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This IS NOT Love. It’s a Trauma Bond (7 Signs You’re Stuck & How To BREAK Free)This IS NOT Love. It’s a Trauma Bond (7 Signs You’re Stuck & How To BREAK Free)">

This IS NOT Love. It’s a Trauma Bond (7 Signs You’re Stuck & How To BREAK Free)

Irina Zhuravleva
por 
Irina Zhuravleva, 
 Soulmatcher
12 minutos de lectura
Blog
noviembre 05, 2025

Have you ever noticed that the person who causes you the greatest pain is often the one you can’t seem to let go of? You tell yourself it’s love or destiny. There’s something about them—they understand you in some deep way—yet they pull away, criticize you, threaten to end things, or actually do break up with you. Instead of leaving, you find yourself falling harder. When they return to make amends, no matter how badly they treated you, it can feel like rescue, like someone has saved your life; you feel a profound happiness because they’re back, and you mistake that relief for love. But what if those overwhelming feelings aren’t love at all? What you’re experiencing is a trauma bond. If your childhood included neglect, abuse, or turmoil, you likely learned early on that love and pain were linked—not always, but often enough to shape your expectations. Love became synonymous with walking on eggshells, striving for approval, drawing close only to be pushed away repeatedly. That pattern—being cherished one moment and rejected the next—trains your nervous system to crave unpredictability. So when a partner offers mixed signals, sporadic affection, broken promises, or even cruelty, your brain lights up and says, “That’s the intense feeling of love.” But that intensity isn’t love; it’s survival wiring from long ago. If no one ever explained this to you, it makes sense you’d keep chasing the wrong people. You may already recognize the rhythm: one minute they’re showering you with messages and sweet talk, and the next they disappear—blocking contact, ghosting you, leaving you wondering, “What did I do wrong?” You might blame yourself, decide you were too much, so you tone yourself down, become low-maintenance, play it cool, and endure the silence. It stops being about caring for them and becomes about getting them to want you. You cling to the occasional scrap of attention, treasuring that rare good moment like a reward. That feeling—like having “earned” a treat—is actually the trauma bond at work. Many people misunderstand the term trauma bond, thinking it describes two wounded people glued together. In reality it’s about intermittent reinforcement: rewards and withdrawals alternating—love, cruelty, love, cruelty—which hooks the brain. It masquerades as chemistry, producing butterflies and obsession alongside crushing sorrow and disappointment. It’s not love; it’s the nervous system stuck in survival mode, replaying an old pattern as an attempt to fix a childhood wound or to earn uncertain love. You’re not falling in love; you’re responding to neurochemistry. It’s a reflex that keeps you trapped, confusing chaos with passion and meaning. Calm, steady kindness can feel almost dull or awkward after long exposure to this pattern; you might think, “There’s no spark here.” If you’ve been trapped in a trauma bond for a long time, it can take considerable healing before someone reliably kind and stable feels genuinely attractive. That “spark” is usually the high of chasing approval—your trauma firing up, not authentic love. If this repeats, it’s not proof you’re irreparably broken; it’s a sign the trauma inside you hasn’t settled. Trauma tends to replay until it’s addressed, so it’s important to start healing. The faces of those who hurt you will change over time, but the outcome often remains the same and can even worsen or take different forms—this time drugs, that time another partner—but it’s not fate or a curse. It’s a pattern—conditioning for danger—that feeds your dopamine and excitement, keeping you tied to a rigged game where trying harder never brings the safety you crave. How do you break a trauma bond when every instinct screams that holding on is a matter of life and death? Begin with regulating your nervous system: small, steady actions each day to calm yourself. When you’re dysregulated, constructive change is extremely difficult; you may take steps forward only to slide backward. Dysregulation impairs your ability to process and retain new learning. Regaining regulation is how you reclaim clarity and power and stop believing the lie that pain equals deep love. One practical starting point is the daily practice I teach: a specific, simple writing method followed by meditation. These paired techniques—ones used for decades in my work—help you surface, process, and release harsh, fearful, negative thoughts and feelings that have accumulated. Trauma often leaves people with slowed or blocked processing; experiences remain charged—full of adrenaline and panic—rather than becoming neutral memories. The goal here is to help those trapped charges transform into less reactive recollections. Various approaches exist—somatic work, body-centered therapies—but talking alone can be insufficient, even counterproductive, for processing severe trauma. From personal and clinical observations, merely verbalizing an assault repeatedly without a method to discharge the stuckness can worsen symptoms. The technique taught involves setting aside time twice a day to write these charged thoughts and feelings onto paper—not as a mere list but using a structured approach (a free short course explains it fully). Doing the exercise improperly—ruminating on fears and resentments without a release strategy—can amplify distress, so it’s important to learn the method rather than guess at it. After writing, sit for twenty minutes of meditation. This routine is accessible to anyone, whether or not professional help is available. You don’t need to get it perfect or even believe in it; just try it and observe the effects. Over time, the combined act of writing and meditating loosens the spell of obsessive, spinning thoughts and gives you breathing room to distinguish what’s real. That clarity is vital after being in a trauma-bonded relationship because thinking becomes skewed—your emotions are amplified while reasoning is diminished. Processing these thoughts and feelings helps you see things more accurately, which is crucial for recognizing harmful patterns and making choices. There’s a free daily practice course that teaches the two simple techniques to calm you when triggers arise. It’s short and effective, helping you feel clearer and more composed quickly. Click the second link in the description or use the QR code to begin right away. Trauma bonds thrive on confusion; they require you to stay suspended in fear, guilt, and shame so you never anchor to a steady principle or a clear point of view. That makes you impressionable and malleable. The daily practice works by naming that swirl—line by line—until the tangle loosens. Imagine steel wool gradually unraveling into a soft, harmless powder—this method isn’t ordinary journaling. Journaling keeps a record and may invite analysis; this practice is a way to offload what’s buzzing in your head. You don’t analyze what you write and you’re probably best off not rereading it. You simply name it and release it so it stops steering your choices from beneath awareness. Keep at it, even on good days when you’re tempted to stop. Consistency—on both the easy and the hard days—turns processing into a habit and slowly clears the backlog of suppressed emotions, opinions, protests, and unmet needs that never had room to be expressed. As layers come up, it can feel intense, and you may worry it’s making things worse. If you’re safe, it’s okay to keep facing what’s been suppressed. Even the inner voice that claims “This will never help” should be written down and acknowledged; that doubting voice is unreliable. You are worth help, and help is available. If one approach doesn’t suit you, try another—there are proven ways to process the thoughts and feelings generated by trauma. The stuck part of you learned to survive chaos and needs repair. If your present circumstances are calmer but your body and brain still behave as if danger is ongoing, they will recreate chaos; the work is to teach them to live in clarity and peace. After stabilizing, it’s usually necessary to cut contact with the person who’s been harming you—no contact if possible, or minimal contact only if absolutely necessary. This isn’t about punishing them; it’s about interrupting the cycle so you have a real chance for peace. Every time you reach out, even mentally, you rekindle the bond and justify returning. You’re not broken—you’re trained to remain attached to people who confuse and sadden you—but you can stop. Begin by creating space: when the urge to reach out arises, don’t act on it. Rather than battling the impulse, use the writing practice, sit in meditation, or reach out to friends. Many people who’ve endured trauma and trauma bonds lack close supportive relationships because they’ve been hiding or managing a dysfunctional life. That’s why mutual-support groups (such as 12-step fellowships) are valuable—if this resonates, you likely qualify for at least one program. These groups meet regularly in person and online, and they offer free, lived-experience support from people who’ve been on the other side and want to share how they recovered. In my offerings there are daily practice calls for course participants, opportunities for questions, and a community that supports healing, as well as membership and coaching options. Find more at crappychildfairy.com. The impulse to contact someone who hurt you is usually driven by fear—fear you won’t survive the loss, fear you’ll never find another partner, fear you’ll never be loved—or by resentment, but primarily by fear. Writing it down helps: seeing the fear on paper weakens its immediacy. The friction of pen on paper gives distance between the feeling and your sense of agency, allowing an honest part of you to awaken and begin making clearer choices. Often we’re sheltered from clear perception of reality—part of us protects by revealing truth only in small increments. The essential truth is this: the obsession is not love; it’s a trauma loop. Stop feeding it and it will start to fade. The writing practice I describe is not about chronicling life or exploring emotions for their own sake; it’s a tool to cut through mental clutter and restore clarity. When your mind is stuffed with fear and resentment, it resembles a chaotic flea market after closing—disorderly and full of discarded items, imagined conversations, and frantic “what ifs.” You clear that mess by telling the truth on paper and allowing what doesn’t belong in your head to leave. Some people treat the exercise like a prayer, placing God or a higher-power invocation at the top of the page; others simply release the material to their higher self. If you choose to ask for those intruding thoughts to be lifted, trust—perhaps tentatively—that the essential memories you need will remain, only less tangled. You don’t have to accept everything here on faith; experiment and see what it does for you. As the fog lifts, what remains may be calm and peace, or it may be grief—for the love you were denied and for the person you believed someone to be. What you usually miss at first is not the person themselves but the fantasy: the imagined potential of who they might have been if you were different—prettier, thinner, kinder, less flawed, or if you’d behaved just right. Many of us have entertained those thoughts, but the truth is simpler: it wasn’t good enough. There was cruelty. If a relationship leaves you devastated, depleted, and discouraged, it isn’t a healthy one—call it what you want, but authentic love doesn’t demand that you fix someone. True love is calm, kind, and consistent; it’s not a manipulative game. You don’t have to pretend, hide the relationship from friends, beg, or be broken by it. You learned survival skills to get through pain, but survival alone isn’t the goal anymore—now you can learn to live in peace. You don’t need closure from the other person or their understanding. You don’t need to wait until you “feel ready.” Once you recognize what you’re entangled in, you must choose to stop surrendering your life to someone who doesn’t value it. Let go first, then begin the healing—even while the pain and uncertainty are still present. As you do, you reclaim yourself: inner strength returns, the parts of you that were silenced or reshaped to be loveable by someone else re-emerge. If you’re wondering whether childhood trauma might be affecting your life now, here’s a helpful step: check for signs that current struggles trace back to neglect or abuse. Understanding this connection can normalize your experience and show that healing is attainable. A “signs of childhood PTSD” quiz is available for download via the top link in the description or using the QR code. You can stop betraying yourself now and start remembering who you are—one fear, one resentment, one day, one truthful step toward calm and genuine love at a time. Break the trauma bond by choosing reality and choosing yourself, repeatedly, even when the temptation to return is strong. As the bond fades, your authentic self will begin to shine, others will start to see you as you truly are, and life will begin to rise. That, ultimately, is where real love begins. [Music]

Have you ever noticed that the person who causes you the greatest pain is often the one you can’t seem to let go of? You tell yourself it's love or destiny. There’s something about them—they understand you in some deep way—yet they pull away, criticize you, threaten to end things, or actually do break up with you. Instead of leaving, you find yourself falling harder. When they return to make amends, no matter how badly they treated you, it can feel like rescue, like someone has saved your life; you feel a profound happiness because they're back, and you mistake that relief for love. But what if those overwhelming feelings aren’t love at all? What you’re experiencing is a trauma bond. If your childhood included neglect, abuse, or turmoil, you likely learned early on that love and pain were linked—not always, but often enough to shape your expectations. Love became synonymous with walking on eggshells, striving for approval, drawing close only to be pushed away repeatedly. That pattern—being cherished one moment and rejected the next—trains your nervous system to crave unpredictability. So when a partner offers mixed signals, sporadic affection, broken promises, or even cruelty, your brain lights up and says, “That’s the intense feeling of love.” But that intensity isn’t love; it’s survival wiring from long ago. If no one ever explained this to you, it makes sense you’d keep chasing the wrong people. You may already recognize the rhythm: one minute they’re showering you with messages and sweet talk, and the next they disappear—blocking contact, ghosting you, leaving you wondering, “What did I do wrong?” You might blame yourself, decide you were too much, so you tone yourself down, become low-maintenance, play it cool, and endure the silence. It stops being about caring for them and becomes about getting them to want you. You cling to the occasional scrap of attention, treasuring that rare good moment like a reward. That feeling—like having “earned” a treat—is actually the trauma bond at work. Many people misunderstand the term trauma bond, thinking it describes two wounded people glued together. In reality it’s about intermittent reinforcement: rewards and withdrawals alternating—love, cruelty, love, cruelty—which hooks the brain. It masquerades as chemistry, producing butterflies and obsession alongside crushing sorrow and disappointment. It’s not love; it’s the nervous system stuck in survival mode, replaying an old pattern as an attempt to fix a childhood wound or to earn uncertain love. You’re not falling in love; you’re responding to neurochemistry. It’s a reflex that keeps you trapped, confusing chaos with passion and meaning. Calm, steady kindness can feel almost dull or awkward after long exposure to this pattern; you might think, “There’s no spark here.” If you’ve been trapped in a trauma bond for a long time, it can take considerable healing before someone reliably kind and stable feels genuinely attractive. That “spark” is usually the high of chasing approval—your trauma firing up, not authentic love. If this repeats, it’s not proof you’re irreparably broken; it’s a sign the trauma inside you hasn’t settled. Trauma tends to replay until it’s addressed, so it’s important to start healing. The faces of those who hurt you will change over time, but the outcome often remains the same and can even worsen or take different forms—this time drugs, that time another partner—but it’s not fate or a curse. It’s a pattern—conditioning for danger—that feeds your dopamine and excitement, keeping you tied to a rigged game where trying harder never brings the safety you crave. How do you break a trauma bond when every instinct screams that holding on is a matter of life and death? Begin with regulating your nervous system: small, steady actions each day to calm yourself. When you’re dysregulated, constructive change is extremely difficult; you may take steps forward only to slide backward. Dysregulation impairs your ability to process and retain new learning. Regaining regulation is how you reclaim clarity and power and stop believing the lie that pain equals deep love. One practical starting point is the daily practice I teach: a specific, simple writing method followed by meditation. These paired techniques—ones used for decades in my work—help you surface, process, and release harsh, fearful, negative thoughts and feelings that have accumulated. Trauma often leaves people with slowed or blocked processing; experiences remain charged—full of adrenaline and panic—rather than becoming neutral memories. The goal here is to help those trapped charges transform into less reactive recollections. Various approaches exist—somatic work, body-centered therapies—but talking alone can be insufficient, even counterproductive, for processing severe trauma. From personal and clinical observations, merely verbalizing an assault repeatedly without a method to discharge the stuckness can worsen symptoms. The technique taught involves setting aside time twice a day to write these charged thoughts and feelings onto paper—not as a mere list but using a structured approach (a free short course explains it fully). Doing the exercise improperly—ruminating on fears and resentments without a release strategy—can amplify distress, so it’s important to learn the method rather than guess at it. After writing, sit for twenty minutes of meditation. This routine is accessible to anyone, whether or not professional help is available. You don’t need to get it perfect or even believe in it; just try it and observe the effects. Over time, the combined act of writing and meditating loosens the spell of obsessive, spinning thoughts and gives you breathing room to distinguish what’s real. That clarity is vital after being in a trauma-bonded relationship because thinking becomes skewed—your emotions are amplified while reasoning is diminished. Processing these thoughts and feelings helps you see things more accurately, which is crucial for recognizing harmful patterns and making choices. There’s a free daily practice course that teaches the two simple techniques to calm you when triggers arise. It’s short and effective, helping you feel clearer and more composed quickly. Click the second link in the description or use the QR code to begin right away. Trauma bonds thrive on confusion; they require you to stay suspended in fear, guilt, and shame so you never anchor to a steady principle or a clear point of view. That makes you impressionable and malleable. The daily practice works by naming that swirl—line by line—until the tangle loosens. Imagine steel wool gradually unraveling into a soft, harmless powder—this method isn’t ordinary journaling. Journaling keeps a record and may invite analysis; this practice is a way to offload what’s buzzing in your head. You don’t analyze what you write and you’re probably best off not rereading it. You simply name it and release it so it stops steering your choices from beneath awareness. Keep at it, even on good days when you’re tempted to stop. Consistency—on both the easy and the hard days—turns processing into a habit and slowly clears the backlog of suppressed emotions, opinions, protests, and unmet needs that never had room to be expressed. As layers come up, it can feel intense, and you may worry it’s making things worse. If you’re safe, it’s okay to keep facing what’s been suppressed. Even the inner voice that claims “This will never help” should be written down and acknowledged; that doubting voice is unreliable. You are worth help, and help is available. If one approach doesn’t suit you, try another—there are proven ways to process the thoughts and feelings generated by trauma. The stuck part of you learned to survive chaos and needs repair. If your present circumstances are calmer but your body and brain still behave as if danger is ongoing, they will recreate chaos; the work is to teach them to live in clarity and peace. After stabilizing, it’s usually necessary to cut contact with the person who’s been harming you—no contact if possible, or minimal contact only if absolutely necessary. This isn’t about punishing them; it’s about interrupting the cycle so you have a real chance for peace. Every time you reach out, even mentally, you rekindle the bond and justify returning. You’re not broken—you're trained to remain attached to people who confuse and sadden you—but you can stop. Begin by creating space: when the urge to reach out arises, don’t act on it. Rather than battling the impulse, use the writing practice, sit in meditation, or reach out to friends. Many people who’ve endured trauma and trauma bonds lack close supportive relationships because they’ve been hiding or managing a dysfunctional life. That’s why mutual-support groups (such as 12-step fellowships) are valuable—if this resonates, you likely qualify for at least one program. These groups meet regularly in person and online, and they offer free, lived-experience support from people who’ve been on the other side and want to share how they recovered. In my offerings there are daily practice calls for course participants, opportunities for questions, and a community that supports healing, as well as membership and coaching options. Find more at crappychildfairy.com. The impulse to contact someone who hurt you is usually driven by fear—fear you won’t survive the loss, fear you’ll never find another partner, fear you'll never be loved—or by resentment, but primarily by fear. Writing it down helps: seeing the fear on paper weakens its immediacy. The friction of pen on paper gives distance between the feeling and your sense of agency, allowing an honest part of you to awaken and begin making clearer choices. Often we’re sheltered from clear perception of reality—part of us protects by revealing truth only in small increments. The essential truth is this: the obsession is not love; it’s a trauma loop. Stop feeding it and it will start to fade. The writing practice I describe is not about chronicling life or exploring emotions for their own sake; it’s a tool to cut through mental clutter and restore clarity. When your mind is stuffed with fear and resentment, it resembles a chaotic flea market after closing—disorderly and full of discarded items, imagined conversations, and frantic “what ifs.” You clear that mess by telling the truth on paper and allowing what doesn’t belong in your head to leave. Some people treat the exercise like a prayer, placing God or a higher-power invocation at the top of the page; others simply release the material to their higher self. If you choose to ask for those intruding thoughts to be lifted, trust—perhaps tentatively—that the essential memories you need will remain, only less tangled. You don’t have to accept everything here on faith; experiment and see what it does for you. As the fog lifts, what remains may be calm and peace, or it may be grief—for the love you were denied and for the person you believed someone to be. What you usually miss at first is not the person themselves but the fantasy: the imagined potential of who they might have been if you were different—prettier, thinner, kinder, less flawed, or if you’d behaved just right. Many of us have entertained those thoughts, but the truth is simpler: it wasn’t good enough. There was cruelty. If a relationship leaves you devastated, depleted, and discouraged, it isn’t a healthy one—call it what you want, but authentic love doesn’t demand that you fix someone. True love is calm, kind, and consistent; it’s not a manipulative game. You don’t have to pretend, hide the relationship from friends, beg, or be broken by it. You learned survival skills to get through pain, but survival alone isn’t the goal anymore—now you can learn to live in peace. You don’t need closure from the other person or their understanding. You don’t need to wait until you “feel ready.” Once you recognize what you’re entangled in, you must choose to stop surrendering your life to someone who doesn’t value it. Let go first, then begin the healing—even while the pain and uncertainty are still present. As you do, you reclaim yourself: inner strength returns, the parts of you that were silenced or reshaped to be loveable by someone else re-emerge. If you’re wondering whether childhood trauma might be affecting your life now, here’s a helpful step: check for signs that current struggles trace back to neglect or abuse. Understanding this connection can normalize your experience and show that healing is attainable. A “signs of childhood PTSD” quiz is available for download via the top link in the description or using the QR code. You can stop betraying yourself now and start remembering who you are—one fear, one resentment, one day, one truthful step toward calm and genuine love at a time. Break the trauma bond by choosing reality and choosing yourself, repeatedly, even when the temptation to return is strong. As the bond fades, your authentic self will begin to shine, others will start to see you as you truly are, and life will begin to rise. That, ultimately, is where real love begins. [Music]

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