If your relationship feels intense but not actually safe, that's worth paying attention to.
Trauma bonds don't always look like obvious dysfunction. Sometimes they feel like passion, like need, like you simply can't imagine your life without this person.
Here's what actually helps to recognize:
The blurred boundaries and codependent patterns that define trauma bonds
Why the push and pull dynamic — closeness, then distance — keeps you stuck in the cycle
How emotional highs and lows create a roller coaster that feels like love but isn't stability
What's really missing in trauma bonds: true emotional intimacy and authentic safety
What healthy bonds actually look like — rooted in mutual respect, clear boundaries, and emotional honesty
Watch Full Video here: https://youtu.be/Ns6VPO9zX8g
Complete transcript: How to understand trauma bonds
In trauma bonds, there's often blurred boundaries and codependent patterns. People feel like they can't function without the other person. A lot of times there's jealousy, there's possessiveness, or there's a need for constant reassurance. We might even feel obliged, obligated to include the person in everything that we do or to explain ourselves if we spend time with other people. Now, in healthy relationships, there's space. There's the ability to make decisions separately. Another sign of a trauma bond is a push and pull dynamic.
And this could look like one person withdrawing while the other person chases. There's this cycle of closeness and distance, love and conflict, connection and disconnection. This relationship feels so intense with emotional highs and lows, and many of us end up feeling like we're on this roller coaster where we have long or short periods where things feel just amazing and so good. and then followed by long or short periods of confusion, disconnection, and even distress. We can have autonomy without fear of losing the bond. In trauma bonds, there's an overall lack of true emotional intimacy. So that even though the relationship might feel intense, it often lacks depth.
Both people might be hiding parts of themselves and there isn't full safety to express all of our emotions because emotional and authentic vulnerability feels risky because the relationship itself doesn't actually feel stable or secure. Now, healthy bonds look different, and by contrast, they're rooted in safety, in mutual respect, clear boundaries, and emotional honesty.
???? Order my new book Reparenting The Inner Child: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1250393132
????: Join my private SelfHealers Circle community — spaces are limited:
ENROLL now: https://selfhealerscircle.com
????: Order my previous books: https://theholisticpsychologist.com/books "How To Be The Love You Self" | "How to Meet Yourself" | "How to Do the Work"
???? Get my FREE Relationship Future Self Journal: https://theholisticpsychologist.com/relationship-future-self-journal
____________________________________
???? Let's stay connected:
Instagram ➤ / the.holistic.psychologist
TikTok ➤ / theholisticpsychologist
Facebook ➤ / theholisticpsychologist
X ➤ / Theholisticpsyc
#traumabonding #toxicrelationships #toxicrelationship #toxicpeople #selfhealing
Trauma bonds don't always look like obvious dysfunction. Sometimes they feel like passion, like need, like you simply can't imagine your life without this person.
Here's what actually helps to recognize:
The blurred boundaries and codependent patterns that define trauma bonds
Why the push and pull dynamic — closeness, then distance — keeps you stuck in the cycle
How emotional highs and lows create a roller coaster that feels like love but isn't stability
What's really missing in trauma bonds: true emotional intimacy and authentic safety
What healthy bonds actually look like — rooted in mutual respect, clear boundaries, and emotional honesty
Watch Full Video here: https://youtu.be/Ns6VPO9zX8g
Complete transcript: How to understand trauma bonds
In trauma bonds, there's often blurred boundaries and codependent patterns. People feel like they can't function without the other person. A lot of times there's jealousy, there's possessiveness, or there's a need for constant reassurance. We might even feel obliged, obligated to include the person in everything that we do or to explain ourselves if we spend time with other people. Now, in healthy relationships, there's space. There's the ability to make decisions separately. Another sign of a trauma bond is a push and pull dynamic.
And this could look like one person withdrawing while the other person chases. There's this cycle of closeness and distance, love and conflict, connection and disconnection. This relationship feels so intense with emotional highs and lows, and many of us end up feeling like we're on this roller coaster where we have long or short periods where things feel just amazing and so good. and then followed by long or short periods of confusion, disconnection, and even distress. We can have autonomy without fear of losing the bond. In trauma bonds, there's an overall lack of true emotional intimacy. So that even though the relationship might feel intense, it often lacks depth.
Both people might be hiding parts of themselves and there isn't full safety to express all of our emotions because emotional and authentic vulnerability feels risky because the relationship itself doesn't actually feel stable or secure. Now, healthy bonds look different, and by contrast, they're rooted in safety, in mutual respect, clear boundaries, and emotional honesty.
???? Order my new book Reparenting The Inner Child: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1250393132
????: Join my private SelfHealers Circle community — spaces are limited:
ENROLL now: https://selfhealerscircle.com
????: Order my previous books: https://theholisticpsychologist.com/books "How To Be The Love You Self" | "How to Meet Yourself" | "How to Do the Work"
???? Get my FREE Relationship Future Self Journal: https://theholisticpsychologist.com/relationship-future-self-journal
____________________________________
???? Let's stay connected:
Instagram ➤ / the.holistic.psychologist
TikTok ➤ / theholisticpsychologist
Facebook ➤ / theholisticpsychologist
X ➤ / Theholisticpsyc
#traumabonding #toxicrelationships #toxicrelationship #toxicpeople #selfhealing
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