Relationships That Nourish

Relationships That Nourish

If you’ve experienced past trauma, your history with relationships may not feel safe, steady, or supportive.

Instead, you might notice yourself in repeating cycles, the same emotional dynamics showing up in different people. After a while, it can start to feel discouraging. Like maybe you’re just not built for healthy relationships. Like maybe this is simply your pattern.

That belief is common.
But it isn’t the truth of who you are or what’s possible for you.

Why Trauma Can Lead to Unhealthy Relationship Patterns

When we’ve been through repeated emotional pain, our system adapts. It learns what to expect. It learns what feels familiar.

The challenge is that familiar doesn’t always mean healthy.

You might choose partners who seem right at first: kind, interesting, available. But as the relationship deepens, the emotional experience starts to feel strangely recognizable in ways that hurt.

This happens because unresolved trauma can quietly shape:

  • Who we feel drawn to
  • What behaviours we normalize
  • What we tolerate, excuse, or overlook

This doesn’t mean you’re broken.
It means your system learned to survive in the best way it could.

You Can Learn How to Have Healthy Relationships After Trauma

The patterns you learned in painful environments are not permanent. They can change.

But building healthier relationships often requires something you may not have had much of before: new reference points.

You don’t create a new relationship blueprint out of thin air.
You build it by experiencing different ways of relating.

Making Healthy Relationships Feel Familiar

Look around your life for people who already show up in ways that feel safe and respectful. These might be friends, colleagues, mentors, or community members.

People who:

  • Respect your boundaries
  • Communicate honestly and kindly
  • Take responsibility for their emotions
  • Show consistency instead of unpredictability

Pay attention to how your body feels around them.

Do you feel calmer?
Less guarded?
More able to be yourself?

That sense of steadiness is important. It teaches your nervous system that connection doesn’t have to feel chaotic or unsafe.

As you spend more time around people with healthy behaviours, the unfamiliar starts to become familiar. Your system begins to recognize emotional safety as something normal — not something suspicious or boring.

Creating a New Blueprint for Love

Over time, these experiences form a new internal template for relationships.

From this place, you begin choosing partners differently. Not just from attraction or chemistry, but from how someone makes you feel in your body and nervous system.

You’ll be more able to:

  • Recognize emotional safety
  • Notice red flags earlier
  • Trust your discomfort instead of overriding it
  • Walk away from dynamics that don’t match your new standards

You weren’t cursed.
You don’t have bad luck in relationships.

You may have simply lacked healthy models to learn from and that is something that can absolutely change.

Nourishing relationships become possible when your system learns what nourishment actually feels like.

Take a moment to reflect:
Who in your life already models a healthier way of relating — and what do you notice about how you feel when you’re around them?

In love and gratitude,

Relationships That Nourish
Relationships That Nourish
Relationships That Nourish

Need more guidance?

If you want to work with me 1:1 CLICK HERE to  enroll for my coaching program where I tailor a process specifically for YOUR transformation.

You Cannot Heal Yourself Out of Your Soul

You Cannot Heal Yourself Out of Your Soul

How can I possibly heal myself out of my soul?

This is my love letter to you, sweetheart – the you that works so hard on herself/himself. The you that must fix everything – in relationship and in yourself.

I understand how hard you work on things, how hard you work on yourself. Not the standard self-improvement stuff but the going above and beyond stuff. The ’I’ll carry all the weight of this’, stuff.

You take it upon yourself, all the responsibility of your relationships. Not only do you do your work, but you do what is supposed to be other people’s work too. You’re working all that much harder for everyone and only you know that fact.

This is when self-improvement becomes self-annihilation – when we try to get rid of who we are because we feel like there is something wrong with us. For as long as we feel this way we are blinded by it, it gets us to ignore what’s really going on in our relationships because we’re so focused on being better. 

We ignore the red flags, we stay in relationships that have long surpassed their expiry date, and we negate the obvious inconsistencies and incompatibility. 

What we’re really doing is avoiding something deeper – something that existed long before the relationship ever did, something so painful that it would feel better to stay with people who can’t really meet us – people who are so vastly different from who we are because it keeps us in a loop of chasing instead of choosing.

If you played a different game, if you stopped running or chasing an outcome, you would also have to let go of control – allow the chips to fall where they may, allow other people to do their own work and allow yourself space enough to feel.

The work happens; the self-improvement catches up to us when we finally allow ourselves to stand still so that it can. It happens when we allow ourselves to stop and feel those very uncomfortable things that we are terrified of. 

This is how we cultivate courage and build safety in ourselves. This is the process of coming home to who we are – not from a place of judgement, but from a place of allowing. 

I wish you the courage to stay with yourself, to not run away from the uncomfortable feelings that are asking so loudly to be felt by you.

In love and gratitude,

Need more guidance?

If you want to work with me 1:1 CLICK HERE to  enroll for my coaching program where I tailor a process specifically for YOUR transformation.

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