inside out. Maybe no one helped you understand your feelings. Maybe your needs were treated as too much. Maybe your distress was ignored, minimized, criticized, or met with discomfort. Maybe the people around you were physically present but emotionally hard to reach.

So you adapted.

You learned to read the room.

You learned to notice shifts in tone, energy, facial expression, silence, tension, disappointment, or withdrawal.

You learned to stay ahead of other people’s feelings, because their feelings changed the emotional weather.

You learned to become careful.

Useful.

Good.

Low-maintenance.

Responsible.

You learned to find safety by staying connected to what was happening in someone else.

But the cost was enormous.

You became highly attuned to other people and under-attuned to yourself.

You learned how to track the bond, but not how to rest inside your own being.

And this is where relationship pain gets confusing.

Because as an adult, you may genuinely want love, closeness, honesty, mutuality, and emotional intimacy. But when the other person has a feeling, a limit, a mood, a need, a wound, a silence, or a separate inner life, your nervous system may not experience that as normal human separateness.

It may experience it as threat.

Their disappointment feels like danger.

Their unhappiness feels like your assignment.

Their anger feels like proof you have failed.

Their distance feels like abandonment.

Their anxiety feels like something you must fix.

Their withdrawal feels like something you must solve before you can breathe again.

This can make relationships feel impossible, because you are not only relating to the person in front of you.

You are relating through an attachment system that learned: I am safe only when the other person is okay with me.

The Problem Is Not Always What You Think It Is

When you lack a secure connection to yourself, it is very hard to tell the difference between a real relational issue and an old attachment alarm.

Everything feels urgent.

Everything feels personal.

Everything feels like it means something about your worth, your safety, your lovability, or the future of the relationship.

So you may try to get the other person to provide the security you cannot yet access internally.

You may need them to explain more.

Reassure more.

Listen longer.

Understand perfectly.

Respond faster.

Say it the right way.

Come closer at exactly the moment your nervous system starts to panic.

And when they cannot do that — because they are human, limited, separate, tired, triggered, imperfect, or simply having their own experience — it feels like they are failing you.

It feels like they are withholding the very thing you need to survive emotionally.

But the deepest ache may not be, You are not giving me enough.

It may be, I do not know how to stay connected to myself when you are not giving me what I need.

That distinction changes everything.

Because if the entire problem is the other person, then the only path to peace is getting them to change.

They have to understand.

They have to soften.

They have to respond.

They have to stop being upset.

They have to stop needing space.

They have to stop having reactions that activate you.

They have to become steady enough that you no longer have to feel what you feel.

But that is not secure attachment.

That is emotional dependence disguised as relational need.

Secure attachment does not mean you never need reassurance, repair, tenderness, or responsiveness from another person. Those things are real and important. A healthy relationship should have them.

But secure attachment also means you can remain with yourself when another person cannot immediately regulate you.

You can feel hurt without collapsing.

You can feel scared without accusing.

You can feel lonely without demanding.

You can feel disappointed without losing your center.

You can let another person have their feelings without making those feelings the measure of your worth.

Secure Attachment Means The Ability To Be Comfortably Separate As Well As Comfortably Connected

A secure attachment style is not only about being able to feel close to someone. It is also about being able to tolerate separateness.

This is where many people misunderstand attachment.

They think secure attachment means, I finally find someone who never makes me feel insecure.

But secure attachment is not the absence of discomfort.

It is the capacity to stay grounded in the presence of discomfort.

It means you can love someone without fusing with them.

You can need someone without making them responsible for your entire emotional stability.

You can be affected by someone without being overtaken by them.

You can allow another person to be sad, angry, quiet, disappointed, preoccupied, or unsure without immediately turning their inner state into your emergency.

You can remain connected without disappearing.

You can remain separate without feeling abandoned.

For someone with emotional neglect in their history, this can feel profoundly unfamiliar.

Because emotional neglect often teaches you that separation is not safe.

If no one helped you develop a steady internal sense of your own worth, your own emotional reality, your own right to exist, and your own capacity to handle hard things, then another person’s emotional availability can start to feel like the ground beneath your feet.

When they are warm, you feel okay.

When they are distant, you feel unstable.

When they approve, you feel worthy.

When they are upset, you feel threatened.

When they withdraw, you disappear.

That is not because you are needy, dramatic, or broken.

It is because your attachment system learned to look outward for something that was never firmly built inside.

Becoming Securely Attached To Yourself

The real work, then, is not to stop needing people.

It is to stop abandoning yourself when you need them.

To become securely attached to yourself means you begin to develop an inner relationship strong enough to hold your own experience.

You learn to notice what is happening inside you before immediately reaching for control outside you.

You learn to say:

I am scared, and I can be with this fear.

I feel rejected, and I do not have to treat that feeling as absolute truth.

I want reassurance, and I can offer some steadiness to myself first.

Someone else is upset, and that does not automatically mean I am bad.

Someone else is separate from me, and I still exist.

This is not self-sufficiency in the cold, lonely sense.

It is not pretending you do not care.

It is not deciding you should never need comfort, tenderness, or repair.

It is the development of an inner attachment figure — a steadier self that can turn toward your own fear, shame, anger, grief, longing, and panic without rejecting you.

You become less dependent on another person’s immediate response because you are no longer completely absent from yourself.

Letting Other People Be Separate

One of the most important signs of secure self-attachment is the ability to let other people have their own feelings.

This sounds simple until you understand how threatening other people’s feelings can feel when you grew up emotionally alone.

If someone is upset, you may feel compelled to fix it.

If someone is disappointed, you may rush to defend or overexplain.

If someone is quiet, you may start scanning for what you did wrong.

If someone needs space, you may feel abandoned.

If someone has a problem, you may treat it as your responsibility.

If someone is emotionally dysregulated, you may organize yourself around trying to bring them back to calm.

This may look like love.

It may even be praised as empathy, sensitivity, loyalty, or devotion.

But often, it is fear.

It is the old belief that you cannot be okay unless the other person is okay.

Secure attachment allows a different kind of love.

A love that can say:

I care about what you feel, but I do not have to become it.

I can listen without absorbing.

I can comfort without rescuing.

I can take responsibility for my part without taking responsibility for your entire emotional state.

I can let you be disappointed and still know I am not defective.

I can let you struggle without making your struggle proof that I have failed.

This is what makes real intimacy possible.

Not the absence of distress.

Not perfect attunement.

Not constant reassurance.

But the ability for two people to remain connected while still being two people.

Why This Creates So Many Relationship Conflicts

Many relationship conflicts are not really about the surface issue.

They are about the terror underneath the surface issue.

The argument may seem to be about a text message, a chore, a tone of voice, a plan, a facial expression, a lack of help, a delayed response, or whether someone said the right thing.

But underneath, the attachment alarm is asking:

Am I safe with you?

Do I matter?

Are you leaving?

Am I too much?

Did I do something wrong?

Can I trust you to care about me?

Can I still exist if you are not okay with me right now?

When you are not securely attached to yourself, those questions do not stay questions. They become emergencies.

So you protest.

Withdraw.

Pursue.

Accuse.

Explain.

Analyze.

Collapse.

Demand.

Rescue.

Interrogate.

Shut down.

Try harder.

You may believe you are trying to get the other person to understand you.

But at a deeper level, you are trying to get them to regulate an attachment wound that feels unbearable inside your own body.

This is why the same conflict keeps repeating.

Even if the other person gives some reassurance, it often does not last.

Even if they explain, you may need them to explain again.

Even if they apologize, your body may still feel unsafe.

Even if they change one behavior, another threat appears.

Because the deepest insecurity is not only in the relationship.

It is in your relationship with yourself.

What Changes When You Become More Secure Inside Yourself

When you become more securely attached to yourself, relationships do not become painless.

You still care.

You still get hurt.

You still need repair.

You still have preferences, longings, boundaries, disappointments, and grief.

But everything does not feel like annihilation.

A partner’s mood can be a partner’s mood, not an immediate verdict on your worth.

A disagreement can be a disagreement, not proof of abandonment.

A boundary can be a boundary, not rejection.

A pause can be a pause, not the beginning of the end.

Someone else’s distress can matter without becoming your emergency.

Your own distress can matter without becoming their obligation to erase.

This is the beginning of freedom.

You can ask for what you need more cleanly because you are not asking from panic.

You can listen more openly because you are not hearing every feeling as accusation.

You can take responsibility more honestly because you are not collapsing into shame.

You can offer care more freely because you are not using care to secure your own safety.

You can receive love more deeply because you are not constantly testing whether it is still there.

You can stay present with another person because you are no longer leaving yourself.

This Is What Healing From Emotional Neglect Makes Possible

This is where healing from emotional neglect becomes so important.

Because the goal is not simply to understand your childhood.

The goal is to change the way your nervous system learned to organize itself around connection.

Emotional neglect teaches you to look outward for evidence of whether you are okay.

Healing teaches you to build an inner attachment strong enough to help you stay with yourself — enough that someone else’s separateness no longer feels like danger.

Enough that another person’s feelings no longer automatically become your responsibility.

Enough that you can feel connected without performing, pursuing, appeasing, rescuing, or disappearing.

Enough that you can love without losing access to yourself.

EMDR therapy can be especially helpful here because these responses are not only intellectual. They are stored as implicit emotional learning — body-level expectations about what happens when someone is upset, when you have needs, when you disappoint someone, when there is distance, when you are not immediately reassured.

You may already know, logically, that someone else’s mood is not your fault.

You may already know that conflict does not always mean abandonment.

You may already know that you cannot manage everyone’s emotions for them.

But knowing is not the same as feeling safe.

Healing works with the part of you that still does not feel safe.

The part that learned to scan, appease, pursue, withdraw, perform, collapse, or take responsibility for everything.

The part that still believes connection depends on leaving yourself.

The Relationship You Have With Yourself Changes Every Other Relationship

When you are not securely attached to yourself, love can feel like something you have to keep earning.

Closeness can feel unstable.

Separation can feel unbearable.

Other people’s feelings can feel like your job to fix.

And relationships can become places where you are constantly trying to get someone else to give you enough security to make up for the security that never developed inside.

But as you heal, something begins to change.

You still want connection, but you are less willing to abandon yourself to keep it. You still care what others feel, but you no longer treat their feelings as your identity.

You still need people, but you are no longer completely lost when they cannot meet you perfectly. You still love deeply, but you are learning to remain present inside your own life.

That is secure attachment.

Not just with another person.

With yourself.

And when you become more securely attached to yourself, relationships stop being a place where every silence, mood, conflict, and distance feels like danger.

They become something more honest.

Two people.

Separate and connected.

Imperfect and responsible.

Affected and still whole.

Able to love without one person disappearing into the other.

That is not emotional distance.

That is maturity.

That is safety.

That is the kind of connection emotional neglect made difficult — and healing can begin to restore.

I offer virtual EMDR therapy across Michigan, including Metro Detroit and Grand Rapids, and across Ohio, including Columbus. If you’re ready to address the deeper roots of childhood emotional neglect, shame, anxiety, or emotional shutdown, you can schedule a free consultation here.

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How You Learned to Cope Barbara Nasser-Gulch How You Learned to Cope Barbara Nasser-Gulch

Why You Feel Anxious All The Time

If you grew up with emotional neglect, anxiety may not be “just how you are.” It may be the result of a nervous system that learned to scan, prepare, prevent, please, and stay ahead of pain. This post explores how anxiety shows up as hypervigilance, overthinking, future worry, rumination, control, and worst-case thinking — and why these responses make sense as adaptations to relational trauma.

When Anxiety Is A Trauma Response, Not A Personality Flaw

Anxiety often begins long before anyone calls it anxiety.

No one looks at a small child and says, “This is a nervous system learning to survive.”

They say the child is sensitive.

Shy.

Intense.

A worrier.

A perfectionist.

A little too aware of what is happening around them.

Maybe the child asks too many questions before going somewhere new. Maybe they need to know the plan. Maybe they watch faces carefully, notice tension before anyone names it, or become uneasy when the mood in the room changes. Maybe they try to be good, helpful, prepared, agreeable, impressive, funny, invisible, or whatever the moment seems to require.

From the outside, it may look like temperament.

And some of it may be temperament.

But for many adults who grew up with emotional neglect or relational trauma, anxiety is not simply “how they are.” It is how they adapted.

It began in ordinary rooms where the emotional rules were never clearly explained, but had to be learned anyway.

A parent is quiet, and the child feels the air change.

A caregiver is overwhelmed, and the child becomes careful.

Someone is irritated, and the child starts scanning for what went wrong.

A conflict happens, and no one repairs it.

A child is upset, and instead of being helped to understand what they feel, they are dismissed, corrected, minimized, ignored, shamed, or left alone with too much.

Nothing dramatic has to happen for a child to become anxious.

Sometimes anxiety grows in the absence of steadiness.

The absence of attunement.

The absence of someone saying, in a thousand different ways, “I see what is happening inside you, and you do not have to manage it alone.”

When that kind of support is missing, a child often learns to stay alert.

Alert to other people’s moods.

Alert to disappointment.

Alert to conflict.

Alert to mistakes.

Alert to anything that might create distance, criticism, withdrawal, rejection, embarrassment, or emotional chaos.

Over time, that alertness can become a way of living.

And then, years later, the adult wonders why they cannot relax.

You Are Not Just “An Anxious Person”

There is a particular kind of loneliness in believing anxiety is just your personality.

It makes the anxiety feel like a defect.

Like you are simply wired wrong.

Like other people move through life with ease and you were somehow born with a mind that will not stop scanning for danger.

So you try to manage yourself.

You read about breathing.

You try to think positively.

You tell yourself to stop overreacting.

You make lists, plans, backup plans, emergency plans, and contingency plans for the backup plans.

You prepare yourself for every possible outcome, not because you enjoy being controlling, but because uncertainty feels like exposure.

And then, when you still feel anxious, you may decide you are the problem.

Too sensitive.

Too intense.

Too much.

Too hard to calm down.

But anxiety in survivors of emotional neglect often makes profound sense.

It is not random. It is not weakness. It is not a character flaw. It is not proof that you are broken.

It is an intelligent response to having lived in emotional environments where you had to anticipate what was coming because no one reliably helped you feel safe in what was happening.

That matters.

Because when anxiety is understood only as a symptom, the goal becomes getting rid of it.

When anxiety is understood as a trauma response, the goal becomes listening to what it has been trying to protect.

Hypervigilance About Other People’s Emotional States

One of the most common forms of anxiety after emotional neglect is hypervigilance around other people’s moods.

You may notice the slight shift in someone’s tone before anyone else does. You may feel a jolt in your body when a text comes back shorter than usual. You may scan faces, silences, pauses, sighs, word choices, delays, and changes in energy.

You may ask, “Are you okay?” when what you really mean is, “Are we okay?”

This kind of anxiety is not just concern.

It is often the old survival system trying to determine whether connection is still safe.

If you grew up around emotional inconsistency, withdrawal, criticism, volatility, immaturity, or unspoken tension, you may have learned that other people’s moods mattered deeply. A parent’s irritation could change the whole day. A silence could mean trouble. A facial expression could carry consequences. A shift in energy could mean you needed to adjust quickly.

So your system became skilled.

Very skilled.

You learned to detect danger before it became visible. You learned to soften yourself before someone got upset. You learned to manage the room before the room turned against you. You learned to become responsible for emotional weather that was never yours to control.

As an adult, this may look like empathy.

And sometimes it is empathy.

But empathy feels different when it is free.

Hypervigilance feels like obligation. It feels like you cannot settle until you know everyone is okay with you. It feels like you are always listening for the emotional floor to drop.

This is not because you are needy.

It is because your body learned that distance, displeasure, or withdrawal could be dangerous.

Worry About The Future

Anxiety also shows up as constant future-planning.

What if this happens?

What if that goes wrong?

What if I cannot handle it?

What if I make the wrong choice?

What if I disappoint someone?

What if the money runs out?

What if the relationship falls apart?

What if I do not see the problem in time?

For people with emotional neglect histories, worry can feel like responsibility. It can feel like maturity. It can feel like being prepared.

And sometimes preparation is wise.

But worry is different.

Worry tries to emotionally live through the future before the future arrives. It attempts to solve uncertainty by imagining every possible danger in advance.

This makes sense if your younger self often felt alone with hard things.

If no one consistently helped you organize your feelings, think through problems, repair after difficulty, or trust that you could be supported when life became overwhelming, then the future may not feel like something you can meet as it comes.

It may feel like something you must outrun.

So you try to stay ahead of everything.

You plan out the conversation.

You imagine the conflict.

You predict the disappointment.

You rehearse the explanation.

You prepare for being misunderstood.

You calculate how to prevent pain before pain has even entered the room.

This is exhausting.

And it is also understandable.

When no one helped you feel held in the present, your system may have tried to create safety by controlling the future.

Rumination About The Past

Anxiety does not only live in the future.

It also loops through the past.

You replay the conversation.

You analyze the look on someone’s face.

You wonder whether you said too much, sounded weird, seemed selfish, failed to explain yourself clearly, missed a cue, offended someone, disappointed someone, or somehow created a problem you did not intend to create.

You may go over the same moment again and again, trying to find the exact point where things went wrong.

This can look like overthinking.

But often, rumination is an attempt at repair when repair was not available.

If you grew up in an environment where conflict was not talked through, where emotions were dismissed, where misunderstandings lingered, where people withdrew instead of repairing, or where you were left to make sense of relational pain alone, your mind may have learned to keep searching.

What happened?

What did I miss?

How do I prevent this next time?

How do I make sure I am not abandoned, criticized, blamed, shamed, or misunderstood again?

Rumination is often the mind’s attempt to find control after an experience of emotional helplessness.

It is not foolish.

It is not dramatic.

It is a system trying to create safety through analysis because safety was not created through connection.

The problem is that rumination rarely gives the nervous system what it is looking for.

It may produce explanations.

It may produce insight.

It may even produce a very convincing case against yourself.

But it does not always produce relief.

Because the deeper need is not just to understand what happened.

The deeper need is to feel safe now.

Worst-Case Scenarios And Catastrophic Thinking

For survivors of emotional neglect, worst-case thinking can become a form of self-protection.

If I imagine the worst, maybe I will not be blindsided.

If I prepare for rejection, maybe it will hurt less.

If I assume the problem is coming, maybe I can stop it.

If I expect disappointment, maybe I will not be foolish enough to hope.

This is how anxiety steals joy before anything has even happened.

It asks you to pay for possible pain in advance.

And because you have paid so many times before, because your body knows what disappointment feels like, because you may have been surprised by emotional absence when you most needed presence, worst-case thinking can feel responsible.

It can feel like wisdom.

It can feel like not being naive.

But there is a cost to always preparing for impact.

You may not let yourself enjoy what is good while it is happening. You may hold back from trusting people who have not actually harmed you. You may interpret uncertainty as threat. You may confuse fear with intuition. You may become so organized around preventing pain that you do not have much room left for desire, rest, play, hope, or ease.

That is not freedom.

That is a life organized around threat.

And if emotional neglect taught you that support might not be there when you need it, of course your system tries to prepare for everything.

Of course it does.

But you were not meant to spend your life bracing for every possible loss.

Trying To Control Every Little Detail

Control is one of anxiety’s favorite disguises.

It can look like competence.

Efficiency.

High standards.

Being organized.

Being the one who thinks things through.

And sometimes it is exactly that.

But when control is driven by trauma, it has a different quality. It is tense. Urgent. Rigid. Difficult to put down.

You may need to know exactly what will happen, who will be there, what time things start, how long they will last, what the expectations are, what might go wrong, what someone meant, how someone will respond, and what you will do if things do not go as planned.

You may plan the details of your life not simply because you like order, but because unpredictability feels like danger.

This is especially common when childhood felt emotionally unpredictable, even if the outer structure of life looked stable.

A home can have routines and still lack emotional safety.

A family can look organized and still feel relationally confusing.

A parent can be physically present and emotionally unavailable.

A child can know what time dinner is and still have no idea what version of a parent they are going to get.

When that is the case, control becomes a way to create the steadiness that was missing.

If I can plan enough, maybe I can relax.

If I can anticipate enough, maybe I can avoid conflict.

If I can do everything right, maybe no one will be upset.

If I can control the details, maybe nothing will fall apart.

But anxiety is never satisfied for long.

There is always another detail.

Another possible outcome.

Another person’s reaction.

Another thing to prepare for.

Another edge to scan.

This is how control becomes a cage that pretends to be safety.

The Body Keeps Asking, “Am I Safe?”

Anxiety is not always loud thoughts.

Sometimes it is a body that cannot settle.

A tight chest.

A clenched jaw.

A stomach that drops when a notification comes in.

Shoulders that never fully lower.

Restlessness when nothing is wrong.

Fatigue from being internally on guard.

A sense of urgency you cannot explain.

Trouble sleeping because your mind becomes most active when the world finally gets quiet.

Difficulty resting unless everything is done, everyone is okay, and nothing uncertain remains.

Which, of course, almost never happens.

For many survivors of emotional neglect, the body learned early that safety required vigilance. Not because danger was always obvious, but because emotional safety was not consistent enough to trust.

So the body keeps checking.

Are we okay?

Is something wrong?

Did I miss something?

Is someone upset?

What do I need to do?

Who do I need to be?

This is why anxiety can persist even when your life looks fine.

Your adult mind may know there is no immediate crisis. Your body may still be living by rules learned in a much earlier environment.

Rules like:

Stay alert.

Do not need too much.

Do not make mistakes.

Do not upset anyone.

Do not relax until everything is under control.

Do not trust ease; it may not last.

These rules may have helped you survive.

They do not have to define your life.

Anxiety As An Adaptation

There is a difference between saying, “I have anxiety,” and saying, “My anxiety makes sense.”

One is a label.

The other is a beginning.

Anxiety is often the part of you that learned to scan, prepare, prevent, please, explain, control, and stay ahead of pain because being unprepared once felt too dangerous.

It is the part of you that does not want to be surprised by rejection.

The part that does not want to be trapped in conflict.

The part that does not want to need someone who will not show up.

The part that does not want to be shamed for having feelings.

The part that does not want to be powerless again.

There is dignity in that.

Not because anxiety is pleasant.

It is not.

But because it was trying to protect something tender.

The answer is not to shame this part of you into silence. The answer is not to treat it like an enemy, a flaw, or a personality defect. The answer is to understand what it learned, why it learned it, and what it still believes will happen if it stops working so hard.

Because anxiety is often not asking for more logic.

It is asking for a new experience of safety.

When Healing Becomes Coming Back To Yourself

Healing anxiety rooted in emotional neglect is not only about calming down.

Calming down is lovely.

Take the breath. Feel your feet. Go for the walk. Drink the water. Put the phone down. All of that can help.

But deeper healing is not just about managing symptoms more politely.

It is about reclaiming your life from the old rules that keep telling you danger is everywhere and responsibility is yours alone.

The rule that says you must stay ahead of every possible problem.

The rule that says other people’s moods are your assignment.

The rule that says mistakes are unsafe.

The rule that says rest must be earned.

The rule that says uncertainty is intolerable.

The rule that says if you stop scanning, something terrible will happen.

Those rules may have made sense in the environment where they formed.

They do not have to run the rest of your life.

Healing means you begin to notice anxiety without obeying it automatically. You begin to distinguish fear from intuition, responsibility from control, preparation from bracing, and care from self-abandonment.

You begin to ask different questions.

Is this danger, or is this old fear?

Is this mine to solve, or am I trying to prevent someone else’s discomfort?

Am I planning because this is wise, or because uncertainty feels unbearable?

Am I replaying the past because there is something to repair, or because my system still believes I can think my way into safety?

Am I responding to what is happening now, or to what I learned to expect long ago?

This is not easy work.

It takes courage to stop organizing your life around the worst thing that might happen.

It takes courage to let other people have moods without making them your emergency.

It takes courage to let the future arrive without rehearsing every possible disaster.

It takes courage to stop living as if peace is something that will be taken from you the moment you stop guarding it.

But this is where healing becomes reclamation.

You begin to come back to yourself.

Not the self who performs calm.

Not the self who manages everyone.

Not the self who is always prepared, always careful, always ten steps ahead.

The self underneath all that vigilance.

The self with preferences.

The self with instincts.

The self that can rest.

The self that can make a choice without needing to predict every consequence.

The self that can be connected without constantly scanning for threat.

The self that can live from truth instead of survival.

What Begins To Change in Therapy

Over time, anxiety can become less like the manager of your life and more like information you can listen to with discernment.

You may still feel the old alarm sometimes.

Of course you may.

Healing does not mean your nervous system never reacts. It means you no longer have to hand the steering wheel to every old fear.

You may begin to notice more space between a trigger and your response. More ability to pause before apologizing, fixing, explaining, controlling, or spiraling. More capacity to let a text sit unanswered without creating an entire story around it. More freedom to make plans without trying to eliminate every possible uncertainty.

You may stop treating other people’s disappointment as proof that you have done something wrong.

You may stop confusing worry with responsibility.

You may stop calling constant vigilance “just how I am.”

You may begin to feel the difference between true intuition and trauma anticipation.

You may discover that your life does not fall apart when you are not managing every detail.

That is not small.

That is a life-changing kind of freedom.

If you recognize yourself here, anxiety may not be a random personality trait. It may be one of the ways emotional neglect and relational trauma shaped your nervous system.

And because these responses were learned through experience, they often need more than insight alone to shift.

EMDR therapy can help work with the emotional and relational memories that keep anxiety, hypervigilance, overthinking, people-pleasing, and control feeling automatic, so you can begin to respond from clarity instead of old survival.

If you are ready to address the deeper roots of anxiety, childhood emotional neglect, shame, emotional shutdown, or relational trauma, you can schedule a free consultation here.

I offer virtual EMDR therapy across Michigan, including Metro Detroit and Grand Rapids, and across Ohio, including Columbus. If you’re ready to address the deeper roots of childhood emotional neglect, shame, anxiety, or emotional shutdown, you can schedule a free consultation here.

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What Shaped You Barbara Nasser-Gulch What Shaped You Barbara Nasser-Gulch

Why It’s So Hard to Receive Support

Struggling to receive support does not always mean you are overly independent or “bad at vulnerability.” For many people, it reflects earlier experiences where emotional needs felt unsafe, overwhelming, ignored, or emotionally costly. Over time, self-reliance can become deeply ingrained — even when part of you longs for closeness and care. This post explores why receiving support can feel so uncomfortable, especially for adults shaped by emotional neglect and relational trauma.

When Needing Other People Never Felt Safe or Natural

Emotional neglect often begins in homes that look perfectly ordinary from the outside.

There may be dinner on the table, clean clothes in the drawer, rides to practice, homework checked, birthdays remembered, and a parent in the next room. The family may look basically fine. In many ways, it may be fine.

That is part of what makes emotional neglect so difficult to recognize. It is often not the presence of something obviously terrible. It is the repeated absence of something essential.

A child is sad, and no one quite knows how to come close. A child is overwhelmed, and the room becomes tense, impatient, distracted, or blank. A child is scared, and someone explains why there is no reason to be. A child is angry, and the focus shifts quickly to tone, behavior, attitude, or respect. A child is hurt, and the conversation moves on before anyone has really stayed long enough to understand what happened inside them.

None of this may look dramatic. It may not even look like much at all.

A parent may be loving, responsible, hardworking, generous, funny, admired, or deeply well-intentioned, and still not know how to meet a child emotionally. They may provide, advise, correct, distract, lecture, minimize, solve, or move on. What they may not do is stay present with the child’s actual inner experience.

That is the quiet devastation of emotional neglect.

The child is not necessarily abandoned in any visible way. They are abandoned in the place where they most need accompaniment: inside what they feel, fear, long for, misunderstand, and cannot yet make sense of alone.

And children are brilliant at surviving what they cannot change.

They do not sit down and decide to become self-sufficient. They do not announce, “From now on, I will stop needing comfort.” They simply begin to notice what happens. Which feelings are welcome. Which ones make people uncomfortable. What brings closeness. What creates tension. What gets dismissed, corrected, mocked, ignored, or turned back on them.

So they adapt.

They become easier to have around.

They become responsible, funny, helpful, agreeable, impressive, self-contained, mature for their age, or unusually capable. They become the child who does not ask for much, not because they need less than other children, but because needing less has become the safest available arrangement.

And because the house still looks normal, because there may have been love, because there may have been good memories too, the adult who grows from that child may struggle to name what happened.

Nothing was that bad.

Other people had it worse.

My parents did their best.

I should be fine.

But emotional deprivation does not stop shaping a person simply because it is hard to see.

When a child repeatedly has to manage their inner world alone, aloneness becomes familiar in a way support never does. Self-reliance becomes more than a strength. It becomes an emotional structure. A way of organizing the self. A way of staying safe. A way of avoiding the old ache of reaching and not being met.

That is often where the difficulty with receiving support begins.

Not in adulthood, when someone says, “Let me know how I can help,” and you suddenly feel awkward, guilty, exposed, irritated, indebted, or blank.

It began much earlier, in the ordinary rooms of childhood, where needing other people did not feel simple.

So now, even when support is available, even when someone genuinely wants to help, something in you may tighten. You may want closeness and still brace against it. You may long to be understood and still feel uncomfortable when someone comes too close to the truth. You may be deeply generous with other people and strangely unable to let care come back toward you.

That can feel confusing, especially when you are the person others rely on.

But it makes sense when you understand that receiving support is not just a skill.

It is a learned emotional experience.

Receiving Support Is Not Just A Skill

It would be convenient if this were only about communication.

Just ask for what you need. Just let people help. Just be vulnerable.

Lovely advice, really. Also wildly incomplete.

That advice sounds reasonable when your nervous system already believes support is safe. But when support has been inconsistent, absent, intrusive, guilt-laced, emotionally confusing, or followed by disappointment, receiving care may not feel natural at all. It may feel risky before you can explain why.

You may have learned that needing something changes the room. You may have learned that emotions overwhelm people, that comfort comes with criticism, that help comes with strings, or that if someone gives to you, you will owe them something in return. You may have learned that it is safer to be low-maintenance, safer to be capable, safer to take care of yourself before anyone has the chance to fail you.

Children do not need these lessons stated directly. They learn them by what happens next.

What happens when they cry. What happens when they ask. What happens when they are afraid. What happens when they are disappointed. What happens when they are too much, too sad, too angry, too sensitive, too needy, too inconvenient, or too human.

If what happens next is distance, irritation, dismissal, overwhelm, punishment, withdrawal, or emotional absence, the child learns. They may not have words for it, but their system begins to organize around it.

Need less. Show less. Expect less. Handle more.

That is how self-reliance stops feeling like a preference and starts feeling like survival. It may later look like independence, competence, emotional control, or strength, but underneath it may be a very old arrangement with life:

I will not need what may not be there.

The Problem With Being The Strong One

People who struggle to receive support often look like they are doing beautifully.

They are responsible. Thoughtful. Capable. Useful in a crisis. They remember the details, anticipate the needs, read the room, send the follow-up text, bring the extra thing, make the plan, smooth the awkward moment, and notice when someone else has gone quiet.

They are often the people everyone else leans on.

Which can look admirable.

And it is admirable.

But it can also be lonely as hell.

Because being the strong one can become a very elegant form of disappearance.

You are there for everyone, but not fully known by anyone. You are appreciated, but not always reached for. You are trusted, but not necessarily tended to. You become so good at holding things together that people forget to wonder what it costs you to be so composed.

Or maybe they never knew to wonder.

So you keep functioning.

You say, “I’m fine,” and you are convincing enough that people believe you. You minimize what you need before anyone else has to. You tell yourself it is not a big deal. You recover privately. You make yourself reasonable. You become fluent in taking care of yourself alone.

And then, when someone finally does offer care, your system does not know how to receive it cleanly.

You may feel grateful and uncomfortable at the same time. You may want help and resent needing it. You may feel touched, then exposed. Relieved, then guilty. Seen, then suddenly desperate to get your composure back.

This is not because you are difficult.

It is because some part of you still associates being supported with danger, debt, disappointment, or loss of control.

Why Care Can Feel So Uncomfortable

One of the strange things about healing from emotional neglect is that care itself can feel threatening.

Not cruelty.

Not abandonment.

Care.

Someone is kind, and your body tightens. Someone listens, and you want to change the subject. Someone sees your pain, and you feel embarrassed. Someone offers help, and instead of feeling comforted, you feel indebted, suspicious, flooded, or strangely numb.

This can be maddening, especially if you have spent years longing to be understood.

But longing for care and being able to receive care are not the same thing.

Sometimes the care you wanted most is the very thing your system learned not to trust.

Because receiving support asks something of you. It asks you to stop managing the entire emotional field by yourself. It asks you to let someone else matter. It asks you to tolerate the vulnerability of being affected. It asks you to risk the old ache of wanting something from another person.

And if wanting something from another person has historically led to disappointment, shame, criticism, guilt, withdrawal, or emotional confusion, of course your system hesitates.

Of course it does.

Your hesitation is not the enemy. It is the evidence of how carefully you learned to survive.

But survival rules are not the same as truth.

And eventually, if you want to live freely, you have to begin questioning the rules that once protected you.

The rule that says needing is weakness.

The rule that says you must be easy to love.

The rule that says care always comes with a cost.

The rule that says you are safer alone than disappointed.

The rule that says you can support everyone else, but you should not ask anyone to show up for you.

Those rules may have made sense in the rooms where you learned them.

They do not have to run the rest of your life.

Emotional Neglect Teaches You To Live Without Much Room

Emotional neglect does not always leave obvious evidence.

It leaves a person with less room inside themselves.

Less room to feel without apologizing.

Less room to need without shame.

Less room to be angry without self-doubt.

Less room to be tired without guilt.

Less room to be held without bracing.

When no one consistently helps a child make sense of their inner world, the child often learns to manage that world alone. They may become watchful, self-contained, pleasing, impressive, useful, funny, quiet, over-responsible, or fiercely independent. They may build an entire identity around being someone who does not need much.

And then people call it personality.

But often, it began as protection.

This matters because you cannot shame yourself out of a strategy that once helped you survive. You cannot simply decide to be more open, more trusting, more vulnerable, more receptive, as if your body did not spend years learning the opposite.

The work is deeper than that.

It is not about becoming needy. It is not about collapsing into other people. It is not about throwing away your strength.

It is about no longer confusing deprivation with independence.

It is about no longer mistaking emotional isolation for maturity.

It is about no longer organizing your life around the belief that you must handle everything alone.

When Healing Becomes Reclamation

Healing often begins with recognition.

Not the kind that says, “Here is another thing wrong with me.”

The kind that says, “Oh. This makes sense.”

There is relief in that. There is grief in it too.

You may begin to see how much of your life has been organized around not needing what you were afraid would not be there. You may see where you have performed strength, minimized pain, over-explained your needs, kept the peace, managed everyone’s comfort, and called it love.

You may see how often you have betrayed yourself in order to remain easy for other people.

That realization can hurt.

It can also become a doorway.

Because once you understand that these responses were learned, you can begin to question whether they are still serving you. You can begin to notice the old rules instead of obeying them automatically. You can begin to ask what you actually want, what you actually feel, what you actually need, and who has earned the right to come close.

You can become more willing to disappoint others than abandon yourself.

You can let support in without making it proof that you are weak.

You can let someone care for you without immediately turning it into a transaction.

You can stop performing okayness long enough to tell the truth.

This takes courage.

The courage to risk being seen.

The courage to stop living as if your needs are a burden.

The courage to let care matter.

The courage to choose what is true over what is familiar.

This is where healing becomes more than symptom relief.

It becomes reclamation.

Not because you become someone entirely new, but because you begin returning to the parts of yourself that had to go quiet in order to stay connected.

The part that needed comfort.

The part that had preferences.

The part that wanted to be known.

The part that was tired of earning love through usefulness.

The part that was never actually too much.

What Begins To Change

Over time, support can begin to feel less dangerous.

Less loaded.

Less like a trapdoor.

You may begin to notice that you can need something without drowning in guilt. You can let someone show up without immediately minimizing what it meant. You can name a feeling before it hardens into resentment. You can receive kindness without becoming suspicious of it. You can let people matter without handing them all the power.

You can stop confusing self-protection with selfhood.

This does not mean you trust everyone. Please don’t. Discernment matters.

It does not mean you become endlessly available, emotionally transparent, or dependent on other people to steady you.

It means you have choices.

You can support others without disappearing.

You can be strong without being unreachable.

You can be generous without abandoning yourself.

You can be loved without having to earn it by being useful, agreeable, impressive, or low-maintenance.

That is not small work.

That is a life-changing kind of freedom.

If you recognize yourself here, emotional neglect or relational trauma may be part of what shaped your difficulty receiving support. And because these responses were learned through experience, they often need more than insight alone to change.

EMDR therapy can help work with the emotional and relational memories that make closeness, vulnerability, and receiving support feel difficult, so connection does not have to feel so costly.

If you are ready to address the deeper roots of childhood emotional neglect, shame, anxiety, emotional shutdown, or difficulty letting support in, you can schedule a free consultation here.

I offer virtual EMDR therapy across Michigan, including Metro Detroit and Grand Rapids, and across Ohio, including Columbus. If you’re ready to address the deeper roots of childhood emotional neglect, shame, anxiety, or emotional shutdown, you can schedule a free consultation here.

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Why It Still Affects You Barbara Nasser-Gulch Why It Still Affects You Barbara Nasser-Gulch

Why You Feel Numb (And What Your System Is Trying to Protect You From)

Numbness is often less about not feeling anything and more about losing access to what is there. This post explores how trauma and emotional neglect can create protective distance from emotion, meaning, motivation, memory, and connection.

Emotional Disconnection Is Not a Personality Trait, But a
Survival Strategy

Emotional numbness can be hard to describe. Sometimes it feels like flatness. Like distance.

Sometimes like you are technically here, but not fully in contact with anything.

You get through the day.

You do what needs to get done. You answer people. You function.

But something in you feels dimmed.

You may not feel much interest. Or much excitement.

Things you used to care about may not seem to reach you in the same way.

You may look at your life and know, intellectually, that certain things matter — your partner, your kids, your work, your future, your own well-being — but not feel much response when you try to connect with that truth.

It can feel like you are going through the motions.

Sleepwalking through your own life.

Like you are present in it, but seeing it through a glass wall.

Some people describe this as a feeling of deadness. Others as emptiness, apathy, disinterest, or just not feeling much of anything clearly.

Sometimes it comes with fatigue that is hard to explain. Sometimes with irritability.

Sometimes with a sense that nothing really matters, or that there is no point in reaching for much because you can’t feel it anyway.

And sometimes what feels most unsettling is not just the numbness itself, but the estrangement.

You feel like a stranger in your own life.

A stranger in your own reactions.

A stranger even in your own memories.

You may know you should be moved by something and not be.

You may know you love someone and still feel far away from them.

You may know you are upset, overwhelmed, lonely, or hurt, but not be able to get close enough to the feeling for it to fully register.

That kind of disconnection can start to affect everything.

Your inner life feels farther away.

Your motivation drops.

Your sense of meaning gets thin.

Your empathy for other people can narrow.

Relationships become harder to inhabit fully.

Even memory can feel altered — less alive, less emotionally connected, more like you are remembering facts than re-entering experience.

That can leave you feeling frightened, ashamed, or deeply confused about yourself.

Am I depressed?

Am I broken?

Am I becoming cold?

Why can’t I care the way I used to?

Why does everything feel so far away?

Numbness is not random. It is not a personality flaw, and it is not simply a lack of effort or depth.

It is a protective state.

That distinction matters.

Because numbness is not just “not feeling.” It is often what the nervous system does when full contact with feeling has come to seem costly, destabilizing, or unsafe.

When certain experiences carry too much emotional intensity without enough help metabolizing them, the system does not simply leave them untouched. It adapts around them.

Sometimes that adaptation is obvious, and sometimes quiet. But either way, the basic logic is the same: if full contact with your emotions is overwhelming, distance becomes protective. Numbness was a strategy your nervous system used to try to help you survive.

This can develop after overt trauma, but also through repetition in environments where emotion was poorly held. If you had strong feelings and no one noticed, no one asked, no one helped, no one welcomed your inner experience, or no one knew what to do with it — then feeling itself may have started to seem like something you had to manage alone.

And when people have to manage too much alone for too long, the system often turns down the volume on emotions.

Feelings don’t disappear. Access just narrows.

That is one of the most important distinctions in this whole subject. Numbness is not the absence of emotion, but the absence of access to emotion.

Underneath the disconnection there is still grief, anger, fear, longing, shame, exhaustion, hurt, or unmet need.

But the mind and body are no longer in easy contact with them. The system has learned to create distance.

That is why numbness can coexist with sudden overwhelm. You can feel flat for days or weeks and then be hit by a wave of grief, panic, rage, or collapse that seems to come out of nowhere.

Numbness does not stay neatly contained inside one area of life.

It shows up in the way people move through their days. The way they relate. The way they remember. The way they respond to joy, conflict, desire, tenderness, or pain.

You may feel it when someone close to you is hurting and you know you should feel more than you do.

You may feel it when someone reaches for you emotionally and you go flat instead of moving toward them.

You may feel it during conflict when your mind checks out, your body goes distant, and you cannot access much beyond irritation or blankness.

You may feel it when you want to cry and cannot, when you want to care and cannot locate the care, or when your life looks objectively full but internally feels vacant.

That can create another layer of suffering, because now you are not only numb — you are also judging your numbness.

You tell yourself you should be more grateful.

More passionate.

More loving.

More affected.

More alive.

You wonder whether something is wrong with your character. Whether you have become selfish or unreachable. Whether your disconnection means there is no love there, no moral depth there, no real self there.

But that is usually not what is happening.

Often, your system has spent a long time protecting you from states that felt unmanageable. When it does that, it also mutes the states you want to experience — pleasure, interest, tenderness, vitality, desire, meaning, connection.

That is part of why numbness is so painful. It does not only blunt pain. It blunts aliveness.

This is not something you can think your way out of it.

Insight and understanding help. Knowing the history matters. It helps to understand what shaped the response.

But numbness isn’t cognitive. It is not primarily maintained by a lack of explanation.

It lives as a protective organization in the nervous system: a learned, reflexive habit of distancing from emotions when those emotions have come to feel dangerous, destabilizing, or futile.

That is why telling yourself to care more, feel more, appreciate more, or wake up more rarely works.

Pressure doesn’t restore access. It often increases shame — and shame tends to drive people even farther from themselves.

What actually helps is slower and less dramatic.

It starts with understanding numbness not as an enemy, but as a protective state with a history.

It continues by building more safety, more steadiness, and more capacity for contact — not all at once, and not by forcing intensity, but by helping the system learn that it does not have to shut so much down in order to survive.

That may mean noticing small signals before they disappear.

Noticing when flatness turns into irritation.

Noticing when disinterest is covering something more painful.

Noticing the body before the mind starts explaining it away.

Creating conditions where feeling can come a little closer without flooding everything.

Therapy can help here, not by forcing or demanding immediate access or emotional intensity, but by helping make contact feel more possible.

It can help people understand what numbness has been doing for them, what it developed around, what it protects against, and what it costs.

It can help slowly and gently rebuild connection to emotion, memory, desire, meaning, and self-experience without forcing more than the system can hold.

And deeper work like EMDR can help process the experiences that made detachment feel necessary in the first place, so numbness is no longer the only way the system knows how to stay safe.

If you feel numb, flat, disconnected, apathetic, uninterested, deadened, or far away from yourself, that does not mean there is nothing there.

It may mean there is a great deal there — but your nervous system has adapted so you don’t feel all of it at once.

That response makes sense.

And it does not have to be the end of the story.

If this feels familiar, therapy can be a place to begin understanding what your numbness has been protecting, and to start rebuilding a way of being with yourself that feels more connected, more manageable, and more alive. If you’re curious, you’re welcome to reach out.

I offer virtual EMDR therapy across Michigan, including Metro Detroit and Grand Rapids, and across Ohio, including Columbus. If you’re ready to address the deeper roots of childhood emotional neglect, shame, anxiety, or emotional shutdown, you can schedule a free consultation here.

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How You Learned to Cope Barbara Nasser-Gulch How You Learned to Cope Barbara Nasser-Gulch

When Your Survival Strategies Hurt The People You Love

The coping responses that once helped you survive can start causing pain in present-day relationships. Learn how trauma, emotional neglect, and protective relationship patterns can affect the people you love — and what it takes to begin changing them.

How Emotional Neglect And Relational Trauma Can Come Out As Anger, Control, Defensiveness, Or Distance

Some trauma responses are easy to recognize as pain.

Crying.

Freezing.

People-pleasing.

Overthinking.

Pulling away because you feel scared or ashamed.

But other trauma responses do not look like pain from the outside.

They look like anger.

Control.

Criticism.

Defensiveness.

Contempt.

Stonewalling.

Sarcam.

Blame.

A refusal to look at your own behavior.

A fixation on how you were wronged.

A need to win the argument instead of understand what happened between you.

And because these responses often come out forcefully, they can be harder to recognize as protection.

They do not always look vulnerable.

They do not always look afraid.

They may not even feel afraid from the inside.

They may feel justified.

Clear.

Certain.

Wronged.

Disrespected.

Attacked.

Misunderstood.

Like you are the only one seeing things accurately.

Like the problem is what the other person is doing, how they are saying it, what they are asking of you, how sensitive they are, how unreasonable they are being, how unfairly they are treating you.

And maybe part of that is true.

But sometimes, underneath all that certainty, something else is happening.

Something in you feels exposed.

Something in you feels cornered.

Something in you feels ashamed, powerless, inadequate, unseen, controlled, or emotionally overwhelmed.

And before you can even feel that directly, your system moves to protect you.

By getting louder.

Colder.

Sharper.

More defended.

Further away.

More in control.

More focused on what they did wrong than what is happening inside you.

Not All Survival Looks Like Shutting Down

When people talk about trauma, they often talk about the person who collapses inward.

The one who apologizes too quickly.

The one who assumes everything is their fault.

The one who over-functions, over-explains, smooths things over, and tries to become easier to love.

That is real.

But it is not the only way people survive.

Some people learned to protect themselves by staying small.

Others learned to protect themselves by making sure they never felt small again.

They learned to stay on top of the situation.

To be right before they could be blamed.

To attack before they could be exposed.

To dismiss before they could be affected.

To control before they could feel helpless.

To shut down before they could be reached.

To become critical before they could feel ashamed.

To turn hurt into anger so quickly they never had to feel the hurt underneath.

These are survival strategies, too.

But they are survival strategies that can hurt other people.

And that part matters.

Because something can make sense and still cause harm.

Something can have a history and still need to change.

Something can be protective and still become destructive in the relationships you most want to keep.

When Pain Turns Into Anger, Control, Or Defensiveness

A lot can live underneath anger.

Hurt.
Fear.
Shame.
Rejection.
Grief.
Embarrassment.
Powerlessness.

The feeling of not being considered.

The feeling of being criticized, dismissed, controlled, or unwanted.

But if those softer feelings were not safe to have, you may not recognize them as feelings at all.

You may only notice what happens after they turn into anger.

You may not think, I feel ashamed.
You think, They are disrespecting me.

You may not think, I feel scared I am failing.
You think, Nothing I do is ever enough for them.

You may not think, I feel hurt and want reassurance.
You think, They are attacking me.

You may not think, I feel powerless right now.
You think, I need to get control of this conversation.

That shift can happen fast.

The vulnerable feeling is there for a split second, and then it is covered by irritation, sarcasm, judgment, a cutting comment, a slammed door, a long silence, or a list of everything the other person has done wrong.

By the time the argument is fully happening, you may genuinely believe the anger is the whole story.

But anger is often a bodyguard.

It stands at the door of something more vulnerable.

This is not exclusive to men. Women do this too. Anyone can use anger, blame, contempt, withdrawal, or control to protect against shame, fear, hurt, or emotional exposure.

But many men were trained early to move away from vulnerability and toward defense.

Sadness was weakness. Fear was unacceptable. Tenderness was unsafe. Being wrong meant humiliation.

So hurt becomes anger.

Fear becomes control.

Shame becomes blame.

Helplessness becomes criticism.

Emotional overwhelm becomes shutdown.

The original feeling does not disappear.

It just gets translated into something that feels less exposed and more powerful.

How This Can Show Up In Relationships

One of the clearest signs of this pattern is what happens when someone says, “That hurt me.”

Instead of being able to take that in, your whole body may tense.

You may feel accused. Exposed. Cornered. Shamed. Controlled. Like if you admit you hurt them, you are surrendering your dignity.

So you defend.

You explain.

Correct the details.

Point out their tone.

Bring up what they did last week, last month, last year.

Say they are too sensitive.

Say they always do this.

Say you were joking.

Say that was not your intention.

Say they are making you feel like a terrible person.

And now the other person came to you with hurt and found a wall. Or a fight. Or a courtroom.

That does something to a relationship over time.

It teaches the people close to you that your pain matters, but theirs may not be safe to bring up.

That they have to soften their words before they speak.

That honesty may not be worth the cost.

That they may end up carrying the emotional weight of what you are not yet able to face.

Sometimes you replay how unfair someone was. How disrespected you felt. How they never see how much you carry. How much you do. How wrong they are.

And the more you replay it, the more certain you feel.

But sometimes rumination is not helping you understand what happened.

Sometimes it is helping you avoid what happened inside you.

Because if you stopped building the case, you might have to feel hurt. Or shame. Or longing. Or the reality that you had an impact you do not feel proud of.

The same thing can happen through sarcasm, “jokes,” contempt, silence, shutdown, control, overwork, substances, or chronic busyness.

A cutting comment passed off as teasing.

A joke that leaves someone feeling small.

A silence that punishes.

A withdrawal that leaves the other person alone holding everything.

A need to control the tone, the pace, the outcome, or the other person’s feelings.

A life so busy and defended that emotional closeness gets whatever is left.

These strategies may reduce your anxiety in the moment.

But they do not build trust. They do not create closeness.

They do not make the relationship stronger.

They usually teach the other person that your safety requires their silence, restriction, softening, or self-erasure.

And that is not intimacy.

Understanding The Pattern Is Not The Same As Excusing It

If these responses began as survival, that does not make them harmless.

Your pain matters.
So does your impact.

It may be true that you learned defensiveness because being wrong once felt humiliating or unsafe.

It may be true that you learned anger because vulnerability was not allowed.

It may be true that you learned control because helplessness felt unbearable.

It may be true that you shut down because your system gets overwhelmed fast.

And.

The people who love you should not have to be repeatedly blamed, mocked, dismissed, controlled, stonewalled, or verbally hurt because your nervous system learned to protect you that way.

Both things can be true.

There is a reason this developed.
And there is a responsibility to work on it.

You do not have to hate yourself to become accountable.

But you do have to become willing to see yourself more clearly. Not just your intentions. Your impact.

Not just what you felt. What you did with what you felt.

Not just how you were hurt. How your unprocessed hurt may now be hurting someone else.

What Actually Starts To Change

Healing this does not mean becoming passive.

It does not mean you never feel angry, that your pain stops mattering, or that you accept blame for everything.

It means becoming more able to stay with yourself when you feel exposed.

To notice anger before it becomes an attack.

To notice shame before it becomes blame.

To notice fear before it becomes control.

To notice overwhelm before it becomes disappearance.

To notice the impulse to defend before you invalidate someone else’s reality.

Because knowing this pattern is there does not always stop it.

These reactions often happen before reflective thinking fully comes online.

Your body detects threat. Your shame spikes. Your nervous system mobilizes. Your old protective move takes over.

That is why communication skills matter, but are not always enough on their own.

If your system experiences accountability as attack, vulnerability as danger, and someone else’s pain as a threat to your self-worth, you will struggle to use those skills when you need them most.

So change starts when you begin recognizing the protective move closer to the moment.

You feel the heat rise.

You notice the urge to interrupt.

You notice the courtroom forming in your mind.

You notice the sentence that would cut.

You notice the desire to leave, punish, mock, dismiss, or take control.

And instead of letting the old response fully take over, you begin creating some space.

Not perfect space. Not easy space. But enough space to choose differently.

To say, “I’m getting defensive.”

To say, “I need a pause, but I am not leaving this unresolved.”

To say, “I want to explain myself, but I also want to understand what hurt you.”

To say, “That landed as criticism, and I can feel myself wanting to fight. I’m trying to stay here.”

To say, “I made a joke, but I can see it hurt you. I need to take responsibility for that.”

To say, “I am angry, but I do not want to use my anger to scare you or shut you down.”

That is what repair starts to look like.

Not perfection. Not never getting triggered. Not never feeling defensive.

But becoming less ruled by the response that once protected you.

This work is not about removing anger.

Anger has information. Anger can clarify boundaries.
Anger can say, Something here matters.

The goal is to stop making anger carry feelings it was never meant to carry alone.

The grief.
The shame.
The fear.
The longing.
The need.
The helplessness.
The old ache of not feeling important, considered, chosen, respected, or safe.

This work is about becoming able to feel more than anger.

To hear someone else’s pain without immediately defending against it.

To learn that accountability is not humiliation.

Repair is not defeat.

Being wrong does not make you worthless.

To stay connected without needing to win. To stay present without disappearing. To stay open without feeling like you have lost all power.

To be strong in a way that does not require someone else to feel small.

If This Is Something You Recognize In Yourself

If you see yourself here, it may be uncomfortable.

It should be.

Not because shame is the goal.

But because honest recognition often hurts before it frees anything.

You may have had real reasons to become defended.

You may have learned these responses in environments where softness was not safe, accountability was used against you, vulnerability was mocked, or emotional needs were ignored until they hardened into resentment.

Those things matter.

And they still do not make it okay to keep hurting the people who are trying to love you now.

Both truths belong in the room.

The pain that shaped you.
And the impact you have now.

Therapy can help you understand what your anger, shutdown, defensiveness, control, contempt, or blame may be protecting.

It can help you build enough capacity to stay present with shame, fear, hurt, and vulnerability without turning those feelings into harm.

And deeper work like EMDR can help process the experiences that taught your nervous system to treat accountability, closeness, vulnerability, or emotional exposure as danger.

Not so you can excuse what has happened.

So you can stop repeating it.

So the people you love do not have to keep meeting the protected version of you at the expense of the connected one.

So repair can become possible.

So strength can become something steadier than defense.

So closeness does not have to feel like a threat.

If this feels familiar, you are welcome to reach out for a free consultation.

I offer virtual EMDR therapy across Michigan, including Metro Detroit and Grand Rapids, and across Ohio, including Columbus. If you’re ready to address the deeper roots of childhood emotional neglect, shame, anxiety, or emotional shutdown, you can schedule a free consultation here.

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