Tag: trust issues

  • Relationship Do’s and Don’ts: 10 Rules for Healthy Love

    Relationship Do’s and Don’ts: 10 Rules for Healthy Love

    You’ve read every relationship book. You’ve tried couples therapy. You’ve watched the TED talks, listened to the podcasts, and promised yourself — again — that this time will be different.

    But nothing changes. The same fights keep happening. The same walls go up. The same emptiness sits between you and the person you’re supposed to love.

    The relationship patterns you keep repeating are not communication problems, compatibility issues, or bad luck in love — they are childhood survival strategies running on autopilot in your adult relationships, and until you trace them back to the emotional blueprint that installed them, no amount of relationship advice will change anything.

    Here’s what nobody tells you: the problem isn’t your partner. It’s not your communication skills. It’s not even the specific things you fight about. The problem is the invisible blueprint you’re running — one that was installed in childhood, long before you ever chose a partner. Every one of the 10 Don’ts I’m about to share traces back to the Worst Day Cycle™ — a repeating loop of trauma, fear, shame, and denial that drives every unhealthy relationship pattern you’ve ever experienced.

    That’s you if you keep trying to fix your relationship without understanding what’s actually driving it.

    I’m going to give you 10 Do’s and 10 Don’ts for a great relationship. But more importantly, I’m going to show you why you keep falling into the Don’ts — and the exact path out through the Emotional Authenticity Method™ and the Authentic Self Cycle™.

    Emotional Blueprint icon representing the unconscious relationship patterns formed in childhood trauma

    The 10 Do’s: What Healthy Relationships Actually Look Like

    Before we get into what’s broken, let’s paint the picture of what’s possible. People in genuinely healthy relationships share these traits — not because they got lucky, but because they did the work to get there.

    1. They Know It’s Never Their Partner’s Job to Meet Their Needs

    This is the foundation. People in healthy relationships recognize that meeting their own needs and wants is their responsibility. Is it wonderful when their partner steps up? Absolutely. But they don’t expect it. They don’t demand it. They put a plan in place to meet their own needs — and that changes everything.

    That’s you if you’ve ever thought, “If they really loved me, they’d just know what I need.”

    2. They Don’t Live in Fear of Betrayal

    They aren’t snooping through phones. They aren’t checking location apps. They aren’t interrogating their partner after every night out. They have a basic, grounded security that their partner is invested in them — not because their partner is perfect, but because they trust themselves enough to handle whatever comes.

    3. They See the World as Basically Decent

    Sure, there are difficult people. But their default setting isn’t suspicion. Their general worldview is positive rather than negative. They don’t walk into every room scanning for threats. They don’t assume the worst about strangers, coworkers, or their partner’s intentions.

    4. They See Themselves as Lovable and Worthy

    They recognize their great qualities and their perfect imperfections. They don’t need constant external validation to feel OK about who they are. They’re open to the possibility that someone else out there feels the same way about themselves — and is willing to accept those imperfections.

    That’s you if you secretly believe something is fundamentally wrong with you — something that makes you undeserving of real love.

    Perfectly Imperfect icon representing self-acceptance and authentic self-worth in relationships

    5. They Don’t Allow Harmful Behaviors

    They don’t make excuses. They don’t minimize. They don’t say, “Well, they only act like that when they’re stressed.” They recognize harmful behaviors as intolerable and say no to them immediately — not from anger, but from self-respect.

    6. They Don’t Abandon Themselves to Be Loved

    They don’t give up friends, family, hobbies, or careers to keep the peace. They stay attached to what matters to them. And if someone asks them to sacrifice those things? They won’t. That’s what makes them available for a healthy relationship.

    Codependence icon representing the pattern of abandoning yourself to be loved by your partner

    7. They Know Their Morals, Values, Needs, Wants, Negotiables, and Non-Negotiables

    They’ve sat down and mapped it all out. They know what they stand for. They know what they need. They know what they’re willing to flex on — and what they’re not. And they communicate all of this openly, without expecting their partner to read their mind. If you haven’t done this work, here’s where to start: How to Determine Your Negotiables and Non-Negotiables.

    That’s you if you’ve never once sat down and asked yourself: What are my non-negotiables? What do I actually need from a partner?

    8. They Believe Saying “No” Is Loving

    They don’t see boundaries as cold or problematic. They understand that saying no removes the possibility of saying yes to things while expecting something in return — which is manipulation. Boundaries aren’t walls. They’re the foundation love is built on.

    That’s you if you keep saying yes when you mean no — and then keeping score of everything you’ve “sacrificed.”

    9. They Never Enable, Rescue, or Parent Their Partner

    They know their partner will struggle. They have faith their partner will figure it out. They don’t try to gain false power by fixing everything. Instead, they pick partners who can do it on their own.

    10. They Embrace That Relationships Are Difficult

    They don’t pull away, run, or quit when things get hard. They stay engaged. They recognize that the difficulties are exactly what create long-lasting intimacy and connection. They use challenges to learn about each other — and to build deeper trust.

    That’s you if your first instinct when things get hard is to shut down, pull away, or start planning your exit.

    That is the foundation. This is what people in healthy relationships believe about themselves, and they always return to that base. This is where they originate their relationships from.

    The 10 Don’ts: The Patterns That Destroy Relationships

    Now let’s get into the Don’ts — the polar opposite of everything above. You see these patterns in almost every movie, TV show, and social media post about love. What we’ve had modeled for us is deeply unhealthy.

    If you find yourself on this list, that doesn’t mean you’re a bad person. You can’t be blamed for doing things you were taught to do. If this is the first time you’re hearing these, then this is the first day you have a choice. You can choose to learn new information, gain new skills and tools, and build the relationship you actually deserve.

    Survival Persona icon representing the false identity created in childhood to cope with unmet emotional needs

    1. Believing Your Partner Should Meet All Your Needs

    This is the number one relationship killer. It shows up as the belief that your partner should know what you need without you ever asking — and that they should deliver it at all times. In almost every session, clients tell me they’ve told their partner what they want “a thousand times” and that they “should just know.”

    Here’s the truth: what’s important to you may not be important to them. That doesn’t make them bad people. Their life is filled with their own needs and wants. Our partners are human — they’re going to forget. That belief that they should be focused on us at all times is codependent, manipulative, destructive, and unhealthy.

    That’s you if you feel abandoned or unloved when your partner doesn’t anticipate what you need before you ask.

    2. No Trust — Controlling, Spying, and Snooping

    We put the latches on our partners because of our own fears, insecurities, and abandonment issues. But here’s what we don’t want to face: a lack of trust in others is hiding a lack of trust in ourselves for our previous choices. We project that lack of self-trust outward and convince ourselves that everyone is inherently bad, deceptive, or dangerous. For a deeper look at how relationship insecurity drives these controlling behaviors, that post will change your perspective.

    3. A Core Belief That You’re Unlovable

    This drives the first two Don’ts. If we’re controlling, demanding, and hypervigilant, it’s because deep down we believe something is defective in us. Instead of learning to love ourselves, we try to force the other person to love us. Oftentimes we’re completely detached from these deeper feelings and don’t even recognize our own behaviors.

    That’s you if you can’t sit alone with yourself for more than a few minutes without feeling empty, anxious, or worthless.

    4. Tolerating Abuse Because You Believe No One Else Will Love You

    I’ve had clients who call me every week saying they’ve broken up with their partner “for the last time.” The next session starts with how they got back together — and the partner is still saying and doing hurtful things. The violence only escalates, yet they keep going back. That going back is a product of the lack of love for themselves. They minimize the bad behaviors because the alternative — being alone — feels worse than being hurt.

    That’s you if you keep going back to someone who hurts you because the fear of being alone is worse than the pain of staying.

    5. Needing Constant Approval and Affirmation

    This shows up as the inability to take criticism or be wrong. It’s the belief that our partner must constantly have our back in any disagreement — that they must support us no matter what. Think about how absurd that is: if we believe our partner should support us at all times, what happens when we do something genuinely harmful? Are they supposed to support that too?

    Everyone is perfectly imperfect. Everyone has behaviors that shouldn’t be supported. It’s actually loving for a partner to kindly show us when we didn’t have a great moment.

    That’s you if you feel attacked or betrayed when your partner disagrees with you or points out something you could do differently.

    Adapted Wounded Child icon representing the survival response of people-pleasing and self-abandonment in relationships

    6. Sacrificing Everything for Your Partner

    Giving up friends, hobbies, family, career — all to keep the relationship alive. I did this in my first marriage. I went about 10 years without seeing my family because it was what she wanted. All I knew were the messages from movies, media, and TV: if I loved her, I had to sacrifice everything.

    That’s you if you look around and realize you’ve given up everything that used to matter to you — and you still feel empty.

    7. Not Knowing Your Morals, Values, Needs, Wants, Negotiables, and Non-Negotiables

    This was me. I remember laying on my bed as a kid, wondering who would marry me — if she’d be nice or pretty. I had no idea I could decide my morals, values, needs, wants, negotiables, and non-negotiables. I spent years waiting for someone to pick me up. Every area of my life didn’t line up with my first wife because I never sat down and mapped these things out — that’s on me. How could she meet my needs and wants if our morals and values were opposite?

    8. No Boundaries and the Inability to Say No

    You hear people exclaiming, “I did this and that for them, and look what they did to me!” That means we did all those things hoping to get something in return. That is manipulation. The proof is we’re throwing it in their face, keeping score, and resenting them.

    That’s why “no” is the most loving word a partner can tell us. When they say no, we know they won’t throw it in our face later. I used to go to garage sales with my first wife for hours — hating every minute — then come home and be passive-aggressive all night. Where’s the love in that?

    That’s you if you keep saying yes when you mean no — and then resenting your partner for “making” you do things you never wanted to do.

    9. Rescuing, Enabling, and Playing the Parent

    My ex was a pill addict. I’d drive all across the state, going to friends’ houses, lying to pharmacies and doctors, trying to get more pills. I was totally enabling her addiction — thinking I was rescuing her from being hurt. The truth? I thought if I did this, maybe she’d have sex with me. It was all manipulation.

    When people give themselves away to do for others, it’s a false power dynamic. They sit in the resentment, never having to face their own manipulation. I used to say, “I quit pro hockey. I gave up my family. I gave up sex. I changed careers. I changed my whole life for her — and she wouldn’t stop hitting me.” I’m not condoning any of her behaviors. But I was never taught about boundaries or healthy relationships. I was manipulative and I had to take responsibility for my part to change it.

    That’s you if you give everything away and then feel like a martyr when nobody appreciates the sacrifice.

    10. Avoiding Relationships Entirely

    These are the people who say, “I’m done with relationships! Men are all liars. Women are all cheaters.” If they are in a relationship, they won’t open up or be vulnerable. Because of the lack of knowledge, skills, and tools, they stay stuck in their pain, avoid connection, and project the problem onto everyone else.

    That’s you if you’ve built a wall so high that nobody can get in — and you tell yourself it’s because you’re “protecting yourself.”

    Trauma Chemistry icon representing the addictive biochemical patterns that keep you in unhealthy relationship cycles

    The Worst Day Cycle™: Why You Keep Repeating the Same Patterns

    Here’s where most relationship advice completely fails you. Therapists and self-help books give you communication techniques, love languages, and conflict resolution scripts. But none of that works if you don’t address the root cause.

    Every adult relationship pattern — every fight, every shutdown, every desperate attempt to control or please — is a direct replay of an unhealed childhood emotional blueprint. The brain doesn’t distinguish between past and present danger. It only recognizes known versus unknown. And since the known pattern was installed in childhood, the brain repeats it in every adult relationship, mistaking repetition for safety.

    The Worst Day Cycle™ operates in four stages:

    Stage 1 — Trauma: Childhood trauma isn’t limited to extreme abuse. Any negative emotional experience that created painful meanings — shame, neglect, enmeshment, emotional absence — qualifies. These experiences create a massive chemical reaction in the brain and body. The hypothalamus generates chemical cocktails of cortisol, adrenaline, dopamine, and oxytocin misfires, and the brain becomes addicted to these emotional states.

    Stage 2 — Fear: The brain conserves energy by repeating known patterns — it can’t tell right from wrong, only known versus unknown. Since 70%+ of childhood messaging is negative and shaming, adults repeat these painful patterns in relationships, career, hobbies, health — everything. Fear drives repetition because the brain thinks repetition equals safety.

    Stage 3 — Shame: This is where you lost your inherent worth. The core wound says “I am the problem.” Not “I made a mistake” — “I am the mistake.” This shame becomes the engine that drives every Don’t on the list above.

    Stage 4 — Denial: To survive the unbearable pain of shame, the brain creates a survival persona — a false version of yourself designed to manage the chaos. This denial is brilliant in childhood. It keeps you alive. But in adulthood, it becomes the very thing that destroys your relationships.

    Worst Day Cycle icon representing the repeating pattern of childhood trauma playing out in adult relationships

    The survival persona shows up in three types:

    The falsely empowered survival persona controls, dominates, rages, and demands. In relationships, this looks like jealousy, possessiveness, and emotional explosions.

    The disempowered survival persona withdraws, shuts down, disappears, and avoids. In relationships, this is the stonewaller — the person who goes silent when things get hard.

    The adapted wounded child survival persona people-pleases, sacrifices, enables, and rescues. In relationships, this is the person who gives everything away and then resents their partner for not reciprocating.

    That’s you if you recognize yourself in one — or all three — of those patterns, depending on the situation.

    The Worst Day Cycle™ keeps running because the survival persona was never designed to create healthy relationships. It was designed to survive childhood. But you’re not a child anymore — and the strategies that kept you safe then are destroying your relationships now.

    How the Don’ts Show Up in Every Area of Your Life

    These patterns don’t just wreck your romantic relationships. They bleed into everything.

    In your romantic relationship: You pick partners who recreate your childhood dynamics. You enable, control, or withdraw. You can’t resolve conflict without one of you shutting down or exploding. You feel like you’re walking on eggshells — or your partner does.

    That’s you if every relationship follows the same script — different person, same pain.

    In your friendships: You over-give, then resent. You keep score. You attract people who take advantage of your inability to say no. Or you keep everyone at arm’s length because you don’t trust anyone.

    At work: You people-please your boss. You take on extra work and then burn out. You can’t handle feedback without spiraling. Or you dominate and control — and wonder why your team doesn’t respect you.

    In your parenting: You repeat the very patterns your parents used on you — the ones you swore you’d never repeat. You control, enable, or emotionally withdraw from your children without realizing you’re doing it.

    In your body and health: The stress of living in the Don’ts shows up physically. Chronic pain, insomnia, digestive issues, autoimmune conditions. Your body keeps the score of every unprocessed emotion.

    That’s you if your body is screaming at you and you keep pushing through, ignoring what it’s trying to tell you.

    Emotional Regulation icon representing the somatic process of down-regulating the nervous system before making relationship decisions

    The Emotional Authenticity Method™: The 6-Step Path From the Don’ts to the Do’s

    So how do you actually get from the Don’ts to the Do’s? Not through willpower. Not through communication techniques. Not through finding a “better” partner. You get there through the Emotional Authenticity Method™ — a 6-step process for feeling your real feelings, tracing them to their origin, and rewiring the emotional blueprint that drives every relationship pattern.

    Emotional Authenticity icon representing the method for processing shame and building real connection in relationships

    You cannot change emotional patterns through thoughts alone. Emotions are biochemical events. Thoughts originate from feelings — not the other way around. This is why affirmations fail, why “just think positive” fails, and why cognitive techniques alone will never rewire the survival persona driving your relationship patterns.

    Step 1 — Somatic Down-Regulation: Focus on what you can hear for 15 to 30 seconds. This activates the auditory cortex and pulls the brain out of the emotional hijack. If you’re highly dysregulated, use titration — alternate between the triggering feeling and the grounding sound in small doses until the nervous system settles enough to think.

    Step 2 — What Am I Feeling Right Now? Use emotional granularity — expand your vocabulary beyond “bad” or “anxious.” The Feelings Wheel is one of the most powerful tools for this. Most people use five or six words for their entire emotional range. Real healing requires naming the specific feeling: abandoned, dismissed, invisible, suffocated, controlled, not enough.

    Step 3 — Where in My Body Do I Feel It? All emotional trauma is stored physically. The tightness in your chest, the knot in your stomach, the tension in your jaw — these are the body’s record of every childhood wound that was never processed. Locate it. Stay with it.

    Step 4 — What Is My Earliest Memory of Having This Exact Feeling? This is the step that changes everything. Trace the current feeling back to its childhood origin. When your partner forgets your birthday and you feel worthless, that’s not about the birthday. That’s about every time your needs were invisible as a child. This step breaks the illusion that the present moment is causing your pain.

    That’s you if you know your reactions are way too big for the situation — but you can’t figure out where the intensity is coming from.

    Step 5 — Who Would I Be If I Never Had This Thought or Feeling Again? What would be left over? This is the vision step. It connects directly to the Authentic Self Cycle™. Most people have never imagined themselves without the shame, without the fear, without the survival persona. This question opens the door to who you actually are underneath all of it.

    Step 6 — Feelization: Sit in the feeling of the Authentic Self and make it strong. Create a new emotional chemical addiction to replace the old blueprint. Ask: how would I respond to this situation from this feeling? What would I say? What would I do? Visualize and feel yourself operating from your Authentic Self. This is the emotional blueprint remapping and rewiring step — the moment where the brain starts building new neural pathways that override the childhood programming.

    That’s you if you know what you should do in your relationship — but your body keeps hijacking you into the same old reaction before your brain can catch up.

    Myelin neural pathways icon representing the neuroplasticity process of building new emotional patterns through Feelization

    The Authentic Self Cycle™: What Becomes Possible

    Authentic Self Cycle icon representing the path from survival persona to genuine connection and healthy relationships

    When you start living from your authentic self instead of your survival persona, you enter the Authentic Self Cycle™ — the healing counterpart to the Worst Day Cycle™. This is an identity restoration system that operates in four stages:

    Truth: Name the blueprint. See “this isn’t about today.” Recognize that your partner isn’t your parent — your nervous system just thinks they are.

    Responsibility: Own your emotional reactions without blame. Stop pointing at your partner and start asking, “What childhood wound is running me right now?”

    Healing: Rewire the emotional blueprint so conflict becomes uncomfortable but not dangerous, space isn’t abandonment, and intensity isn’t attack. This is where the Emotional Authenticity Method™’s Feelization step creates a new emotional chemical pattern.

    Forgiveness: Release the inherited emotional blueprint and reclaim your authentic self. This isn’t about forgiving your parents’ behavior — it’s about releasing the grip the childhood wound has on your adult life.

    When couples each do this work independently — healing their own Worst Day Cycle™, identifying their own survival persona, and practicing the Emotional Authenticity Method™ — the relationship transforms. Not because the other person changed, but because two authentic selves showed up instead of two survival personas fighting each other’s childhood ghosts.

    In the Authentic Self Cycle™, you stop trying to get love and start being love. You stop demanding your partner meet your needs and start meeting your own. You stop fearing abandonment because you’ve stopped abandoning yourself. You stop controlling because you trust yourself to handle whatever comes.

    That’s you if you’re tired of surviving and ready to actually live — in your relationship and in every part of your life.

    It Starts With Your Childhood — And That’s Not a Blame Game

    I know it’s uncomfortable to look at our parents’ imperfections — or to admit our own as parents. I’m not trying to blame anyone. I believe it’s loving to hold our parents accountable without blaming them. My goal is to break the wall of denial down, and my heart is to do it lovingly.

    Every scientific process out there shows that our relationship patterns are a direct result of our childhood experiences. If we’re not addressing childhood trauma, we’re not addressing the core problem. We’re just rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

    That’s you if the phrase “look at your childhood” makes you tense up, shut down, or immediately think “my childhood was fine.”

    Your Next Step: Start Moving From the Don’ts to the Do’s

    If you recognized yourself in the Don’ts — and especially if you recognized yourself in all 10 — here’s where you start:

    For understanding your relationship patterns: The Relationship Starter Course — Couples ($79) walks you through exactly how your childhood blueprint is driving your current relationship — and what to do about it.

    For understanding yourself: The Emotional Blueprint Starter Course — Individual ($79) helps you identify your survival persona, map your emotional blueprint, and start building from your authentic self.

    For going deeper: Why We Can’t Stop Hurting Each Other ($479) and Why High Achievers Fail at Love ($479) are comprehensive courses that take you through the full Worst Day Cycle™ and into the Authentic Self Cycle™.

    For the avoidant dynamic: The Shutdown Avoidant Partner ($479) is specifically designed for couples trapped in the pursuer-distancer cycle.

    For complete transformation: Tier 1: Mapping the Blueprint ($1,379) is where the deepest work happens — the full Emotional Authenticity Method™ with guided practice, community support, and real transformation.

    If you want to understand the patterns driving your relationships at a deeper level, these books have been instrumental in my own work and in the lives of my clients:

    Facing Codependence by Pia Mellody — The foundational text on how childhood trauma creates codependent relationship patterns. Mellody’s framework for understanding carried shame and the five core symptoms of codependence is some of the most important work ever done in this field.

    When the Body Says No by Gabor Maté — How the stress of unprocessed emotions and unhealthy relationship patterns manifests in physical illness. Maté’s work on the mind-body connection shows why relationship patterns don’t just hurt emotionally — they hurt physically.

    Codependent No More by Melody Beattie — The classic guide to understanding and recovering from codependent patterns in relationships. If you recognized yourself in the Don’ts, start here.

    Daring Greatly by Brené Brown — Why vulnerability is the birthplace of connection and why the survival persona’s strategy of hiding, controlling, or people-pleasing will never create the intimacy you’re looking for.

    The Bottom Line

    The 10 Don’ts aren’t character flaws. They’re survival strategies — built in childhood, reinforced by culture, and running on autopilot in every relationship you’ve ever had. You didn’t choose them. But now that you see them, you can choose something different.

    The path from the Don’ts to the Do’s doesn’t run through better communication or a more compatible partner. It runs through your own childhood wounds, through the survival persona you built to manage those wounds, and into the authentic self that’s been waiting underneath all along.

    The relationship you want is on the other side of the work you’ve been avoiding.

    I’ll leave you with this: if you decide to face the pain from the past, I have yet to see one person whose life didn’t explode with joy, peace, and contentment. If that’s what you really want, this is the only way I have found that always works.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Why do I keep attracting the same type of partner?

    You’re not “attracting” them — you’re choosing them. Your survival persona is drawn to partners who recreate the emotional dynamics of your childhood because those dynamics feel familiar. The Worst Day Cycle™ explains exactly how your childhood attachment patterns create a template that keeps pulling you toward the same relationship dynamics, no matter how different the person seems on the surface.

    Can I fix my relationship without my partner doing the work too?

    You can’t control whether your partner does the work. But when you start operating from your authentic self instead of your survival persona, the entire dynamic shifts. Many of my clients find that as they change, their partner either rises to meet them — or it becomes clear the relationship was built entirely on survival patterns. Either way, you win.

    What’s the difference between healthy boundaries and being cold or selfish?

    Your survival persona tells you that saying no is mean, selfish, or unloving. The truth is the opposite. Saying no is the most loving thing you can do — for yourself and for your partner. When you say yes and don’t mean it, you’re manipulating. You’re setting the stage for resentment, score-keeping, and passive aggression. Boundaries create safety. Lack of boundaries creates chaos.

    Is it really about my childhood even if my parents did their best?

    Your parents absolutely did their best with what they had. This isn’t about blame — it’s about truth. Every major framework in psychology and neuroscience confirms that our adult relationship patterns are formed in childhood. Holding your parents accountable isn’t the same as blaming them. It’s the doorway to healing. Without it, you stay stuck in denial — and denial keeps the Worst Day Cycle™ spinning.

    How do I know if I have a survival persona running my relationships?

    If you recognized yourself in any of the 10 Don’ts, your survival persona is running the show. The three types — falsely empowered (controlling, raging), disempowered (withdrawing, shutting down), and adapted wounded child (people-pleasing, enabling) — cover nearly every unhealthy relationship pattern. Most people flip between all three depending on the situation. The Emotional Authenticity Method™ teaches you to recognize which one is active in real time.

    What if I’ve already tried therapy and it didn’t work?

    Most therapy focuses on managing symptoms — better communication, coping strategies, conflict resolution techniques. Those are useful, but they don’t address the root cause. If you haven’t worked specifically on your childhood attachment wounds, your survival persona, and the Worst Day Cycle™ that’s driving everything, you haven’t done the work that actually changes things. The Emotional Authenticity Method™ goes where most therapy doesn’t — into the shame, the survival patterns, and the authentic self underneath.

  • 7 Signs of Relationship Insecurity (And What’s Really Behind It)

    7 Signs of Relationship Insecurity (And What’s Really Behind It)


    The Moment You Realize It’s Not About This Relationship

    You check their phone when they leave the room. You replay their tone of voice for hours. You feel a pause in their texting and your whole body floods — chest tight, stomach dropping, thoughts spiraling: What did I do? Are they pulling away? Is this over?

    You’re not crazy. You’re not “too much.” You’re not broken. What you’re experiencing is relationship insecurity — and it didn’t start with this relationship. It started long before you ever fell in love.

    Relationship insecurity is a trauma-driven pattern where your nervous system constantly scans for signs of abandonment, rejection, or emotional withdrawal — because that’s exactly what it learned to expect in childhood. The overthinking, the jealousy, the clinginess, the need for constant reassurance — these aren’t character flaws. They’re survival strategies your younger self built to manage emotional pain that no child should have had to carry alone.

    That’s you at fourteen, monitoring your parent’s mood the second they walked through the door. That’s you learning to read the room before you learned to read a book. That’s you carrying that same radar into every relationship you’ve ever had.

    In this article, I’m going to walk you through the 7 characteristics of relationship insecurity, what’s really driving each one underneath the surface, why the usual advice hasn’t worked, and what actually does — including the Al-Anon “Three Gets,” Pia Mellody’s foundational work on love addiction, and the Emotional Authenticity Method™ that rewires these patterns at the root.

    isn’t a personality flaw — it’s a nervous system response programmed by childhood emotional abandonment. The 7 characteristics (overthinking, catastrophizing, needing reassurance, bringing the past forward, over-giving, snooping, and inability to be alone) all trace back to your emotional blueprint. Recovery requires healing the original wound through the Emotional Authenticity Method™, not just managing symptoms with communication tips.

    Childhood emotional blueprint diagram showing how the brain predicts adult emotional reactions based on childhood trauma programming

    What Are the 7 Characteristics of Relationship Insecurity?

    Clinically, what most people call “relationship insecurity” or “anxious attachment” is actually love addiction. I know that term sounds intense. But one of the core ingredients of recovery is getting into reality. If we don’t call things what they actually are, we enable the person in pain to stay disconnected from the truth — and that goes against everything I stand for.

    Your survival persona — the identity you built in childhood to manage your parents’ emotional chaos — is running every single one of these behaviors. Whether you became the falsely empowered one (controlling everything), the disempowered one (making yourself invisible), or the adapted wounded child (shape-shifting to match whoever you’re with), these characteristics are your survival persona’s playbook.

    Here are the 7 characteristics I see over and over again in my coaching practice:

    1. Obsessive Overthinking

    This was me for most of my life. I would replay conversations on loop, scrolling back through texts, trying to decode every pause, every word choice, every shift in tone. What did they mean by “okay”? Why didn’t they say “I love you” back?

    The critical distinction here: these aren’t just passing thoughts. They’re obsessive, and they’re always focused outward — trying to figure the other person out instead of turning inward to understand what’s actually happening inside you.

    Your Hurt Child voice is running the show, scanning for danger the same way it did when you were small and couldn’t predict whether your parent would be warm or cold, present or gone.

    That’s you lying awake at 2 AM, scrolling back through a text thread for the fourth time, trying to decode whether “sounds good” means they’re happy or pulling away. That’s you spending more energy reading your partner than reading yourself.

    2. Catastrophic Thinking

    A communication gap opens — even a slight pause in texting — and your entire nervous system goes into threat mode. They’re leaving. They’re angry. Something is wrong. This is over.

    You feel it in your body first: the chest tightens, your breathing gets shallow, your stomach drops. This isn’t rational thinking. This is your nervous system firing a survival alarm that was installed decades ago. What I call the Worst Day Cycle™ — Trauma → Fear → Shame → Denial — is running on autopilot. The original trauma of emotional abandonment triggers fear, which triggers shame (“I’m too much,” “I’m not enough”), which you then deny or project onto your partner.

    That’s you at ten years old, waiting for your parent to come home, not knowing if they’d be sober or drunk, happy or raging. Your adult relationship just triggered the same alarm system — and your nervous system can’t tell the difference between then and now.

    Worst Day Cycle diagram — the continuous loop of trauma, fear, shame, and denial that drives relationship insecurity

    3. Needing Constant Reassurance

    I learned this one from my mother. It was common for our family to be at dinner talking about politics or some completely unrelated topic, and my mom would suddenly blurt out: “How do I look in this dress?”

    While I never did exactly that, I absolutely needed constant affirmation from my partner. And here’s the devastating part — it never satisfied. No amount of “I love you” was enough. No reassurance lasted more than a few hours. Because the emptiness wasn’t coming from this relationship. It was coming from a childhood where your emotional needs went unmet, and your blueprint decided: “I have to earn love, and it can be taken away at any moment.”

    That’s you needing to hear “I love you” three times a day — and still not believing it. That’s the bottomless well inside you that no partner can fill, because the hole was carved in childhood.

    4. Bringing the Past Into the Present Relationship

    Your emotional blueprint’s fear creates an obsessive need to keep yourself safe. One way it attempts this is by constantly comparing the past to the present.

    I used to do this constantly — comparing things my current girlfriend did to what my last girlfriend did. “She paused before answering, just like my ex did before she left.” This attempt to avoid pain makes it impossible to actually be present with the person in front of you. And that hypervigilance? It often creates the exact abandonment you’re trying to prevent.

    That’s you punishing today’s partner for yesterday’s pain. That’s your survival persona running old data through a new relationship, guaranteeing you’ll never actually experience this one.

    5. Over-Giving Time, Attention, and Power

    The love addict’s desperate need to avoid abandonment creates a disempowering abandonment of themselves. You over-emphasize your partner’s strengths, elevating them to a fantasy. You make your entire life about the other person. You give up your interests, your space, your desires, your friendships.

    You feel five years old trying to navigate an adult relationship.

    There is far too much attention on your partner and not nearly enough on yourself. You’ve effectively made the other person your higher power — the source of your worth, your safety, your identity. This is your disempowered survival persona at work — the part of you that learned in childhood: “If I just give enough, they won’t leave.”

    That’s you canceling your plans the second they text. That’s you abandoning yourself so completely that when the relationship ends, you don’t know who you are anymore. That’s the adapted wounded child running your adult life.

    Codependence icon — the relational pattern of abandoning yourself to manage another person's emotions

    6. Snooping and Surveillance

    Love addicts will feel the need — and even demand — to check their partner’s phone, email, or social media. They want to keep tabs on where their partner is going and who they’re with. They are on constant alert for the possibility that they are being replaced.

    This isn’t about trust. This is about a nervous system that was trained in childhood to never feel safe — so it keeps searching for evidence that confirms its deepest fear: “I’m not enough, and they’ll find someone better.”

    That’s you checking their Instagram at midnight. That’s you memorizing which friends liked their posts. That’s your survival persona desperately trying to control what it could never control in childhood — whether someone stays or goes.

    7. The Inability to Feel Whole or Happy Outside of a Relationship

    Love addicts feel empty, sad, and depressed when alone. They often enter new relationships — even destructive ones, or relationships with someone they’re only mildly interested in — just to avoid being alone.

    This is the clearest sign that the issue isn’t about your partner at all. It’s about a wound inside you that predates every relationship you’ve ever had. Your blueprint decided long ago: “I am only valuable when someone else says I am.”

    That’s you jumping from relationship to relationship without ever spending a day understanding who you are without one. That’s you terrified of silence, because in the silence you hear the voice that says you’re not enough.


    How Relationship Insecurity Shows Up Across Your Life

    Relationship insecurity doesn’t stay neatly contained in your romantic life. It bleeds into every relationship you have — because the pattern isn’t about the other person. It’s about your nervous system’s foundational operating system. Here’s how it shows up:

    In Your Family

    You still defer to your parent’s emotions even when they contradict your own reality. You feel responsible for their happiness, their loneliness, their aging. You can’t hold a different opinion without guilt. Holiday visits leave you physically ill. That’s you still running the original childhood program: my parent’s comfort is my job.

    In Your Romantic Relationships

    You read your partner’s mood the moment they walk in the door. You adjust yourself — your tone, your needs, your plans — to keep things calm. You have trouble saying what you want because you’re too busy tracking what they feel. You make yourself smaller and smaller — editing, dimming, adjusting — until you don’t recognize who you’ve become. That’s you still running the survival program: keep them stable and you stay safe.

    In Friendships

    You’re the one who always listens but rarely gets listened to. You show up for others’ crises while your own go unaddressed. You can’t say no without over-explaining or feeling guilty for days. That’s you still running the program: your needs don’t matter if someone else is struggling.

    At Work

    You over-function. You manage your boss’s moods, your colleagues’ problems, your company’s dysfunction. You can’t leave on time even when your work is done. You read rooms for tension and automatically try to smooth it. That’s you still running the program: manage the emotional environment and you’ll be safe.

    In Your Body

    You feel anxious when alone. You’re exhausted by a weight you can’t name. You catch yourself abandoning your own needs mid-conversation without even realizing it. You have chronic health issues — headaches, autoimmune conditions, digestive problems — that nobody can fully explain. That’s your nervous system still believing: your needs aren’t real.

    If several of these ring true, you’re not broken. You’re insecure at the nervous system level. Your survival persona did exactly what it was designed to do. The problem is it’s still running when you no longer need it to.

    Why Does Relationship Insecurity Happen? Your Emotional Blueprint

    Every single one of these 7 characteristics traces back to the same root: childhood emotional abandonment. Not necessarily physical abandonment — though that happens too. I’m talking about the emotional kind. The kind where your feelings were ignored, minimized, punished, or simply never acknowledged.

    When that happens, your developing nervous system builds an emotional blueprint — a set of unconscious beliefs about what love is, what safety means, and what you have to do to keep people from leaving:

    Love = earning someone’s approval.
    Safety = knowing exactly what they’re thinking at all times.
    Belonging = making yourself indispensable so they can’t leave.

    These aren’t conscious choices. They’re survival adaptations. And they made perfect sense when you were a child with no power, no voice, and no ability to leave. The problem is that your adult relationships are now being run by a five-year-old’s survival program.

    That’s you at thirty-five, successful in every visible way, but still feeling like a terrified child the moment your partner goes quiet. That’s the emotional blueprint — running the same childhood code in an adult body.

    Adapted Wounded Child — the survival persona identity created in childhood that still runs adult relationship insecurity patterns

    Why Your Body Is Paying the Price

    People with chronic relationship insecurity are often chronically sick. Headaches, autoimmune conditions, digestive problems, chronic fatigue, insomnia — the list goes on. This isn’t coincidence.

    When you spend years absorbing other people’s emotional states while suppressing your own needs, your body eventually says what your mouth can’t. Dr. Gabor Maté’s When the Body Says No lays out the science: your genes require a specific environment to activate. The emotional turmoil of living in constant fear of abandonment is that environment.

    You weren’t born with these conditions. Your body manufactured them because it had no other way to express the pain your survival persona wouldn’t let you speak.

    That’s you getting a migraine the night before a difficult conversation. That’s the knot in your stomach that appears when your partner is upset. That’s your body screaming what your survival persona won’t let you say: “I’m in pain and I need help.”

    Trauma Chemistry icon — how childhood trauma creates addictive chemical patterns in adult relationships

    Why All the Usual Advice About Relationship Insecurity Fails

    You’ve probably tried everything. Communication techniques. Attachment style quizzes. Journaling. Affirmations. Maybe even therapy where you talked about your childhood for months but still feel the same panic when your partner doesn’t text back.

    Here’s why none of it worked: those approaches treat the symptom, not the wound.

    “Just communicate your needs” doesn’t work when your nervous system is in full survival mode and your shame is screaming that your needs make you a burden. “Set better boundaries” is meaningless when you have no internal sense of where you end and your partner begins — because that boundary was never modeled for you as a child.

    Scripts, tips, and techniques are like putting a fresh coat of paint on a house with a cracked foundation. They look good for a week. Then the cracks show through again. You’re not failing at the advice. The advice is failing you — because it never touches the emotional blueprint driving everything.

    That’s you reading another self-help book and feeling hopeful for three days before the same panic returns. That’s the proof that knowing isn’t enough — you need to go deeper than your thinking brain.

    The 7 Solutions: How to Heal Relationship Insecurity at the Root

    Recovery isn’t about willpower or “trying harder.” It’s about rewiring the blueprint that’s running your relationships on autopilot. Here are the 7 solutions — and they go deep.

    Solution 1: Face the Self-Deception and Acknowledge the Truth

    This means getting into the reality that your expectations are addictive. Your desire for unlimited positive regard — your demand for constant time and attention from the other person — is excessive. Not because you’re bad. Because your blueprint distorted what love looks like.

    You have to recognize that how you define love is distorted, and you have recovery work to do on your codependence. This is the first step of what I call the Authentic Self Cycle™ — Truth → Responsibility → Healing → Forgiveness. It starts with truth.

    That’s you finally admitting: “The way I love isn’t love — it’s addiction. And it’s not my fault, but it is my responsibility to heal.”

    Authentic Self Cycle diagram — the pathway of truth, responsibility, healing, and forgiveness that replaces relationship insecurity patterns

    Solutions 2–4: The Al-Anon “Three Gets”

    The following three solutions come from Al-Anon and are called the “Three Gets.” They are simple to understand and incredibly difficult to practice — which is exactly how you know they’re working.

    Get Off Their Back. Your constant wondering what they’re doing, your need for continuous attention, your overthinking of every word and action, your snooping — this is all evidence that you are “on their back,” paying far too much attention to their life and not nearly enough to your own.

    Get Out of Their Way. Stop trying to dictate or correct how they live their life. Let them be who they want to be. Don’t try to change them or get them to meet your needs. They’re okay the way they are. It’s not your place to critique, judge, or tell them who to be. And here’s the deeper truth — this is also a defensive projection. You avoid focusing on healing yourself by making them the problem.

    Get On With Your Own Life. Instead of putting all your time and attention into them, put it into yourself. Learn to meet your own needs. Get back to living your own life — pursuing the hobbies, friendships, and interests you gave up when the relationship began.

    That’s you putting the phone down and going for a walk instead of checking their location. That’s you picking up the guitar you haven’t touched in three years. That’s you discovering there’s a person underneath the survival persona — and they’ve been waiting for you to show up.

    Solution 5: Deep Self-Esteem Work

    For the love addict, their internal sense of security is based entirely on their partner or the object of their pursuit. You must start developing the belief that you have inherent value at all times — not only when you’re in a relationship.

    This isn’t affirmation work. This isn’t “look in the mirror and say nice things.” This is the deep, somatic work of reconnecting with your Authentic Adult voice — the part of you that knows your worth isn’t determined by anyone else’s attention or approval.

    A powerful place to start: Download my free Feelings Wheel — it will help you build the emotional vocabulary to identify what you’re actually feeling beneath the anxiety and obsessive thoughts. When you can name the feeling, your nervous system begins to calm. This is the foundation of the Emotional Authenticity Method™.

    Solution 6: Develop Boundaries (The Gas Pedal Metaphor)

    Boundaries can be incredibly difficult for the love addict. So here’s a concrete way to think about it: imagine gas pedals.

    Take your foot off the accelerator. You’re used to being fully vested — pedal to the floor — at all times. Pull way back. If your partner shares a little bit, going about 8-10 MPH, join them. Maybe try to advance to 12-13 MPH. But if they back off, you back off.

    Here’s how you know you’re doing this right: you should feel like you’re being cold, mean, selfish, and disinterested. You should feel uncomfortable — because you’re used to that gas pedal being on the floor. When you feel that new discomfort, you’ll know you’re no longer acting addictively. Now you’re acting moderately. In no time, you’ll get used to it, and things will get better.

    That’s you feeling guilty for not texting back immediately — and sitting with the guilt instead of caving. That’s the survival persona screaming that you’re being selfish, when really you’re finally being healthy.

    Solution 7: Work With an Expert

    The addiction was created by childhood abandonment, and working with an expert is the only way to overcome it fully. You are too close to the situation to see your behaviors accurately, and you don’t have access to the knowledge, skills, and tools that an expert provides.

    I strongly encourage you to read Pia Mellody’s Facing Love Addiction and Facing Codependence, as well as Beverly Engel’s The Emotionally Abusive Relationship. These books will help you begin getting into reality about how abandoned you were in childhood — and you’ll become aware that many of the behaviors you believe are kind, authentic, and loving are in fact self-sabotaging.

    The Emotional Authenticity Method™: What Actually Rewires the Pattern

    The 7 solutions above give you the roadmap. But the engine that makes lasting change possible is the Emotional Authenticity Method™ — my 5-step process for interrupting the blueprint in real time:

    Emotional Authenticity Method — the 5-step somatic process for rewiring childhood emotional blueprints that cause relationship insecurity

    Step 1: Somatic Down-Regulation. When the panic hits — when they haven’t texted back and your body is flooding — pause. Focus on what you can hear around you for 15-30 seconds. This interrupts the survival response and brings your prefrontal cortex back online.

    Step 2: What am I feeling right now? Not “what am I thinking” — what am I feeling? Use emotional granularity. Go beyond “anxious” or “bad.” Are you terrified? Abandoned? Ashamed? Invisible? (This is where the Feelings Wheel becomes essential.)

    Step 3: Where in my body do I feel it? Chest? Throat? Stomach? Behind the eyes? Your body holds the map to the wound.

    Step 4: What is my earliest memory of having this exact feeling? This is where the magic happens. The anxiety you feel when your partner pulls away? You’ve felt it before — long before this relationship. Usually before age 7. That’s your blueprint talking.

    Step 5: Who would I be if I never had this thought or feeling again? What would be left over? This question connects you to your Authentic Adult — the part of you that exists beyond the wound, beyond the blueprint, beyond the survival strategies.

    That’s you in the middle of a panic spiral, pausing instead of reaching for the phone. That’s you feeling the fear — really feeling it — and realizing it’s a five-year-old’s terror, not an adult’s reality. That’s the moment your nervous system starts to learn: I can survive this feeling without managing someone else.

    What Healing Relationship Insecurity Actually Looks Like

    Before: Your partner goes quiet for two hours and you’ve already checked their social media three times, drafted a text you’ll delete, and convinced yourself they’re reconsidering the relationship. Your chest is tight. You can’t focus on anything else. You feel like a child waiting to be told they’re still wanted.

    After: Your partner goes quiet and you notice the pull. You feel the tightness in your chest. You pause, use the Method, and realize: “This is the same feeling I had when my mom would go silent for days and I didn’t know what I’d done wrong.” You breathe. You let it move through you. You go back to your life. When they text later, you respond from your Authentic Adult — not from your Hurt Child.

    That’s the difference between managing insecurity and healing it.


    Do You Know How Deep Your Codependence Patterns Go?

    Most people with relationship insecurity don’t realize how many areas of their life are affected by the same emotional blueprint. It’s not just romantic relationships — it shows up in friendships, work dynamics, parenting, and your relationship with yourself.

    Take the free Codependence Blueprint Questionnaire to see how these patterns are operating in your life right now. It takes less than 5 minutes and will show you exactly where your blueprint has been running the show.

    Recommended Reading

    Facing Love Addiction: Giving Yourself the Power to Change the Way You Love by Pia Mellody is the definitive book on love addiction. If you recognized yourself in the 7 characteristics above, this book will validate everything you’ve been feeling — and give you the language to understand what’s actually happening inside you.

    Facing Codependence: What It Is, Where It Comes from, How It Sabotages Our Lives by Pia Mellody goes deeper into the childhood roots of codependence — the same roots that drive relationship insecurity. This book helped me understand my own patterns more clearly than years of traditional therapy.

    The Emotionally Abusive Relationship: How to Stop Being Abused and How to Stop Abusing by Beverly Engel shows you how love addiction creates a cycle where you tolerate — and sometimes don’t even recognize — emotional abuse because your blueprint normalized it in childhood.

    These aren’t self-help books with simple fixes. They’re maps of the actual problem. That’s you finally reading something that validates that this was real, that it mattered, that you weren’t overreacting.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Relationship Insecurity

    Is relationship insecurity the same as anxious attachment?

    Anxious attachment is one clinical framework for describing these patterns. I prefer the term “love addiction” because it gets into reality about what’s actually happening — an addictive pursuit of another person to fill an internal void created by childhood emotional abandonment. The term matters because recovery requires honesty, not softened language.

    Can relationship insecurity be cured?

    Yes — but not with tips, scripts, or surface-level communication techniques. Relationship insecurity is driven by your emotional blueprint, which was formed in childhood. Lasting change requires healing the original wound through somatic and emotional work like the Emotional Authenticity Method™, not just managing symptoms. Recovery is absolutely possible when you address the root.

    Why does reassurance never feel like enough?

    Because the emptiness you’re trying to fill wasn’t created by this partner — it was created by childhood emotional abandonment. No amount of “I love you” from your partner can heal a wound that existed before they entered your life. The Worst Day Cycle™ — Trauma → Fear → Shame → Denial — keeps recycling the original pain. Until you heal the source, no external reassurance will ever be enough.

    Is it my fault that I’m insecure in my relationship?

    It’s not your fault — and it is your responsibility. You didn’t choose your childhood. You didn’t ask for the emotional blueprint that was installed in your nervous system. But as an adult, you’re the only one who can do the work to heal it. The person struggling with love addiction is not bad or weak. They are in pain and doing the best they can to avoid that pain. Recovery begins when you take responsibility without shame.

    What’s the difference between healthy concern and relationship insecurity?

    Healthy concern is proportional, present-focused, and doesn’t hijack your nervous system. Relationship insecurity is disproportionate, past-driven, and takes over your body and mind. If a brief pause in communication sends you into a full panic spiral, that response is coming from your emotional blueprint — not from the current situation. The intensity of the reaction reveals the depth of the original wound.

    How is relationship insecurity connected to codependence?

    Relationship insecurity is one of the primary symptoms of codependence. Both are rooted in the same childhood emotional blueprint — your nervous system learned that your safety depends on managing another person’s emotional state. Enmeshment creates the architecture, codependence is the behavioral pattern, and relationship insecurity is what it feels like from the inside.

    Your Next Step: Start With the Truth

    Remember — the person struggling with love addiction is not bad or weak. You are in pain, and you’ve been doing the best you can to avoid that pain. Addictively pursuing someone is the only way you currently know how to alleviate it. But if left untreated, it creates more of the exact pain you’re desperately trying to avoid.

    There is hope. Real, lasting hope — not the “think positive” kind that evaporates by Tuesday.

    Here’s where to start:

    Free resources to begin right now:

    Go deeper with structured courses at The Greatness University:

    By gaining new knowledge, skills, and tools — and then putting a plan in place to heal the underlying pain — you can find the authentic love you crave and deserve.

    The Bottom Line

    You’ve spent years — maybe your entire adult life — managing a terror that doesn’t belong to this relationship. The overthinking, the jealousy, the snooping, the clinginess, the desperate need for reassurance — none of it started here. It started in a childhood where your emotional needs went unmet, where your nervous system learned that love is conditional and safety is an illusion.

    But that’s not the truth. That’s the blueprint. And blueprints can be rewritten.

    You don’t heal relationship insecurity by finding the right partner, getting enough reassurance, or learning better communication scripts. You heal it by going back to the nervous system level and teaching it what it never learned: you are safe. You are worthy of love without earning it. You can exist as a whole person without managing someone else’s emotional state.

    That’s not selfish. That’s not cold. That’s the beginning of actually being present — for yourself and for the people you love. That’s the beginning of real intimacy, not the desperate survival-driven version you’ve been running on.

    You’re not broken. You’re trauma-trained. And that means you can be retrained.