A Calm Place For Emotional Healing

Gentle, EMDR-informed reflections to help you understand your patterns, feel seen, and feel less alone on your healing journey

Virtual EMDR therapy in Ohio and Michigan | Audacious & True Counseling

You may be capable, perceptive, and high-achieving — but inside, persistent self-doubt, loneliness, or emotional exhaustion quietly lingers. Even a “stable” childhood can leave hidden emotional wounds that shape your patterns today.

This blog is for high-achieving adults in Michigan and Ohio who want to understand the lasting impact of emotional neglect, complex trauma, or attachment challenges. Here, you’ll find language for experiences that may never have been named, validation for patterns that make sense, and reassurance that what you carry has meaning.

Barbara Nasser-Gulch Barbara Nasser-Gulch

What It Feels Like to Be Truly Met

You can feel deeply understood by books, insight, or self-awareness—and still feel unseen in relationships. This post explores why that happens and what actually begins to change it

When No One Really Saw You — And Why Being Seen and Known Changes Everything

If you feel unseen in relationships — even when people care about you — this may be connected to emotional neglect and relational trauma. This post explores what it actually feels like to be truly met, and why that changes everything.

There’s a kind of moment that many people who come to therapy have never fully experienced.

Not really.

They’ve been listened to.

They’ve been given advice.

They’ve been supported, even cared for.

But they haven’t been met.

And something in them knows the difference.

What It Feels Like When No One Really Saw You

If you grew up with emotional neglect — even in a family that looked “fine” from the outside — you may not have the language for what was missing.

But you might recognize the feeling:

  • You learned to read the room instead of being known

  • You became responsible for other people’s emotions

  • You were “easy,” “independent,” or “mature for your age”

  • You learned to perform, achieve, or accommodate — but not to exist as you are

For some people, the only place they felt anything close to being seen…

was outside of real relationships.

In books.

In poetry.

In music.

Something that seemed to understand them without asking them to explain themselves first.

Without needing anything from them.

Without requiring them to adjust.

I often think about how, for me, that was where something in me could exhale.

  • Where I didn’t have to anticipate or shape myself.

  • Where I could feel seen without being watched.

  • Where something in my internal world was recognized, even if no one around me could name it.

But even then, it wasn’t the same as being met by another person.

And over time, that creates a quiet kind of disconnection.

Not just from others — but from yourself.

And often, from relationships too.

For some people, these patterns also align with what’s often described as complex trauma or Complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (CPTSD)— but you don’t need that language for this to apply to you.

The Difference Between Being Seen and Being Met

Philosopher Martin Buber described two ways of relating:

I–It and I–Thou.

Most people are used to being related to as an “It.”

Not in a harsh or intentional way — often in subtle, well-meaning ways:

  • Being interpreted instead of experienced

  • Being evaluated

  • Being responded to based on someone else’s expectations or discomfort

  • Being guided, shaped, or “helped” toward something more acceptable

In those moments, you are being understood in a way.

But you are not being met.

What It Feels Like to Be Met Instead of Managed

An I–Thou encounter is different.

It’s not about analyzing you.

It’s not about changing you in that moment.

It’s not about who you should be.

It’s about meeting you as a whole, complex, real human being — right here.

In those moments:

  • You are not reduced to your patterns or symptoms

  • You are not subtly being shaped into something easier to hold

  • You are not being handled, fixed, or explained away

  • You are experienced as you

There is no agenda between you and the other person.

Just presence.

Just recognition.

Just… being with.

For many people, this is unfamiliar in a way that’s hard to put into words.

Because it’s something they’ve been missing for a long time.

How You Learn to Stay Connected Without Being Seen

When you grow up without being consistently seen and emotionally met, your system adapts.

You learn to:

  • Anticipate others instead of feeling yourself

  • Stay slightly outside of your own experience

  • Disconnect, override, or question what you feel

  • Shape yourself in ways that maintain connection

This isn’t a conscious choice.

It’s a relational survival strategy.

But it often leads to relationships that feel:

  • close — but not quite right

  • connected — but not fully safe

  • present — but not deeply understood

Why Being Truly Met Feels So Unfamiliar

When you’re used to being unseen — or only partially seen — being truly met can feel disorienting at first.

You might notice:

  • A pull to retreat or disconnect

  • Uncertainty about how to respond

  • A sense of vulnerability you’re not used to

  • The feeling of being more there than usual

This isn’t because something is wrong.

It’s because something is different.

Your system is encountering a kind of connection it hasn’t had before.

What Begins to Shift When You Are Finally Seen and Known

Something powerful happens when you are consistently met in this way.

Not occasionally.

Not performatively.

But reliably, over time.

Your system begins to shift.

Without forcing it, you may start to notice:

  • You feel less guarded

  • You don’t have to monitor yourself as closely

  • You can stay present instead of disappearing

  • Your reactions begin to make sense from the inside

You’re not trying harder.

You’re having a different experience of relationship.

One where you don’t have to disappear to stay connected.

What It Means to Be Met in Therapy

This way of meeting you — fully, directly, without reducing you — isn’t just a philosophy.

It’s fundamental to how I approach this work.

Before we move into deeper processing, something important happens first:

You are listened to in a way that connects your past to your present.

Your experiences are witnessed — not analyzed from a distance.

The patterns you’ve lived inside begin to make sense, without blame.

And importantly:

You are not treated as a problem to solve.

You are met as a person to understand.

How EMDR Supports This Shift

EMDR helps your brain and body process experiences that have been held in a fragmented or unresolved way.

But that work doesn’t happen in isolation.

It happens in relationship.

In a space where you are not being rushed, managed, or interpreted from the outside — but supported in staying connected to your own internal experience.

For many people, this is what allows therapy to go deeper than insight alone.

Because it’s not just understanding.

It’s integration.

What It Looks Like to Feel Seen in Your Life and Relationships

Over time, something begins to change.

Not all at once.

Not perfectly.

But steadily.

  • You recognize your needs without immediately dismissing them

  • You feel more solid in yourself, even in connection

  • You don’t have to work as hard to be understood

  • You can stay present in relationships without losing yourself

And perhaps most importantly:

You begin to experience yourself not as someone who is too much, not enough, or hard to know —

But as someone who was never fully seen.

Until now.

If You’ve Never Felt Fully Seen Before

If you’re someone who has done insight work…

who understands your patterns but still feels stuck…

who feels disconnected in ways that are hard to explain…

There may not be anything missing in your effort.

There may have been something missing in the relational experience.

And that’s something that can change.

Schedule a free consultation to learn more about EMDR therapy and how this work can support you.

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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