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For many trauma survivors conflict doesn’t register as disagreement. It registers as threat. 

If early relationships taught you that love was conditional, unpredictable or withdrawn after conflict, your nervous system learned that conflict equ
For many trauma survivors conflict doesn’t register as disagreement. It registers as threat. If early relationships taught you that love was conditional, unpredictable or withdrawn after conflict, your nervous system learned that conflict equalled loss of safety. So a raised voice, shift in tone or tension in a relationship doesn’t feel challenging, it feels like an abandonment. This is why conflict can trigger panic, shutdown, appeasing or a desperate need to repair. Your body learned that rupture meant disconnection, rejection or emotional withdrawal. So your nervous system may be responding to the past and what conflict cost you. That’s why treatments like EMDR are so powerful. Because they help you separate past from present and danger from conflict. Conflict doesn’t have to mean abandonment and your nervous system can learn that staying connected through a rupture is still possible. #relationships #trauma #nervoussystemhealing #traumarecovery #traumahealing
If you grew up as the scapegoat, your nervous system didn’t develop around safety, it developed around anticipation. Scapegoating is a family dynamic where one child becomes the container for blame, tension, and unprocessed emotion. Responsibility is unclear. Anger is indirect. Safety is conditional. So your body adapts. It learns to scan the environment. It learns to notice shifts in tone. It learns to act before anything actually happens. Not because you’re perceptive. But because unpredictability once came with consequences. That’s why calm can feel unsettling. Your nervous system associates quiet with what comes next. These patterns aren’t personality traits. They’re survival responses. And they don’t have to be permanent. Therapies like EMDR work with the nervous system, not just the story. They help the body process experiences that taught it to stay alert, so safety no longer depends on vigilance. #scapegoat #trauma #traumahealing #traumarecovery
You can want closeness and still feel panicked when someone actually stays.

For many trauma survivors, this isn’t ambivalence or “mixed signals”. It’s a nervous system doing exactly what it learned to do.

When early relation
You can want closeness and still feel panicked when someone actually stays. For many trauma survivors, this isn’t ambivalence or “mixed signals”. It’s a nervous system doing exactly what it learned to do. When early relationships were unpredictable, overwhelming, or emotionally unsafe, closeness became something you had to manage. You learned to stay alert. To monitor shifts. To brace for withdrawal, anger, or abandonment. So when someone stays - consistently, calmly, without conditions, it can feel unfamiliar rather than comforting. The absence of threat doesn’t automatically register as safety. It can register as uncertainty. This is why intimacy after trauma can feel destabilising before it feels soothing. Not because you don’t want connection, but because your body learned that closeness required vigilance. Over time, through relational experiences and treatments like EMDR, your nervous system can learn something new: that connection doesn’t have to be earned, monitored, or survived and that staying present in closeness can be safe. If this resonates, there’s nothing wrong with you. There’s history here. And it makes sense. #trauma #traumahealing #traumarecovery #ptsd
For many trauma survivors conflict doesn’t register as disagreement. It registers as threat. 

If early relationships taught you that love was conditional, unpredictable or withdrawn after conflict, your nervous system learned that conflict equ
If you grew up as the scapegoat, your nervous system didn’t develop around safety, it developed around anticipation.

Scapegoating is a family dynamic where one child becomes the container for blame, tension, and unprocessed emotion. Responsibi
You can want closeness and still feel panicked when someone actually stays.

For many trauma survivors, this isn’t ambivalence or “mixed signals”. It’s a nervous system doing exactly what it learned to do.

When early relation

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