The fear of change is a biochemical event rooted in your childhood emotional blueprint—not a character flaw or weakness. Your brain learned to associate change with threat during formative trauma, creating a Worst Day Cycle™ of fear, shame, and denial that keeps you stuck in familiar pain. By understanding the three survival personas and applying the Authentic Self Cycle™, you can rewire your relationship with change and reclaim authentic freedom.
That’s you: You know change is necessary, but the moment you consider it—a new job, ending a relationship, moving, starting therapy—you feel a wave of panic, numbness, or sabotage. Something inside says “stay small, stay familiar, stay safe.”
Table of Contents
- What Is Fear of Change? (And Why It’s Not Your Fault)
- The Worst Day Cycle™: Why Change Triggers Your Survival Persona
- The Three Survival Personas: Which One Are You?
- The Authentic Self Cycle™: How to Heal
- The Emotional Authenticity Method™: Five Steps to Rewire Your Blueprint
- Signs of Fear-Based Resistance by Life Area
- People Also Ask
- The Bottom Line

What Is Fear of Change? (And Why It’s Not Your Fault)
Fear of change isn’t laziness, lack of motivation, or personal failure. It’s a survival mechanism—your nervous system doing exactly what it was designed to do: protect you from perceived danger.
When you were a child, negative experiences created emotional imprints. Maybe a parent’s abandonment taught you that change = loss. Maybe instability meant chaos and pain. Maybe criticism made you believe you’d fail at anything new. Your brain absorbed these messages and built an emotional blueprint—a set of unconscious rules that still run your decision-making today.
That’s you: You’ve quit before you started. You’ve stayed in jobs, relationships, or situations that drain you because the devil you know feels safer than the unknown. Somewhere inside, change = danger.
Here’s the neurochemistry: Childhood trauma triggers the hypothalamus to release a chemical cocktail—cortisol, adrenaline, dopamine, and misfiring oxytocin. Your brain becomes addicted to these emotional states and actively seeks repetition of familiar patterns, even painful ones, because repetition signals safety to the unconscious mind. The brain can’t tell right from wrong; it only knows known versus unknown.
This isn’t broken neurology—it’s survival intelligence. Your fear of change protected you when you were small and vulnerable. But in adulthood, that same protection has become a prison.
The Worst Day Cycle™: Why Change Triggers Your Survival Persona
The Worst Day Cycle™ is a four-stage feedback loop that explains why change feels so dangerous and why you keep repeating familiar pain.

Stage 1: Childhood Trauma Creates the Blueprint
Trauma doesn’t require abuse. Trauma is any negative emotional experience that created painful meanings about yourself, others, or the world. It could be a parent’s unpredictable anger, a sibling’s betrayal, divorce, critical feedback, enmeshment, abandonment, or unmet emotional needs.
In that moment, your developing brain made survival conclusions: “If I change, I’ll lose control and people will abandon me.” Or: “If I try something new, I’ll fail and prove I’m not good enough.” Or: “If I speak up, I’ll be punished.” These conclusions became hardwired in your nervous system.
That’s you: You remember the exact moment you decided it wasn’t safe to try. Now every big life change feels like stepping toward that same danger.
Stage 2: Fear Keeps the Cycle Running
Fear is the activation signal. When you consider change—a new relationship, a career pivot, moving away from family, starting therapy—your nervous system screams: “Danger! This is how it started last time!”
Your body floods with cortisol and adrenaline. Your chest tightens. Your mind races through catastrophe scenarios. You feel unsafe, even though objectively you’re safe in your current moment.
Fear is biochemical panic rooted in an old survival blueprint, not accurate information about current reality. Your nervous system is running a program from age 7, but you’re living in 2026.
The fear doesn’t feel irrational—it feels absolutely true. And that’s the problem. Fear becomes the lens through which you evaluate whether change is worth the risk. Spoiler alert: when fear is running the show, the answer is always “no.”
Stage 3: Shame Anchors You to Denial
Shame is the moment you internalize the fear as identity. Fear says: “Change is dangerous.” Shame says: “I am the problem. I’m broken. I’m not capable of handling change. Something is wrong with me.”
You’ve lost your inherent worth. You no longer believe you deserve better or can create different. Shame is the deepest wound because it’s not about behavior—it’s about being.
That’s you: You feel defective. You tell yourself: “Other people can handle change. Why can’t I? There must be something wrong with me.”
Shame is where the Worst Day Cycle™ locks in. Because once you believe you’re the problem, you stop trying. You accept limitation as identity. You create internal narratives that justify staying stuck: “I’m not a risk-taker. I’m not brave. I’m not built for change.”
Stage 4: Denial Forms Your Survival Persona
Denial is the brilliant adaptation your nervous system created to survive unbearable shame and fear. It’s not conscious lying—it’s a complete shift in identity and behavior designed to feel safe and avoid the pain.
Your survival persona is the character you became to survive childhood. It’s not your authentic self—it’s the protection strategy that kept you alive. And it works. For a while.
But in adulthood, that survival persona becomes the main barrier to change. It’s the voice that sabotages new relationships, talks you out of the job interview, convinces you that your situation isn’t that bad. It’s not trying to hurt you—it’s trying to keep you alive by keeping you small and familiar.
Here’s the cycle: Trauma → Fear (your nervous system protects) → Shame (you internalize the fear as broken identity) → Denial (you create a survival persona) → Repetition of familiar pain (the cycle reinforces itself).
The Three Survival Personas: Which One Are You?
When childhood trauma taught your nervous system that the world wasn’t safe, you developed a survival persona—a protective identity that helped you manage unbearable pain, shame, and fear. That persona is still running the show in adulthood.
The three survival persona types exist on a spectrum: Falsely Empowered (over-controlling), Disempowered (collapsed), and Adapted Wounded Child (oscillating between both). Most people don’t fit neatly into one—they oscillate or blend, depending on context.

Falsely Empowered (The Controller)
The Falsely Empowered persona protects by controlling, dominating, raging, or perfectionism. In childhood, you learned that safety came from controlling outcomes and other people’s behavior. Vulnerability equaled danger.
As an adult, your fear of change manifests as rigidity. You micromanage. You resist flexibility. You rationalize why change is impossible or unnecessary. You catastrophize others’ change decisions. You maintain the illusion of control by keeping everything—and everyone—in place.
That’s you: You say “I have everything under control” while relationships suffer and opportunities pass by. You know what needs to change, but the thought of surrendering control feels like drowning.
The Falsely Empowered persona can look like ambition, strength, and leadership on the surface. But underneath, it’s panic and shame. The moment control is threatened, rage or shutdown appears. Change feels like losing yourself entirely.
Disempowered (The Collapser)
The Disempowered persona protects by collapsing, people-pleasing, and abandoning your own needs. In childhood, you learned that the only way to survive was to make yourself small, compliant, and emotionally attuned to others. Your safety depended on being needed, invisible, or helpful.
As an adult, your fear of change manifests as paralysis. You say “yes” to things you don’t want. You stay in harmful situations because leaving feels selfish. You wait for permission that never comes. You sabotage positive change because growth feels disloyal to the family or belief system that raised you.
That’s you: You’ve spent years adapting to everyone else’s needs. The idea of choosing yourself—changing careers, ending a relationship, setting a boundary—triggers guilt and terror. Who are you if you’re not taking care of others?
The Disempowered persona can look like kindness and selflessness. But underneath, it’s self-abandonment and invisible rage. You’re not genuinely giving—you’re protecting yourself by making sure no one abandons you first.
Adapted Wounded Child (The Oscillator)
The Adapted Wounded Child persona oscillates between Falsely Empowered and Disempowered, depending on the perceived threat level. You can be rigidly controlling one moment and completely collapsed the next. You’re the chameleon, the code-switcher, the person who reads the room and becomes whoever’s needed.
In childhood, unpredictability forced you to develop extreme flexibility. You had to sense danger and shift strategies constantly. Your survival depended on being able to control when necessary and collapse when necessary.
As an adult, change triggers rapid oscillation. You plan a big shift, feel excited, then panic and abandon the plan. You’re in a conversation about your needs, you start advocating for yourself, then you collapse back into people-pleasing. You want to leave a relationship, then you convince yourself you’re being ungrateful. This oscillation is exhausting and deeply confusing to others.
That’s you: People say you’re inconsistent or moody. You feel like you’re being torn in two directions constantly. One minute you’re ready for change, the next you’re drowning in doubt and shame.
All three survival personas are brilliant adaptations. They kept you alive. The problem isn’t that they exist—it’s that they’re still running your adult life and blocking your capacity for authentic change.

The Authentic Self Cycle™: How to Heal
If the Worst Day Cycle™ explains the problem, the Authentic Self Cycle™ is the solution. It’s an identity restoration system—a four-stage process that rewires your emotional blueprint and reclaims your authentic self from underneath the survival persona.

Stage 1: Truth — Name the Blueprint
Truth means seeing the emotional blueprint clearly. It’s naming where your fear came from, what painful meanings you made about change, and how those meanings have run your life.
This isn’t blame or victimhood—it’s clarity. You’re not saying “My parent’s abandonment ruined me forever.” You’re saying “My parent’s abandonment taught my nervous system that I’m not safe when things change. That’s the blueprint I’m carrying. That blueprint is no longer serving me.”
That’s you: You stop telling yourself “I’m just not a risk-taker” and start seeing “I was trained to fear change because change meant danger.”
Truth is the first step because you cannot change what you cannot see. The survival persona stays invisible by convincing you it’s just “who you are.” Truth breaks that invisibility.
Stage 2: Responsibility — Own Your Emotional Reactions
Responsibility doesn’t mean blame. It means reclaiming your power by owning that your emotional reactions to change are coming from your blueprint, not from current reality.
This is the pivot point: Your partner isn’t your abandoning parent. Your new job opportunity isn’t a setup for failure. Your nervous system just thinks they are because you’re running an old program.
Responsibility means: “When I consider leaving this job, I feel terror. That terror isn’t information about the job—it’s information about my blueprint. My nervous system learned that change = danger. That’s not the job’s fault. That’s not my weakness. That’s my blueprint. And I’m responsible for healing it.”
This shift is radical. It moves you from victim (“This is happening to me”) to agent (“I’m responsible for my own healing”). You reclaim your power.
Stage 3: Healing — Rewire Your Nervous System
Healing means creating new neural pathways. It means experiencing change in small, regulated doses so your nervous system learns: “Change is uncomfortable, but I survive. Change is unfamiliar, but it’s not dangerous. I can handle uncertainty.”
Healing isn’t intellectual. You can’t think your way out of emotional patterns. You have to feel your way through them. This is where the Emotional Authenticity Method™ comes in—it’s a somatic process that works with your body and emotions, not just your thoughts.
As your nervous system learns safety in the face of change, space stops meaning abandonment. Intensity stops meaning attack. Uncertainty stops triggering survival panic. A new emotional chemistry replaces fear and shame.
Stage 4: Forgiveness — Release the Inherited Blueprint
Forgiveness is releasing the inherited emotional blueprint so you can build your own. This doesn’t mean condoning harm or staying in contact with people who hurt you.
It means: “My parents did the best they could with the emotional blueprints they inherited. The pain they passed to me wasn’t personal—it was inherited. I can acknowledge that and choose differently for myself.”
That’s you: You stop seeing yourself as damaged by your past and start seeing yourself as responsible for your future. You reclaim your authentic identity.
Forgiveness is where you truly become free. Not free from the past—but free from letting the past dictate your present and future.
The Emotional Authenticity Method™: Five Steps to Rewire Your Blueprint
The Emotional Authenticity Method™ is how you execute the Authentic Self Cycle™. It’s a five-step somatic process that rewires your emotional blueprint by working with your body, not just your thoughts.
You cannot change emotional patterns through thoughts alone. Emotions are biochemical events. Thoughts originate from feelings, not the other way around. This is why positive affirmations don’t work if your nervous system still believes you’re in danger.

Step 1: Somatic Down-Regulation (with Optional Titration)
Before you can access truth, you have to calm your nervous system. If you’re in fight-flight-freeze mode, your prefrontal cortex (the thinking brain) is offline. You can’t access clarity or wisdom from a dysregulated state.
Down-regulation might look like: deep breathing, cold water on your face, grounding techniques (5-4-3-2-1 sensory awareness), movement, bilateral stimulation, or simply slowing down.
Titration means doing this in small doses. You don’t try to calm completely—you gently lower the activation level so you’re accessible but still connected to the feeling. If you fully suppress the emotion, you can’t access it for healing.
That’s you: When you think about change, panic floods your system. Step 1 is: “Okay, I’m going to breathe slowly for 60 seconds. I’m going to feel my feet on the ground. Now I’m calm enough to actually think.”
Step 2: What Am I Feeling? (Emotional Granularity)
Most people collapse all difficult feelings into “anxiety” or “stress.” But your nervous system is far more specific. Is it shame? Terror? Sadness? Rage? Helplessness? Betrayal? Loneliness?
The more granular you can get, the more information the emotion reveals. Shame says: “I’m the problem.” Rage says: “Someone violated my boundary.” Sadness says: “I’ve lost something.” They require different responses.
Use the Feelings Wheel to expand your emotional vocabulary. Start with the primary emotion (fear, sadness, anger, joy, disgust, surprise) and spiral inward to find the specific shade of the feeling you’re experiencing. This alone is healing—our nervous systems calm when we name the experience accurately.
We offer a free interactive Feelings Wheel at kennyweiss.net/life-changing-exercise to help you build this emotional literacy.
Step 3: Where in My Body Do I Feel It?
All emotional trauma is stored in the body. When you avoided your feelings, your nervous system stored the incomplete experience as physical sensation. Until you process it somatically, your body keeps trying to complete the experience.
Locate the feeling: Does your chest tighten? Does your throat close? Does your belly clench? Does your skin flush? Does your jaw clench? What part of your body is holding this emotion?
This is crucial information. Your body is the gateway to your emotional blueprint. The nervousness about change might feel like throat closure (can’t speak your truth) or chest tightness (can’t breathe/move forward) or stomach clenching (can’t trust your gut instinct).
That’s you: You notice that when you think about changing careers, your chest immediately tightens and you feel suffocated. That’s not a heart attack—that’s your nervous system saying “This change feels like suffocation because of what you experienced before.”
Step 4: What Is My Earliest Memory of This Feeling?
This is the trace step. You follow the feeling backward to its origin in your childhood blueprint. This feeling of panic about change—when’s the first time you felt it? How old were you? What was happening?
You might trace terror about change back to the day your parent said they were leaving. You might trace paralysis back to a teacher’s harsh criticism of your work. You might trace rage back to feeling invisible in your chaotic family.
This isn’t about reliving trauma—it’s about connecting the dots. Your nervous system responds to change with such intensity because change has been dangerous before. You’re not broken. You’re responding logically to past experience.
When you trace the feeling to its origin, something shifts. You literally see: “This response made sense when I was seven. I was protecting myself from actual danger. That danger is no longer present, but my nervous system is still running that old program.”
Step 5: Who Would I Be If I Never Had This Feeling Again?
This is the vision step. It’s not positive affirmation—it’s genuine imagination of your authentic self, free from this specific emotional pattern.
If you didn’t feel terror when you considered change, who would you be? What would you do? What would you try? What would you create? How would you move through the world differently?
That’s you: “If I wasn’t terrified of change, I would leave this job I hate. I would tell my partner the truth. I would start that creative project. I would trust myself.”
This vision step connects you to the Authentic Self Cycle™. It shows you what’s possible on the other side of healing. It’s not a fantasy—it’s a preview of your authentic self once the survival persona releases its grip.
Repeat this process as often as needed. Each cycle weakens the emotional pattern and strengthens your capacity for change. Over time, your nervous system rewires. Change becomes uncomfortable but not dangerous. You access your authentic agency.
Signs of Fear-Based Resistance by Life Area
Fear of change manifests differently across life domains. Here’s how to recognize it in the areas where you feel most stuck.
Family & Origin Dynamics
- You stay entangled with family patterns even though they cause pain
- You can’t set boundaries because change in family dynamics feels unsafe
- You replay childhood roles (caretaker, scapegoat, invisible one) even as an adult
- You feel obligated to stay the same so family members feel comfortable
- You tell yourself “my family will never change” and accept dysfunction as permanent
- You avoid therapy or healing work because it might change the family dynamic
That’s you: You know the family dynamic is unhealthy, but the thought of changing it—setting a boundary, speaking the truth, reducing contact—triggers overwhelming guilt and terror. Who are you if you’re not the person they need you to be?
Romantic Relationships
- You stay in relationships that drain you because leaving feels like abandonment (of them or by them)
- You sabotage good relationships because they’re unfamiliar and therefore feel unsafe
- You repeat the same dysfunctional pattern in every relationship
- You can’t communicate your needs because vulnerability feels dangerous
- You choose partners who are unavailable or harmful because that dynamic is familiar
- You feel paralyzed when a partner wants to deepen intimacy (that’s too much change)
Explore this deeper in our post on insecurity in relationships and how trauma patterns show up in partnerships.
Friendships & Social Connection
- You maintain friendships that are one-sided or harmful because ending them feels disloyal
- You don’t speak up when a friend hurts you because conflict means loss
- You’re isolated because making new friends requires vulnerability and risk
- You people-please in friendships, never showing your authentic self
- You disappear when friendships naturally evolve because change in closeness triggers fear
- You feel unable to ask for support because you learned that needing others is dangerous
Career & Creative Work
- You stay in jobs that don’t align with your values because change feels risky
- You sabotage promotions or opportunities because visibility triggers shame
- You don’t pursue creative work because failure would confirm you’re not good enough
- You tell yourself you’re “not that person” who takes risks or pursues passion
- You’re over-cautious, over-prepared, perfectionist (trying to control the outcome)
- You shrink yourself to fit the expectations of others rather than creating on your terms
That’s you: You have a business idea, a creative dream, a career change waiting inside you. But every time you consider it, panic and self-doubt paralyze you. You tell yourself “I’m not brave enough” or “It’s too risky.” The real fear: “If I try and fail, I’m a failure. If I try and succeed, I have to be visible and that’s not safe.”
Body & Health
- You avoid medical care because the unknown feels dangerous
- You stay in harmful physical patterns (sedentary, eating habits, substance use) because change feels threatening
- You can’t sustain exercise or nutrition changes because your nervous system sabotages progress
- You ignore body signals and stay disconnected from physical sensation
- You punish your body through stress or neglect as a way to feel in control
- You fear the vulnerability of asking for help or admitting you’re struggling

People Also Ask
Why does change trigger such intense fear if the danger is no longer present?
Your nervous system doesn’t distinguish between past and present. It only knows “pattern matches = safety, unknown = danger.” When you were seven and your parent abandoned the family, change was genuinely dangerous. Your nervous system learned: change = loss, separation, danger. Now, decades later, your body still treats all change as a threat signal, even though the actual danger is no longer present. This is why logical reassurance doesn’t work—the fear is biochemical, not rational. Your nervous system needs to learn through repeated safe experiences of change that you can handle uncertainty. That’s why the Emotional Authenticity Method™ works—it rewires your nervous system somatically, not just mentally.
I’ve tried therapy and self-help books, but nothing changes. Why am I still stuck?
Most traditional talk therapy and self-help focus on thoughts and behavior. But your emotional blueprint is biochemical and somatic. You can understand intellectually that change is safe while your nervous system still believes it’s dangerous. The disconnect between what you know and what you feel is maddening because your emotions are running the show, not your thoughts. The Emotional Authenticity Method™ is different—it doesn’t ask you to think your way out. It works with your body and emotions directly. You calm your nervous system first, then trace the feeling to its origin, then create new neural pathways through somatic practice. This takes longer than a self-help book, but it actually creates lasting change.
How do I know if I’m a Falsely Empowered, Disempowered, or Adapted Wounded Child survival persona?
Most people aren’t purely one type—they oscillate or blend depending on context. But you can identify your primary patterns by noticing: When you’re anxious about change, do you try to control (Falsely Empowered), collapse and people-please (Disempowered), or oscillate between the two (Adapted Wounded Child)? A Falsely Empowered person might rigidly maintain their job and relationship because leaving feels like losing control. A Disempowered person might stay in a bad situation and people-please their way through it. An Adapted Wounded Child might want to leave, start planning, then suddenly decide to stay, then want to leave again. All three are protecting against the same core fear of change—just using different strategies.
Can I overcome fear of change without addressing my childhood trauma?
Not fully. You can develop coping strategies that make change feel more manageable, but you’ll always be managing from a place of underlying fear. True freedom from fear-based resistance requires understanding and rewiring your emotional blueprint—the survival conclusions you made as a child that still run your nervous system. That’s what the Emotional Authenticity Method™ does. It connects your current fear of change to the childhood experience that created it, then uses somatic practice to rewire your nervous system so change becomes uncomfortable but not dangerous.
What’s the difference between healthy caution about change and fear-based resistance?
Healthy caution is thoughtful and measured. You consider the risks, gather information, make a deliberate choice, and move forward even with uncertainty. Fear-based resistance is paralyzing. You can’t move forward. You sabotage positive change. You rationalize staying stuck. You feel shame about your inability to change. If you’re considering a big life change and your entire body is screaming “no” while your mind is saying “yes, you should do this,” that’s a sign your nervous system is running an old survival program.
How long does it take to rewire fear of change?
There’s no fixed timeline. It depends on the depth of your childhood trauma, how long you’ve been stuck in the pattern, and how committed you are to the healing work. Some people experience shifts in weeks—a few rounds of the Emotional Authenticity Method™ and they’re noticeably more capable of handling change. Others need months or longer of consistent practice to rewire deep patterns. What’s important: every time you practice the method, you’re creating new neural pathways. Your brain is literally building new tissue (myelin) around new patterns of response. Daily practice accelerates healing far more than sporadic effort.
The Bottom Line: Fear of Change Is Grief in Disguise
Your fear of change isn’t weakness or broken neurology. It’s your nervous system mourning the loss of the familiar, even when the familiar causes pain.
Change means letting go—of identity, of roles, of the world as you’ve known it. That’s a real loss, and your system is wise to grieve it. The problem isn’t the grief. The problem is when grief becomes paralysis, when mourning the loss of the familiar keeps you from stepping into authentic possibility.
That’s you: You’re standing at the threshold of change. One foot wants to move forward. One foot is cemented in the past. You’re torn. Exhausted. Ashamed of how stuck you are.
Here’s what I want you to know: Every single person who has healed their fear of change has felt exactly what you’re feeling right now. That terror isn’t a sign you shouldn’t change. It’s a sign your nervous system needs to learn that change is safe. The Worst Day Cycle™ isn’t permanent. It’s a pattern—and patterns can be rewired.
Your authentic self is waiting on the other side of this fear. Not a perfect self—an imperfect, vulnerable, real self who gets to choose. Who gets to speak. Who gets to try. Who gets to fail and try again. Who gets to move forward even when it’s scary.
The Authentic Self Cycle™ is the path. The Emotional Authenticity Method™ is the map. Your job is to show up consistently, trace your fear to its origin, and practice moving forward in small, regulated doses until your nervous system learns: “I am safe. Change is uncomfortable, but I can handle it. I am worthy of the life I actually want.”
You don’t have to stay afraid. Not because fear will disappear—but because you’ll become someone who moves forward anyway.
Recommended Reading
- Codependent No More by Melody Beattie — Understanding how to stop abandoning yourself to please others
- The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk — How trauma is stored in the nervous system and how somatic healing works
- Attached by Amir Levine & Rachel Heller — Understanding attachment styles and how childhood patterns show up in adult relationships
- The Gifts of Imperfection by Brené Brown — Releasing perfectionism and shame to show up authentically
- Facing Codependence by Pia Mellody — The foundational text on how childhood trauma creates survival personas and codependent patterns
- When the Body Says No by Gabor Maté — How chronic emotional suppression manifests as physical illness
- It Didn’t Start With You by Mark Wolynn — Understanding inherited emotional patterns and transgenerational trauma
Take the Next Step
You don’t have to figure this out alone. Kenny Weiss has created courses specifically designed to help you understand your emotional blueprint and practice the Emotional Authenticity Method™.
Emotional Blueprint Starter Course — Individual ($79) — Understand your emotional blueprint, identify your survival persona, and create a personalized healing roadmap.
Relationship Starter Course — Couples ($79) — If your fear of change shows up in your romantic relationship, understand the dynamic with your partner.
Why We Can’t Stop Hurting Each Other ($479) — How emotional blueprints create relationship patterns and how to break them.
Why High Achievers Fail at Love ($479) — Understanding why success in career feels impossible in relationships.
The Shutdown Avoidant Partner ($479) — How to show up and stay connected when change threatens your stability.
Tier 1: Mapping the Blueprint ($1,379) — The most comprehensive program: Master the Emotional Authenticity Method™.
Download the Feelings Wheel — the free tool used in Step 2 of the Emotional Authenticity Method™ to build emotional granularity.
Explore more: The Signs of Enmeshment | 7 Signs of Relationship Insecurity | 7 Signs of High Self-Esteem | How to Determine Your Negotiables and Non-Negotiables | 10 Do’s and Don’ts for a Great Relationship



















