Site icon Overcoming Narcissistic Abuse – Elizabeth Shaw

Recovery From Trauma Bonding, After Narcissistic Abuse.

Advertisements

Overcoming the trauma bond.

People often stay way longer than they ever should in an abusive relationship, myself included, it took me several attempts and a few years to get out, then once out, all hell broke loose as they came at me with one mind game after another. Due to the trauma bond, it is hard for those in these relationships to break free and hard to stay free. However, plenty of people have, so it is more than possible. You can, and you will.

When you are not getting punched in the face, it’s hard to see you’re in an abusive relationship, even when there is physical violence it’s usually twisted around onto you, or you’ve reacted in some way, so you’re left with all the self-doubt, blame and guilt, believing you are the one at fault.

Some people might just ask, “why didn’t you leave sooner.” Or remark, “I’d have never put up with that.” When they have not lived it, they don’t understand it. The power of that trauma bond and the emotional pull to the person who’s actually causing you emotional, physical, psychological and financial pain is a hard one to break.

Those who’ve never been in an abusive relationship struggle to understand why people stay in one. Survivors often also struggle to explain why and what truly happened to them. When survivors connect with each other, it helps give survivors of domestic violence more understanding. You are far from alone in this. Very few get out and stay out on their first attempt. It takes time to piece reality back together after all the gaslighting, it is a learning curve, and it is more than possible to break free and stay free.

It takes an average of seven attempts to break free of a toxic relationship. How you feel is normal.

Most of us have been conditioned from news and films that abusive relationships are always really physical, and although this does happen, it’s not always the case.

Psychological abuse is harder to see; it’s drip-fed over a period of time and is an insidious form of mental torture.

They break your heart, your spirit, your friendships, your physical health, your mental health, your financial health and more, and it takes time to recover and break free. You’re doing amazing.

Living with a narcissist is like living in a war zone, never knowing when the bomb will go off next, and not knowing what you did to set it off. You’re running around a mind field, walking on eggshells trying not to set them off, dodging bullets when you do.

Narcissistic people have a great talent of love bombing and playing nice, with the odd cleverly formed underhand comment here and there like. “Are you really going to wear that?” “If only you’d do this.” Partner’s often have brushed these comments to one side, not realising the actual reality of what’s happening to them. Partners are made to believe that the real person is the one who plays nice and the evil person is out of character, and it’s something they did to cause them to act out of character.

A psychological, manipulative, abusive relationship is extremely addictive. It causes trauma bonding, and you’re riding the rollercoaster of your life that just doesn’t seem to stop long enough for you to get out.

With the punishment of the silent treatments, then the projection and blame-shifting, then the intermittent reinforcement when they play nice again as you’ve behaved for them in the way they wanted and not true to yourself. Your mind and body go through so much turmoil. It releases high levels of the stress hormones cortisol when they’re gaslighting you and giving you the silent treatments, then high levels of dopamine when they reward you with affection for behaving how they want.

The hormonal roller coaster takes its toll on our minds and bodies. Most often, people in these relationships end up plagued by illness after illness, as they develop autoimmune problems when our minds and bodies have been under constant stress. We stay in these relationships despite the pressure on our own mental and physical health, due to not having our own clarity on reality and seeing what’s truly happening to us through the gaslighting, Control, projection and self-blame, the desperation of trying to win back the abusive partner. We get that intermittent relief of love for a time, reinforcing that we were the ones to blame. You were never to blame, and you’re a kind-hearted person who loves and wants to help.

Ask yourself when you feel to blame.

What did they truly do in the right way for you?

What did you do for them?

Most will realise the abuser didn’t do much other than hurt you and that you actually did all you could to love, help, take care and please them while slowly losing who you were.

Narcissists, narcissists, Psychopaths And narcissists Sociopaths tend to follow the same relationship patterns of idealisation, devalue, discard. Some will also hoover to suck you back in.

Signs you’re trauma bonded.

Unfortunately, some don’t try to leave, often through fear. Those who do often return, the abuser might break you so much that you are physically, emotionally and financially drained. They just discard you for someone new.

Once they are gone, or you do break free, you can begin to grieve, the person who never indeed existed, what you’ve been through, piece back together with your reality, start to see it wasn’t your fault and begin to heal. You were not chosen because you were weak; they chose you because you had greatness within you, a kind, loving, forgiving soul.

Ways to recover.

Click the links below to join, Elizabeth Shaw – Life Coach on social media, for more information on Overcoming Narcissistic Abuse.

On Facebook.

On YouTube.

On Twitter.

On Instagram.

On Pinterest.

On LinkedIn.

The courses Elizabeth Shaw has available.

The full course.

Click here for the full course to help you understand and break free from narcissistic abuse.

The free course.

Click here to join the free starter guide to breaking free from narcissistic abuse.

Help with overcoming trauma bonding and anxiety.

Click for help overcoming the trauma bond and anxiety.

All about the narcissist Online course.

Click here for more information about the narcissist personality disorder.

Recovery from narcissistic abuse and help with Co-Parenting.

Click here for more information on recovery and co-parenting with a toxic ex.

For 1-2-1 Coaching with me, email @ beyourselfagaintoday@gmail.com

Elizabeth Shaw is not a Doctor or a therapist. She is a mother of five, a blogger, a survivor of narcissistic abuse, and a life coach, She always recommends you get the support you feel comfortable and happy with. Finding the right support for you. Elizabeth has partnered with (Sponsored.) BetterHelp. where you will be matched with a licensed councillor, who specialises in recovery from this kind of abuse.

Click here for Elizabeth Shaw’s Recommended reading.

Advertisement.

Handling your emotions video.

Exit mobile version