If you’re always trying to read people’s emotions or wonder if someone is upset with you, you might have an insecure attachment style.
HERE’S WHAT THAT MEANS 🧵:
If we are born into a born into a home where a parent: is unpredictable, withdrawing (gives silent treatment), has anger explosions, or has us “walking on eggshells,” we learn to constantly perceive that parent’s emotions.
We do this in order to stay safe.
By becoming hyper-fixated on our parents: emotions, tone of voice, body language, etc. our brain is attempting to make sense of the situation.
And our nervous system is on high alert because we didn’t experience secure attachment.
When we’ve had to do this for years as children, this becomes our habit or pattern as an adult.
We might: over analyze conversations, always think someone is mad at us, or fear that we are saying or doing something wrong.
For example: we’re out with friends and we tell a story and one of our friends sighs.
Afterwards, we think about what that sigh meant. Or how we offended them. We search for the meaning in everyone’s actions.
The issue is: our role as adults isn’t to find the meaning behind people’s actions.
This is simply a coping mechanism we’ve developed from a dysfunctional home.
As adults, we are responsive for openly communicating our issues or problems.
And, we are not responsible for the emotions of other adults.
To heal, it’s important to understand healthy emotional responsibility.
This looks like:
- if someone’s upset, they’ll need to directly communicate this to me
- if I’m upset, I need to directly communicate this to other people
- rather than assuming someone’s emotional state (like I did as a child) as an adult, I ask.
- if I ask and someone says nothing is wrong I honor this as truth, not as an invitation to keep guessing or digging.
- if I have upset someone, that’s ok. Adults are capable of being upset. It no longer means I’m unsafe or “bad” like it did as a child.
- if someone’s upset me, it’s ok for me to speak up for myself. This is how I establish boundaries.
When we have insecure attachment patterns our mind may often fixate on people’s emotions to cope.
It’s important to consistently remind ourselves we are safe, and to stop playing our childhood roles.
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An emotionally unavailable partner slowly puts your body into survival mode.
Here's Why:
When someone's emotionally unavailable, you can feel completely alone in the relationship. You're trying to connect, trying to find middle ground, or trying to "get" them, but they push you away every time.
You crave depth, being seen, and vulnerability, and they crave distraction, avoidance, and solitude.
They things get difficult, their first instinct is to leave or shut down.
Over-explaining is a habit response. It comes from emotional monitoring. When we believe someone might feel upset or hurt by something we say, we over-explain to try to please the other person and to protect ourselves.
The issue with over-explaining is, we're creating a story about how someone will feel before we actually give them a chance to tell us what they think or feel.
If you've experienced chronic pain or exhaustion doctors have told you "nothing is wrong," you might be experiencing...
Mind body syndrome (MBS)
Here's what you need to know:
Our emotions and stress activate the same pain centers in the brain as physical injury. When we experience physical pain the body, we believe this must mean structural damage or damage to our tissue.
If structural damage or a "disease" isn't found, we're often told it's "in our head" which is a misunderstanding of the mind body connection.
Guilt tripping is when someone tries to get you to change your behavior or remove a boundary. It's done through pressure and works by activating your empathy.