Tag: Trauma

  • When Old Wounds Echo: Why Triggers Can Return Long After the Trauma Ends

    Triggers can show up months or even years after abuse has ended, and when they do, many survivors wonder, “Does this mean I haven’t healed?” What’s so painful about these moments is how unexpected they can be—you might be living your life, feeling stronger than ever, and suddenly something small pulls you back to a feeling you thought you left behind. But the truth is that triggers appearing long after the fact are not a sign of failure but a sign of being human. They are a reminder that your body lived through something intense and real. Healing is not the absence of triggers—it’s the ability to respond differently to them. It’s the ability to notice the fear rising without being consumed by it, to feel the memory surface without being swallowed whole.

    Trauma doesn’t disappear on a schedule; it lingers in the body, stored in the nervous system, waiting for something familiar—a date, memory, smell, or tone —to wake it up. And these “wake-ups” often happen in the very seasons where life has finally quieted down, when your nervous system has enough safety to let old memories rise. This doesn’t mean you’re going backwards. It simply means your body is still releasing what it had to hold onto for far too long. It means your nervous system is reacting to something that once signalled danger, and that is a normal, biological response, not a personal flaw. It’s your body’s way of saying, “I remember this,” even while your mind already knows, “I’m not in danger anymore.”

    During abuse, you lived in survival mode. Hypervigilance became instinct, anticipating moods became necessary, and shrinking yourself became a way to stay safe. These weren’t choices—they were protective reflexes developed under pressure. You learned to read the slightest shift in tone, the smallest change in behaviour, because your safety depended on it. When the danger finally ends, your body doesn’t instantly recalibrate; it slowly unlearns what it once had to rely on. That unlearning can take time. Sometimes it happens quietly, and other times it surfaces through triggers that seem to come out of nowhere.

    So when a trigger surfaces, it’s not a sign of unhealed trauma; it’s an invitation to comfort a part of you that was never comforted before. It’s a chance to offer the compassion, safety, and reassurance your past self never received. Often, triggers rise because you are finally safe enough for your body to process what it couldn’t process in survival mode. The body releases pain slowly, in layers, only as you have the strength to hold it. In that sense, the presence of a trigger can actually be a sign of progress—your system trusts that you can handle what once felt unbearable.

    Your healing is reflected not in whether triggers appear, but in how you respond to them. Perhaps the sting is still there, but now that you recognize what’s happening, you can ground yourself, seek support, and know you’re safe. You pause instead of panicking. You breathe instead of breaking. You speak truth over yourself instead of shame. That is healing, growth, and evidence of how far you’ve come.

    Faith adds a final layer of peace, reminding you that God never leaves you alone in the moments when old wounds echo. When something surfaces, He meets you there—not with judgment, but with gentleness. Psalm 34:18 says, “The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit,” reminding us that His nearness doesn’t disappear just because the trauma has ended. He remains close in the remembering, in the unravelling, in the reprocessing, and in the restoration.

    So no, being triggered does not mean you haven’t healed. It means you’re healing in layers, tending to wounds you weren’t allowed to grow to before, and becoming whole step by step. It means you are strong enough to feel what once overwhelmed you. You’re not regressing. You’re human—and you’re healing. And every time you face a trigger with awareness, compassion, and faith, you take another step toward the freedom you’ve been working hard to reclaim.

  • Not Alienated—Afraid: The Side of the Story Courts Ignore

    Few topics in family court create more confusion and more damage than “parental alienation.” For years, it has been used as a blanket accusation, a catch-all explanation for why a child resists seeing a parent. But like many ideas that take on a life of their own, the reality is far more complex, and far more heartbreaking.

    Is parental alienation real? In rare cases, yes—there are situations where one parent intentionally manipulates a child against the other for revenge, control, or personal gain. But more often than not, what is labelled as “alienation” is nothing more than the natural, instinctive reaction of a child who does not feel safe.

    And here is the part that very few people are willing to say out loud:

    Many children aren’t “alienated.” They’re afraid.

    They are not rejecting a parent because of poison from the other household. They are rejecting a parent because that parent caused harm—whether through emotional abuse, physical intimidation, manipulation, or the chaos the child had to live through. Children do not need to be coached to avoid someone who frightened them, minimized their feelings, or hurt the parent they love and depend on. They remember slammed doors. They remember yelling. They remember their mother crying in the bedroom while covering bruises or wiping away silent tears. They remember tension in the house thick enough to taste. And children, even the quiet ones, even the small ones, absorb everything.

    Yet in courtrooms across North America, these natural trauma responses are twisted into accusations: “She’s alienating the kids. “She’s turning them against me. “She’s brainwashing them.”

    This narrative is convenient for the abusive parent because it shifts all responsibility away from their behaviour and onto the protective parent—most often the mother. Instead of acknowledging the real reason the children resist contact, the abusive parent claims to be the victim. Suddenly, the mother becomes the one on trial, forced to defend herself against labels like “alienator” simply because she protected her children and herself from further harm.

    But children are far more intuitive than adults give them credit for. A child doesn’t need a lecture to understand who feels safe and who doesn’t. A child doesn’t need prompting to feel uneasy around someone who controlled, belittled, or terrified their mom. A child doesn’t need manipulation to remember how it felt when the energy in the home shifted at the sound of footsteps, or when their mom’s voice changed in fear.

    Calling this “alienation” is not only inaccurate—it’s cruel.

    It erases the child’s lived experience. It punishes protective parents. It rewards abusive ones. And it places children back into environments where their trauma is minimized, dismissed, or ignored altogether.

    The truth is simple: Children gravitate toward safety, not alienation. They pull away from chaos, not from love. They avoid what hurts them. They lean toward what comforts them.

    If they consistently choose one parent over another, especially after a history of abuse, the most logical explanation is not manipulation—it’s survival.

    This is why trauma-informed courts and child-protection experts warn against assuming parental alienation without a full, unbiased, evidence-based assessment. When systems rush to fit families into predetermined categories, children lose their voices. And mothers—especially those escaping domestic violence—are silenced, blamed, and punished for doing exactly what good mothers do: protect.

    Real parental alienation does exist. But it is far, far less common than the courts are led to believe.

    Much more common is this: Children who don’t feel safe with the parent who abused their mom, who carry unspoken memories that they don’t know how to articulate, whose bodies remember what their words cannot fully express, who are tired of pretending, and who want peace.

    If we genuinely care about children, we must stop weaponizing the term “parental alienation” against the very people trying to keep them safe. We must start listening—not to the loudest voice in the room, not the one with the best legal strategy, but to the subtle truths children reveal through their behaviour, discomfort, and desire for safety.

    Because at the end of the day, this isn’t about labels. It isn’t about court orders. It isn’t about winning or losing.

    It’s about children who have already lived through enough pain being allowed to choose safety without having their choices called manipulation.

    Sometimes, the most loving thing a child can do is distance themselves from the person who caused the harm. And sometimes the bravest thing a mother can do is stand her ground and refuse to let the truth be rewritten.

    When we understand that, we understand that what some call “parental alienation” is often nothing more than a child’s heart doing what it was created to do—protecting itself.

  • Cognitive Dissonance: The War Between Heart and Mind

    Cognitive dissonance is one of the most tormenting psychological effects of abuse — the invisible tug-of-war inside your mind that makes you question your own reality. It’s the tension between what you feel and know, the mental chaos of trying to reconcile love with harm, and hope with truth. For survivors, it’s not simply confusion — it’s survival.

    Abuse often begins with affection, connection, and the illusion of safety. The person who will later hurt you first studies you — learning your dreams, fears, and vulnerabilities. They mirror your values, speak your language, and convince you that you’ve finally found someone who understands you. When the cruelty begins — the demeaning comments, gaslighting, and manipulation — your mind refuses to accept it at face value. It clings to the version of them who once made you feel safe, seen, and special. You tell yourself they didn’t mean it, they’re stressed, or they’ll change. You remember the good days like lifelines, hoping they’ll come back. That’s cognitive dissonance — your brain trying to bridge the impossible gap between who they pretend to be and who they truly are.

    It’s not weakness. It’s wiring. The brain naturally seeks harmony between beliefs and experiences. When something doesn’t make sense — like “they love me” and “they’re hurting me” coexisting — the mind will do anything to restore order, even if it means rewriting the truth. It’s safer to believe the abuse is your fault than to accept that the person you love is intentionally harming you. It’s less painful to hope they’ll change than to face that they won’t. This is why victims stay. This is how trauma bonds form — through cycles of punishment and reward, cruelty followed by crumbs of affection that feel like proof of love.

    Abusers exploit this confusion masterfully. They use intermittent reinforcement — one moment cold, the next kind — training your nervous system to crave their approval. You start apologizing for things you didn’t do, shrinking smaller, trying harder, and walking on eggshells. You believe that if you can love them right, the good version will return. The truth is that version never existed. It was a carefully constructed mask designed to keep you hooked. But when you realize it, you’re already entangled in a web of fear, self-doubt, and shame.

    Even after you leave, cognitive dissonance doesn’t fade overnight. In fact, it can intensify. You may find yourself defending them, missing them, or second-guessing your own memories. You’ll replay conversations, wondering if you exaggerated or misunderstood. You might even feel guilty for leaving. These conflicting emotions can make you feel crazy, but you’re not. You’re detoxing from manipulation — from a distorted reality that rewired your brain to question itself. Healing requires confronting those contradictions head-on.

    Freedom begins when you allow both truths to coexist: I loved them, and they hurt me. You can grieve the person you thought they were without denying the abuse that happened. You can honour your love without excusing their cruelty. Healing is not about forgetting the good moments but remembering the whole picture — the context, the cost, and the pattern. The brain slowly relearns that truth, even when painful, brings peace, while illusion always brings chaos.

    Recovery from cognitive dissonance is like reassembling a shattered mirror. You pick up each piece of truth and place it back where it belongs. You replace fantasy with facts, guilt with grace, and confusion with clarity. It’s painful at first because your mind must unlearn the lies that once made you feel safe. But as clarity comes, the fog lifts. You start to see the abuser’s tactics for what they were — manipulation, not love. Control, not care. Performance, not partnership.

    Healing involves more than understanding what happened intellectually; it requires retraining your body and mind to trust truth again. Writing things down helps anchor reality when your mind romanticizes the past. Therapy, trauma-informed support, and community with other survivors can help you name what you experienced and remind you that you’re not alone. Most importantly, self-compassion is crucial. You stayed because your heart was hopeful. After all, your empathy was used against you, because your love was real — even if theirs wasn’t.

    Cognitive dissonance dissolves not through force but through truth spoken gently, again and again, until your mind and heart finally agree. You begin to see that peace doesn’t come from pretending it wasn’t that bad, but from admitting it was. And yet, here you are. Still standing, healing and learning to trust yourself again.

    The truth may hurt, but it also heals. The lies kept you bound; the truth will set you free. And in time, you will realize that clarity — even when it breaks your heart — is the most merciful gift you could ever give yourself.

  • You Don’t Get to Judge a Story You’ve Never Lived

    Some people have a lot to say about lives they’ve never lived. They offer opinions on struggles they’ve never faced, pass judgment on choices they’ve never had to make, and speak confidently about paths they’ve never walked. It’s easy to form conclusions from the outside looking in. It’s easy to believe you would have handled things differently when your world isn’t crumbling beneath you. It’s easy to cast judgment when you’ve never been controlled, degraded, gaslit, or made to question your own sanity by someone who claimed to love you. But until you’ve lived it, you don’t understand the layers of fear, manipulation, and trauma that shape a survivor’s every decision. You don’t get to judge a story you’ve never lived.

    Abuse rarely begins as abuse. It starts with affection, charm, and promises. It begins with a person who seems attentive, genuine, and loving. Over time, the subtle changes start—a minor criticism disguised as concern, a raised voice dismissed as stress, an invasion of privacy justified as love. Bit by bit, the abuser rewrites reality. The victim adapts to survive, excusing behaviour that would once have been unacceptable, hoping love will somehow be enough to fix what’s broken. By the time the fog begins to clear, they’re already caught in a web of confusion, fear, and dependency. And then the world dares to ask, “Why didn’t you just leave?”

    Leaving isn’t a simple act of walking away. It’s a process of disentangling, reclaiming, and unlearning. It’s rebuilding an identity that’s been systematically dismantled. It’s risking safety, financial stability, reputation, and sometimes even life itself. Abusers don’t simply let go. They manipulate, threaten, stalk, smear, and exploit every vulnerability. Survival requires courage that most people cannot comprehend. So when someone says, “I would’ve never let that happen to me,” they say, “I don’t understand what it’s like to be trapped in fear.”

    When outsiders speak without understanding, they reinforce shame. They invalidate experiences they can’t fathom. They echo the very words abusers use to keep victims silent: No one will believe you. It’s your fault. You’re overreacting. Judgment keeps people trapped. Compassion helps them find their way out. The world doesn’t need more critics—it needs more listeners.

    Trauma doesn’t just live in the mind; it lives in the body. It changes how the brain processes information, how the nervous system responds to safety and threat, and how trust and love are understood. This is why survivors sometimes appear inconsistent, emotional, or hesitant. They’re not “unstable.” They’re healing from invisible wounds. So before you label someone’s pain as drama or weakness, remember: you have no idea what battles they fight behind closed doors.

    If you’ve never had to plan an escape in the middle of the night, if you’ve never hidden bruises—emotional or physical—behind a forced smile, if you’ve never feared for your children’s safety or questioned your own reality because of someone else’s manipulation, then thank God for that mercy. But don’t use your comfort as a weapon against those who haven’t been as fortunate. Use it as a reminder to extend grace. To hold space for those who are still finding their way out. To believe victims even when their stories sound unbelievable—because abuse always does until it happens to you.

    Every survivor carries scars, but those scars tell a story of strength, not shame. They are evidence of someone who endured what was meant to destroy them and lived to tell the truth. They prove that light can still break through even in the darkest places. When we choose empathy over judgment, we help that light grow.

    To the ones still living in fear: this isn’t your fault. You didn’t cause it or deserve it, and you don’t have to stay. You deserve safety. You deserve peace. You deserve a life where love is kind, not cruel; where home feels safe, not suffocating. Healing won’t happen overnight, but it will happen. Step by step, day by day, you’ll begin to remember who you are. And that person—the one beneath the fear and the pain—is worth fighting for.

    So the next time you’re tempted to comment on someone else’s story, remember that you’re seeing only fragments of a life you’ve never lived. There’s so much you don’t know and pain you can’t see. Be gentle with your words and generous with your grace. Because at the end of the day, none of us are called to judge—we’re called to love.

  • When Survival Has Left You Exhausted: Rest for the Weary Soul

    You are not lazy, stuck, or unmotivated. You are exhausted. There is a difference. After years of living in survival mode, your body and mind are simply tired. You’ve been running on adrenaline, holding yourself together through crisis after crisis, managing emotions that were never yours to carry, and trying to protect yourself and those you love. That kind of living takes everything out of you. It’s not that you lack drive or purpose—you’ve been in fight-or-flight for so long that your body has forgotten what peace feels like.

    The Bible says, “Come to Me, all you who are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” (Matthew 11:28) Those words aren’t just an invitation—they are a promise. God knows the toll that trauma takes. He sees the nights you lie awake replaying memories you wish you could forget. He knows the weight you’ve been carrying—the anxiety, fear, grief—and He’s not asking you to push harder. He’s asking you to rest. Not the kind of rest that comes from a nap or a weekend off, but the soul-deep rest that only He can give.

    When you’ve spent years surviving, slowing down feels wrong. Stillness can feel unsafe, even foreign. You’ve trained your body to stay alert, read every tone, and anticipate danger before it comes. Then, when the chaos finally ends, your system doesn’t automatically know you’re safe. It keeps scanning for threats, and you wonder why you can’t seem to focus, feel unmotivated, or cry for no reason. This isn’t weakness—it’s your nervous system recalibrating after years of living on edge.

    The world glorifies productivity. It tells you that your worth is measured by how much you do, how much you give, and how much you accomplish. But God measures differently. He’s not asking you to perform—He’s asking you to come. To lay it all down. To stop striving for just a moment and let Him carry the weight you were never meant to bear alone.

    This exhaustion you feel isn’t proof that you’re failing. It’s proof that you’ve been strong for too long. You survived what others may never understand. You kept going when it would have been easier to give up. And now, your body and soul ask for what they’ve been deprived of—gentleness, healing, and rest. It’s not that you don’t care anymore; it’s that you’ve finally reached the place where you can begin to breathe again.

    You don’t have to earn the right to rest. You don’t have to justify slowing down. Jesus permitted you when He said, “Come to Me.” His rest is restorative—it doesn’t just refresh the body; it heals the soul. It reminds you that you are safe now, loved, and don’t have to keep proving your worth through effort.

    So, if you feel unmotivated or “stuck,” don’t be hard on yourself. You are not lazy. You are recovering. You are healing from years of exhaustion, and your body has finally stopped masking. Give yourself the grace to slow down, to feel, to rest. Allow yourself to be renewed by the One who restores all things.

    Because healing doesn’t come from pushing through—it comes from surrender. And in that surrender, you’ll find the peace you’ve longed for. You are not broken; You are tired. And that’s precisely who Jesus invites to come to Him—the weary, the burdened, the ones who’ve been fighting for far too long.

    Let Him give you rest. The kind that quiets your soul, steadies your heart, and reminds you that you were never meant to do this alone.

  • How Trauma Changes the Brain—and How Healing Restores It

    Over the years—both through my own journey as a survivor and through sitting with countless others who’ve carried the invisible weight of abuse—I’ve come to realize something science continues to confirm: trauma doesn’t just live in our memories; it lives in our brains, our bodies, and our nervous systems. It changes how we think, react, feel, and connect with others.

    When I first began learning about trauma’s effect on the brain, I was struck by how perfectly the research explained what I had lived through. The hypervigilance made me jump at the sound of a door closing. The brain fog would roll in like a storm cloud when I tried to focus. The sleepless nights, the exhaustion that never seemed to lift, the sense that I was always on guard even in moments that should have felt safe. It wasn’t weakness or lack of faith—it was a brain that had been rewired to survive.

    Studies show that chronic abuse—whether emotional, physical, psychological, or sexual—literally changes the shape and function of the brain. The amygdala, that tiny almond-shaped structure responsible for detecting danger, becomes overactive, firing off alarms even when there’s no real threat. The hippocampus, which helps us store and recall memories, can shrink in response to prolonged stress, making it harder to remember clearly or to distinguish between past and present danger. And the prefrontal cortex, which is supposed to help calm those alarms and keep emotions in check, often goes offline during moments of fear or stress. When you’ve lived through trauma, this imbalance can make it feel like you’re living with one foot in the past and one in the present—ready to run, even when you’re safe.

    As a practitioner, I’ve seen these patterns repeatedly play out. Clients often say, “I feel broken,” or “I can’t seem to calm down,” or “I don’t know why I can’t just move on.” But looking deeper, we see that their brains aren’t broken—they’re protective. They learned to adapt in an unsafe environment. The same overactive amygdala that once kept them alive now keeps them anxious. The same dissociation that shielded them from pain now makes them feel numb or detached. The same survival mode that helped them endure is the very thing that prevents rest and healing.

    Even those who “only” witnessed abuse—children who heard yelling through the walls, who watched a parent being hurt, or who grew up walking on eggshells—show similar patterns in the brain. Their stress response systems stay on high alert. Their cortisol levels fluctuate wildly. Their developing brains, surrounded by fear, begin to equate safety with unpredictability. I’ve worked with adults who still flinch at raised voices or freeze when someone slams a cupboard door. Their bodies remember what their minds have tried to forget.

    The symptoms that follow are not just emotional—they’re physical. Chronic migraines, digestive issues, autoimmune flare-ups, and fatigue often trace back to that same overworked stress system. The body stores what the mind cannot process. When cortisol surges repeatedly, it wears down the immune system and interferes with sleep, memory, and mood. That’s why trauma healing isn’t just about talking—it’s about calming the nervous system, restoring balance, and helping the brain relearn what safety feels like.

    But there’s hope. I’ve witnessed it—in my own life and the lives of the people I’ve had the privilege to walk beside. The brain is resilient. It can change through safety, love, faith, and consistency. Every time we practice grounding, breathe deeply instead of reacting, and let ourselves be vulnerable with someone safe, we teach the brain a new pattern. Neuroplasticity—the brain’s ability to rewire—means that healing isn’t just possible; it’s biological.

    Faith has been a cornerstone of that process for me. When I finally began to understand that my hypervigilance wasn’t a lack of trust in God but the natural result of a traumatized nervous system, I was able to approach healing differently. Instead of condemning my reactions, I learned to extend grace to myself. I began to see that God designed the human brain to protect us—even if that protection became a prison for a time. Healing became an act of partnership: God renewed my mind while I practiced patience and self-compassion.

    What I’ve come to understand is that trauma really can leave its imprint on the brain—sometimes it shows up on scans—but the most powerful changes are the ones we can’t see. You can’t capture courage or faith on an MRI. You can’t measure the strength it takes to get up every morning and keep fighting to heal. Trauma shows itself in so many hidden ways—through anxiety that never seems to rest, nightmares that replay what we wish we could forget, a body that startles too easily, or the profound exhaustion that lingers even after a full night’s sleep. It can look like memory lapses, mood swings, or the constant urge to withdraw because the connection feels unsafe. But the brain that once learned to survive through chaos can also learn peace through safety, truth, and love. That’s the beauty of how God designed us—we’re not stuck the way trauma left us. Healing takes time, but it’s possible. I’ve seen it in others, and I’ve lived it myself. The scans can show what trauma did, but only a healed life can show what grace can do.

  • Why Early Recognition is Your Best Protection

    One of the most powerful tools you can have when it comes to protecting yourself from toxic people—especially abusers—is the ability to recognize the signs before you’re in too deep. The damage can already be done when you’re fully entangled in their charm, control, or manipulation. That’s why learning to spot specific patterns early can save you years of confidence, life and peace, and sometimes even your safety.

    Abusers rarely walk into your life wearing a warning label. They don’t introduce themselves as controlling, deceitful, or manipulative. They often do the opposite. They present themselves as attentive, charming, and understanding. They might even seem too good to be true—and that’s usually the first clue. Genuine people don’t need to perform perfectly. But an abuser’s image is everything, and they’ll make sure you see exactly what they want you to see.

    One of the earliest signs is how they talk about other people, especially their past partners. If every ex is described as “crazy,” “toxic,” or the one who ruined everything, be careful. That’s not just a coincidence—it’s a pattern. They shape your perception by planting seeds so you’ll side with them no matter what you hear later. They’re not giving you the truth; they’re giving you the version of events that keeps them in the role of hero or victim. And if you stay long enough, you’ll see that this same script will one day be used against you.

    Another sign is their inability to admit fault. Healthy people can acknowledge when they’re wrong and take steps to make things right. No matter the evidence, unhealthy people blame, deflect, or justify their behaviour. Accountability feels impossible with them, because admitting fault would mean chipping away at the flawless image they’ve built.

    Pay attention to how they handle criticism—both yours and others’. If even mild feedback sparks anger, defensiveness, or a subtle form of punishment like the silent treatment, that’s a clue you’re dealing with someone whose self-image is fragile beneath the surface. People who can’t tolerate being wrong will do whatever it takes to make sure they’re seen as right.

    And perhaps the clearest sign of all: watch what happens when their image is threatened. This could be as small as calling out an inconsistency or as big as someone else revealing the truth about them. In those moments, the mask slips. You might see false accusations, smear campaigns, rage, or an over-the-top performance of generosity or kindness designed to win back anyone who might doubt them. This isn’t about resolving the issue but regaining control over their perceptions.

    It’s important to spot these signs early because once you’re emotionally invested, leaving becomes harder. You’ll want to believe the version of them you first met. You’ll hold onto the good moments, even if they’re few and far between. And by the time you realize how much their behaviour has chipped away at your sense of self, they may already have a hold on your finances, reputation, or support system.

    Spotting it before it harms you means trusting your instincts when something feels off. It means listening to the red flags instead of talking yourself out of them. It means asking hard questions: Why do they need to be seen as perfect? Why is every ex a villain? Why can’t they take responsibility? Why does it feel like the rules don’t apply to them?

    Because here’s the truth—healthy relationships don’t require you to ignore your discomfort, silence your voice, or twist your reality to fit someone else’s narrative. And if you recognize the patterns now, you can walk away before you become the next chapter in their carefully crafted story.

    Spot it early. Believe in yourself. And choose your peace over their performance.

  • When Abuse Becomes Entertainment: How the Media Is Selling Us a Lie About Love

    Some of the most dangerous lies aren’t shouted; they’re whispered through screens, disguised as love stories, and wrapped in fantasy. We watch them unfold in movies, binge on TV shows, and scroll past them in viral TikToks and memes. They’re everywhere. Many tell us that control, dominance, or manipulation are forms of passion.

    Take Fifty Shades of Grey, for example. It was marketed as a provocative, edgy romance—a daring take on seduction and sexual exploration. Millions bought the books. Box office records were shattered. But here’s what was often missed: what was sold as a “love story” was, at its core, a deeply unhealthy and abusive relationship.

    Christian Grey isn’t a dream partner. He’s controlling, possessive, emotionally manipulative, and isolating. He stalks Anastasia, controls her career decisions, dictates who she can see, and uses intimacy as a tool of control. And yet, audiences swooned. His behaviour was excused as the actions of a “damaged man who just needed love.” The message was clear: if you love someone enough, you can fix their trauma, even if it means sacrificing your safety or sense of self.

    This isn’t just bad storytelling. It’s dangerous.

    And it’s not always a man hurting a woman. Women can be abusers, too. Media tends to portray abusive women as “crazy,” “jealous,” or “just emotional,” but these are red flags too, not plot twists. Female abusers may weaponize guilt, control finances, isolate partners from family, stalk, or use children as pawns. Whether the abuse is emotional, physical, sexual, or verbal, and regardless of the gender of the abuser or the victim, it’s still abuse.

    When abuse is repackaged as romance, it distorts our understanding of what love is supposed to look like. It blurs the lines between passion and possession, between desire and domination. And for those who have lived through real abuse, it feels like a punch to the gut.

    Because here’s the truth: Real survivors don’t get luxury penthouses and fairytale endings. They get confusion, isolation, trauma, and years of healing. They get gaslit into thinking it’s their fault. They get disbelieved, silenced, or told to be grateful it wasn’t worse.

    The media doesn’t just glamorize abuse; it often eroticizes it. It teaches young people that being desired means pursuing relentlessly, even when you say no. That jealousy is romantic. Mood swings and emotional outbursts show how deep someone’s love runs. That boundaries are meant to be broken if you’re truly “meant to be.”

    But this isn’t love. It’s an obsession. It’s dysfunction. It’s abuse dressed up as intimacy.

    It’s not just Fifty Shades. Countless other stories glorify toxic relationships: The brooding, emotionally unavailable partner who treats their love interest like a project. The “bad boy” or “crazy girl” who hurts everyone but magically changes for the right person. The romanticization of stalking, ignoring boundaries, or using sex as a bargaining chip.

    Think about how often films show people being “worn down” until they finally say yes. Or how many times emotional abuse is chalked up to childhood trauma that the love interest is supposed to fix. These narratives aren’t just tired—they’re harmful.

    They send the message that love requires suffering. The more you endure, the more valuable your passion becomes. That abuse is a phase, a kink, a challenge—not a crisis.

    And for those of us who have survived actual abuse, it’s triggering. Because we’ve lived the reality behind the fiction. We’ve endured the “love” that left bruises—not just on our bodies but also our minds and spirits. We’ve been told our abusers were just “misunderstood.” We’ve heard, “But they buy you nice things,” or “At least they come home at night,” or “Maybe you’re just too sensitive.”

    So when the world glamorizes what nearly destroyed us, it’s not entertainment. It’s erasure.

    We must start calling it what it is. Abuse is not sexy. It is not romantic. It should not be brushed aside for chemistry or plot development. Abuse is traumatic. It’s life-altering. And no amount of cinematic flair can change that.

    We need better stories. We need love stories rooted in respect, empathy, communication, and mutual care. We need media that shows healthy relationships—where power is shared, not hoarded; consent is sacred, not negotiated; and people are partners, not projects.

    And we need to equip ourselves—and the next generation—to spot the difference. To recognize when the screen is lying to us. To stop confusing red flags with butterflies.

    Because real love doesn’t control, it doesn’t intimidate. It doesn’t cross your boundaries and then blame it on trauma. It doesn’t make you feel smaller so someone else can feel powerful.

    Real love honours, protects, and sets you free.

    Let’s stop letting Hollywood define romance. Let’s tell the truth—even when the truth isn’t shiny or marketable or trending, because survivors deserve more than to see their pain turned into profit. And love deserves more than to be reduced to abuse with good lighting and a soundtrack.

  • When the Cycle Continues: Why Survivors Sometimes Face Abuse Again

    It’s a question survivors often hear: “How did this happen again?” or “Why do you keep choosing the same kind of person?” As if abuse is something anyone chooses. As if healing automatically guarantees you’ll never be hurt again.

    The truth is, many survivors of domestic violence find themselves in more than one abusive relationship—not because they’re blind, broken, or weak, but because abuse leaves deep psychological and emotional scars. Without intentional healing, those wounds can affect how survivors see themselves, how they interpret love, and what they accept in relationships in the future.

    This isn’t about blame. This is about understanding. Because only when we understand the patterns can we begin to break them.

    Abuse Changes the Way You See the World

    Surviving domestic violence changes you. It rewires your nervous system to stay in survival mode—constantly scanning for danger, trying to anticipate moods, and adjusting yourself to stay safe. You learn to minimize your needs, suppress your voice, and accept the unacceptable to get through the day.

    Over time, this becomes your normal. And when something becomes normal, it’s easy to recreate it—even without realizing it.

    You may gravitate toward people who feel “familiar,” though unhealthy. You may overlook red flags because they don’t seem alarming—just typical. And you may ignore your gut instincts because you were trained to believe your feelings weren’t valid.

    Not All Survivors Lack Discernment

    Some believe survivors have “bad judgment” or “poor discernment.” But that’s a shallow and unfair assumption. Many survivors do recognize red flags. Many are incredibly intuitive, cautious, and aware.

    But abusers are often highly skilled at manipulation. They show up wearing masks—attentive, charming, kind, and spiritual. They know how to say the right things, play the long game, and slowly isolate and control without being obvious. By the time the abuse becomes clear, the survivor may already be emotionally or financially entangled.

    It’s not about discernment. It’s about deception.

    Trauma Bonds and Cycles of Hope

    Abuse often comes in cycles—kindness followed by cruelty, apologies followed by aggression. This cycle creates what’s known as a trauma bond, a powerful psychological attachment that makes it hard to leave, even when the relationship is harmful.

    If this pattern becomes familiar, it can feel strangely comforting—even addictive. Survivors may unknowingly seek out similar dynamics, not because they enjoy the chaos, but because they’ve been conditioned to believe that love comes with pain, that affection is earned, and that they are responsible for fixing the brokenness in others.

    They may also carry an immense amount of hope that the new person will be different, hope that if they just love hard enough, they’ll finally get it right. And in that hope, they miss the warning signs.

    Shame Keeps People Silent

    Survivors who find themselves in another abusive relationship often carry deep shame. They think, “I should’ve known better.” They fear judgement. They may stay quiet out of embarrassment, fear that no one will believe them the second time, and guilt.

    This silence benefits abusers. It protects their image and keeps the survivor isolated. But shame has no place here. Abuse is never the victim’s fault—not the first time, not the second, not ever.

    When Self-Worth Has Been Shattered

    One of the most damaging effects of domestic violence is how it destroys your sense of worth. Survivors are often told they’re unlovable, too emotional, too needy, or not enough. Over time, these lies take root. And when your self-worth is in ruins, it’s hard to believe you deserve more.

    You may tolerate treatment you once would’ve walked away from. You may stay longer than you should. You may settle for crumbs, thinking that’s all you’ll ever get. But none of that reflects your value—it reflects what you’ve been through.

    You are not too broken to be loved well. You are not “damaged goods.” You are someone who has survived the unthinkable. And that strength is not a weakness—it’s a reason to keep fighting for the life and love you truly deserve.

    Healing Is the Way Out

    Breaking the cycle of abuse isn’t about simply walking away. It’s about healing what’s beneath the surface. That means:

    • Rebuilding your self-worth so you stop accepting less than you deserve.
    • Learning to trust your gut and honour your boundaries, no matter how small.
    • Understanding the dynamics of abuse so you can recognize manipulation before it takes hold.
    • Surrounding yourself with people who affirm your value, not undermine it.
    • Seeking support through therapy, advocacy groups, or other survivors who genuinely understand.

    It’s okay to take your time and to make mistakes. Healing isn’t linear—and every step forward, no matter how small, is still progress.

  • Abuse by Proxy—How Hurting a Parent Hurts the Children

    When we talk about children and abuse, most people only picture harm directed at a child, but what often goes unnoticed is the profound impact of a child witnessing one parent abuse the other. Even if a child is never touched or yelled at, growing up in a home where one parent is hurting the other is a trauma that leaves invisible scars.

    Children see more than we realize. They hear the slammed doors, feel the tension in the air, and sense the fear beneath the surface. Watching their mother or father be mistreated by someone they’re supposed to trust is devastating. It shakes their foundation, warps their understanding of love, and makes them question what’s safe and what’s not.

    An abuser might say, “I’d never hurt the kids.” But the moment you harm their parent, you already have. You can’t separate the two. That parent is their safe place, their source of comfort. When that person is being torn down, the child feels it in their body and carries it in their heart.

    Some kids act out, some shut down. Some grow up believing love means control, apologies don’t require change, or that silence is safer than truth. Even years later, those messages shape their relationships, self-worth, and healing.

    When a child witnesses the abuse of someone they love, it is just as damaging as direct abuse. It may not leave physical bruises, but it leaves lasting emotional wounds. Children internalize the chaos, blame themselves for the pain they see, and grow up with deep-rooted fears and insecurities. Their nervous systems learn to expect conflict and instability. And even when they’re not the target, they absorb every insult, every silent treatment, every slammed door. The message becomes clear: love is loud, scary, and unsafe.

    These children may grow into adults who struggle with boundaries, self-worth, and trust. They may find themselves drawn to unhealthy relationships, not because they want pain, but because it feels familiar. What they saw in childhood becomes the blueprint for giving and receiving love. That’s why it’s so important not only to stop the abuse but to heal the silent wounds it leaves behind.

    If we want to raise healthy children who feel loved and safe, we must protect them from the trauma of witnessing abuse. Even if the harm isn’t directed at them, seeing one parent hurt wounds them deeply. A child cannot feel secure when their world is built on fear.