Responding Instead of Absorbing

Responding Instead of Absorbing

There are moments when someone you care about is upset: a partner, a friend, a family member, and before you realize it, their emotion has become yours.

It starts small. A heaviness or tightness in your chest, a sense of resistance or overwhelm creeping in. If it’s intense, maybe even a tension in your gut or a flicker of anxiety.

You want to help. You want to listen with empathy. But somewhere along the way, you begin to carry their feelings as if they were your own.

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What Our Relationships Teach Us About Ourselves

What Our Relationships Teach Us About Ourselves

Every partnership is made up of two people doing the best they know how, shaped by the stories and survival strategies of their childhoods and lived experiences.

For some, safety meant avoiding conflict, staying quiet, not rocking the boat.
For others, safety meant speaking up, taking control, or fighting back.

Neither is wrong. They’re strengths that once kept us safe.

But over time, those same strategies of perfectionism, avoidance, control, people-pleasing can quietly sabotage our relationships.

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