On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Nicole LePera: How to Break the Cycle of Trauma Bonds & Stop Toxic Relationship Habits
Episode Date: September 9, 2024What are your emotional needs? How do you communicate them clearly? Today, Jay welcomes back Dr. Nicole LePera, a holistic psychologist, best-selling author, and founder of the SelfHealers Circle, a g...lobal community for self-healing. She is the author of the New York Times bestseller "How to Do the Work," and her latest book, "How to Be the Love You Seek," guides readers on breaking cycles, finding peace, and healing relationships. Dr. LePera is known for her approachable, transformative approach to mental wellness, empowering individuals to heal themselves and live authentically. Nicole talks about how our earliest experiences shape our adult relationships. She explains the concept of trauma bonds—dysfunctional patterns that often stem from childhood but persist into adulthood, affecting how we connect with others. These bonds can feel familiar and even comforting, but they often prevent us from forming healthy, fulfilling relationships. Jay and Nicole explore how awareness is the first step toward breaking these patterns. They emphasize the importance of understanding our subconscious beliefs and the roles we play in relationships, often unknowingly repeating cycles of pain and misunderstanding. She talks about the importance of staying present, learning to regulate our emotions, and building healthier habits that align with our true selves, and offers practical advice on how to navigate the complexities of love, whether it's setting boundaries with toxic family members or letting go of unrealistic expectations in romantic relationships. In this interview, you'll learn: How to recognize trauma bonds How to break the cycle of reactivity How to set healthy boundaries How to cultivate self-awareness How to develop emotional resilience How to foster a growth mindset in relationships Remember, every moment is an opportunity to choose differently, to show up for ourselves with kindness, and to build the relationships we truly deserve. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 03:44 You Create Change 06:58 Toxic Family Members 11:21 Change is Voluntary 14:33 Deep Rooted Emotions 18:35 Why We Struggle in Relationships 22:58 The Unmet Needs 27:27 We Project What We Think to Others 34:29 Familiarity with Chaos 38:18 Is It Genuine Love? 41:55 Panic Attack 48:54 Chronic Illness 53:54 Countering Beliefs 57:17 Physiological Shifts 01:01:11 What is a Trauma Bond? 01:04:25 Attraction Based on Familiarity 01:06:24 Inner Child Work 01:09:41 The Habit of Showing Up Authentically Episode Resources: Nicole LePera | Website Nicole LePera | Instagram Nicole LePera | Facebook Nicole LePera | TikTok Nicole LePera | YouTube Nicole LePera | LinkedIn How to Do the Work: Recognize Your Patterns, Heal from Your Past, and Create Your Self How to Be the Love You Seek: Break Cycles, Find Peace, and Heal Your Relationships See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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The number one health and wellness podcast.
Jay Shetty.
Jay Shetty.
The one, the only, Jay Shetty.
Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose,
the place that you come back to every single week
to become happier, healthier and more healed.
I'm so happy that you chose to tune
in today because today's episode is going to be one that I know each and every one of
you can deeply relate to. If you've been talking recently with your friends about trauma bonds,
this episode is for you. If you've been struggling with a relationship in your life, romantic
or otherwise, this episode is for you.
And if you're someone who's just been trying to figure out
how to navigate boundaries,
how to navigate all the different roles
you play in a relationship,
the challenges that come from stress responses
we've developed early on in our childhood,
this episode is for you.
I'm speaking about a guest who's been on once before.
You absolutely loved our conversation. The one and only Dr. Nicole Lepera, a holistic psychologist trained
at Cornell University, the New School for Social Research and the Philadelphia School
of Psychoanalysis. Nicole is the founder of the global community healing membership Self
Healer Circle and the author of the number one New York Times bestseller
How to do the work how to meet yourself and today we're discussing her latest book how to be the love you seek
Break cycles find peace and heal your relationships. If you don't have this book already, I want you to go and order it right now
We're diving in please. Welcome to the show Dr. Nicole.
Nicole, it's great to have you back.
And such an honor to be here, Jay.
Thank you.
Thank you so much for coming back onto the show.
Like we were saying, we were together like three years ago
and so much has happened.
But what I've loved is to see your influence,
your impact and your insights continue to grow
and take mainstream attention.
And I think it's so deserving and so worthy,
the work that you're doing.
And I'm so happy that we get to reconnect
and do this again.
So thank you.
Of course, I'm honored to be here.
And when you pointed out that it has been three years,
I mean, my head almost popped off.
I mean, talk about a lot, a lot happening,
a lot of possibility.
I'm just, again, so honored to connect with you
and your community.
Yeah, well, I know this is going to help the community. So let's dive straight in. You
start very emphatically in the book and the title says, You Create Change. And I think
for a lot of people that hear that, I think a lot of us feel we don't have the power to
change things. We don't feel we have the ability to change things. We feel that our life is a constant bombardment
of things happening to us,
of things that other people do towards us.
And you very boldly state, you create change.
I know so many people who feel like
they don't know how to change,
they can't change, they're stuck.
What makes you so certain and conscious
that you can create change?
I think too, nowhere is this, the reality of being stuck so prevalent but in our relationships,
I think. And that's really what inspired this new work is to understand why is it because what I
would hear after writing my first book, How to Do the Work, from many individuals on the healing
journey, oh, I'm making traction, I'm starting to feel good in my life and I'm feeling either ready
to be in a relationship or I'm in a relationship and it's in my relationship where I'm really stuck.
And similar to what I talked about in my first book, so much of how we can create change is because of everything that's happening beneath the iceberg, if you will,
or in our subconscious mind within our relationships. Everything from beliefs about ourselves,
as you even shared in the intro, roles and identities that we've learned to play, deep
wounding, which contains moments of nervous system, dysregulation and reactivity. And ultimately,
when we have these chain of events,
these meanings, interpretations that our subconscious mind
is making to the happenings or not happenings
in our relationship, when that is connected then
to physiological shifts in my body,
those nervous system moments of dysregulation,
and then when we tune in, typically,
is either mid-reaction or somewhere shamefully post-reaction.
And until we've paid conscious attention or simply awareness to all of the different parts
of the story that contribute it to what feels like an instinctive reaction, I'm compelled
to do this thing, I can't stop behaving in this way, or the world continues to create the same struggles,
the same feelings, the same cycles and I think it then becomes really natural
that we don't feel like we have choice and I think how I convince us all that
we do have choices as we become aware of what's going on beneath the surface, as
we become aware of the beliefs and the physiology that is driving those changes,
we can begin to create just a little bit of space because I mean I could sit up As we become aware of the beliefs and the physiology that is driving those changes,
we can begin to create just a little bit of space.
Because I mean, I could sit up here and explain to many listeners why we don't feel in choice.
Until we embody the practice of being able to pause before that habitual reaction, it's
going to be really hard for me to convince us all that we can create change. But when we have the tools to view our internal world in a new way,
including our body and all of the stress reaction that's housed in it,
then I think we do have that empowered shift,
where I can possibly convince you that there is choice and change possible in your future.
Absolutely. One of the things I hear a lot from our community
and our audience when I'm talking to people is,
Jay, I'm just surrounded by toxic family members.
I'm trying to change. I'm trying to be better.
But there's someone in my family who'll always say something
at that dinner that triggers me.
There'll be someone who at the holiday party
will say something to me that will trigger me.
There'll be someone that I'm living with in the house every day
who sees me meditate,
who sees me trying to work out,
but has something condescending to say.
How do I navigate this toxic person
that I can't just distance myself from?
I can't run away from them.
They're in my life.
What do I do?
And I think an empowering shift we can make
is to even just first ask ourselves that question,
what can we do?
Because I think it's really natural to instinctively say, well, I shouldn't have to do anything
if this toxic person could be more supportive of this positive habit or if this person could be a little less
whatever, you know, they're bringing to the table, I could then feel different.
I think the shift of empowerment happens when we say, let's assume and even expect that this person doesn't change,
that these comments continue, the lack of support,
whatever it is, and especially when it's within our family,
I like to offer a bit of insight.
I think a lot of times we do struggle
and we'll continue to struggle,
especially within our family.
With these long-term relationships,
there have been expectations
that have been validated over time.
And so we really do fall into these kind of learned dynamics.
So as we begin even to shift into something positive
for ourselves, for the relationship,
it's gonna challenge the dynamics of the system.
Because what the person on the other end
will be experiencing is something new.
And I'm very intentionally using that word.
Because while we all can create, I mean, I just made a case for all the change that we can create
at any time in our life, our nervous system prefers the habitual.
And even within these roles in our relationships, people have learned to predict
that we show up in predictable
ways. And if and when we don't, it actually activates now a threat response based on this
new experience that someone else is having of us. Now, I went into that description,
of course, because sometimes with that awareness, we can engage with the person sharing that
comment with us, with the person not supporting us in that way differently. We can have a bit of compassion, maybe
understanding where they're coming from. We might even shift our expectation of
that person giving us the support or, you know, sharing with us something positive
in terms of what it is that we're doing. If we give up that expectation, I think a
lot of us
can learn to navigate those relationships because what causes our suffering, in my opinion,
is the unmet expectation. But then, of course, I want to just touch quickly on the reality,
sometimes of boundary changes, of new limits, maybe conversations, topics that we don't bring
to this relationship. If we aren't going to get the support or the feedback that we need, we can
actually modify ultimately what it is that we do or how it is that we engage
with the person.
I was talking to someone that I was coaching and they were talking about a
particular trait that they saw in their partner.
And I said, have you seen this trait before?
And they said, yes.
And I said, how many times have you seen it?
And they thought about it for a second. And they said, yes. And I said, how many times have you seen it? And they thought about it for a second.
And they said, every year we've been together.
And I said, how long have you been together?
And they said, 30 years.
And it was really interesting because you
addressed this at the start of the book, this idea that you can't, we, a lot of
books have told us in the past that if we change our behavior, it will somehow
change the behavior of the other person.
That if you can mold and be malleable
and manipulate your own words, thoughts and actions,
that somehow it will create a behavioral response
from someone else.
But I think what you're saying right now as well
is that actually, even if we change our behavior,
our expectation that that is somehow going to inspire this other individual
to do a U-turn, it's actually kind of like a false errand. Like it doesn't seem to be something
that's going to show. And I think that's kind of a hard reality to accept. We almost feel that
we can get people to change and they will change for me and I am important enough. If they cared
enough, they would change. So how do we let go of that expectation? How do we build a process and a system to actually
recognize my expectation with this individual needs to shift? Because I keep seeing the same pattern
day after day, month after month, year after year, but I keep fooling myself that this will be the
year they change, this will be the month that it all changes for me. I think a lot of times we set that expectation or have that kind of fantasy for the future
out of a protection against the pain and suffering that being in the alternate reality of what
is happening, the fact that this is a pattern that has lasted 30 plus years, just to use
your client as an example, that would cause
a lot of grief, a reckoning almost, maybe even a new choice point where this person
would be at a crossroads. Either I remove this expectation and then modify in terms
of what this relationship is or means to me, or maybe I determine I can't do that and now
I might need to shift or remove myself from the relationship.
And this kind of thinking, which I'm going to call right now immature thinking, but not as a
kind of derogatory label, more as a developmental stage. And I think it's really emblematic of
what happens in childhood for a lot of us. A lot of us in childhood spend a lot of time
when we didn't have the physically present
or the emotionally attuned caregiver that we needed in this kind of fantasy world. Because the pain
of being rejected, of not feeling the support and the attunement that we need is so great.
And I think a lot of us continue that as a protective pattern into adulthood with this idea, right?
That I can just imagine, create this future in my mind that keeps me separate from the reality of my present moment.
I think a lot of times then we hang those expectations on our partner, right?
Giving them, again, all of our power, all of our control, even for very well-intentioned reasons sometimes.
We wanna support them.
We might wanna see them create change that we know
and they know that they need in their lives.
But again, when we are putting all of our energy
on someone else in that way,
not only do we not have access to it for ourselves,
it's felt by the other person.
Even if it's not directly felt,
it's indirectly felt as a pressure.
So again, I wanna normalize, I think,
the tendency to fantasize, to wish,
even the very well-intentioned actions that we can take,
sometimes seemingly in support of someone else,
though I just acknowledge the reality of the many of us
who have created very difficult change in our life.
It takes a daily commitment of having new experiences that will challenge our nervous
system and learning how to create change anyway.
So with that said, having this idea that someone else can or will change for us is putting
an unrealistic expectation on that person
because the only person that can create change is us
and our commitment and our showing up day in, day out in action
ultimately of that change.
What are some of the other ways that our childhood impacts
our current, present and future selves?
Because I think obviously in society and culture,
we are talking about this idea of
What we went through as kids shows up in who we are now, but I think we have quite a rudimentary
Basic understanding of how that actually shows up and I don't know for always as conscious
I found the more I've delved into this the more subtle my understanding became of myself
So for example at one point I realized that one of my caregivers
had always given me a lot of love, but they also made me feel guilty
when I didn't reciprocate that love.
And I found myself replicating that in loving relationships
as such a subtle, hidden thing where I would overly give love,
but then express words or behaviors
that would make the other person feel guilty
if I didn't feel like they lived up to my version of it.
And it took me a while to really recognize that,
to heal that, to remove that from my vocabulary,
my behavior, but knowing that it wasn't something
that was bad about me or that I'd created
or that I could blame and recognize was so powerful.
But what are the ways in which our early childhood experiences
are affecting our current relationships
and of course future relationships?
I think this conversation into the subtlety of it
is so foundationally important
because I know that there's a lot of us,
especially as we kind of progress through adulthood,
that has this idea that, well, childhood is decades ago.
It's actually a space that I don't want to go back to, right?
I'm an adult now, and it doesn't impact me,
because I do think we look for the kind of more obvious signs.
But there are so many kind of ways in which,
from what we were made in childhood
to directly or indirectly think about ourselves,
ultimately becomes those deep rooted beliefs
that we carry and continue to think about ourselves into adulthood. In terms of our emotions,
the way in which we were allowed to express our emotions, the support we had
in which navigating our emotions, simply the level of attunement that our
caregivers gave us, will directly impact our current relationship in adulthood
with our emotions and our ability
to be responsibly present to them as opposed to reactive and the way those identities that
you talked about earlier, the way in which we've learned in childhood to connect or relate,
which for a lot of us meant shoving down parts of our self-expression, right?
Not showing certain aspects of our thoughts, of our emotions,
of our just general self, and or amplifying other aspects. So really
simply how at one time we had to connect with or relate to another individual
ultimately becomes those same roles that we play in our current relationship. So
when we begin to truly understand not only the individual
impact, right, do I know myself? Do I know how to navigate my emotions? Do I know how
to give and receive support in a relationship to then relationally who
am I so much as a remnant or an artifact in my opinion of who we once had to be.
Which is why we have an epidemic in a sense of adults who don't know themselves,
who don't have the emotional resilience that they need to remain responsive
to their emotions and who are showing up
in all of these, you know, kind of masks, playing all of these roles
and are feeling deeply unfulfilled, even those of us that are actively in relationships.
Yeah, I feel like there's this contention between
a lot of us in relationships are fighting for who we were.
Like there's a defense to,
this is how I've been raised, this is what I think is right,
this is what I've been told, these are my beliefs.
And then there's another part of us that's trying to then cater to
and sway towards, oh no, but I know I need to take on some of yours as well.
And that kind of often creates a bit of conflict
on an identity level because we're wondering,
well, what parts of myself do I leave behind?
But then am I trading for their values?
Then are their values right?
How do you kind of make sense of all of that?
Because it seems like you've got your
early childhood impact.
The person you have a relationship with is
their early childhood impact. You've now become adults, now you're interacting. There's a
lot of complexity there because you may not even be aware of your own, let alone they
may not be aware of theirs. And so you don't have any context of theirs. So it feels like
there's a lot of unknown unknowns in a lot of relationships.
And then you're fighting about the dishes or the bills,
or you're fighting about something that feels very current.
But would you say that actually a lot of it
is based on pre-existing data?
I think you beautifully, Jay, described
why relationships are so complicated.
Why, as I said in the beginning, so many of us continue to struggle wherever we are
on our healing journey within our relationships
because we do have all of these influences,
many of which that are out of sight.
And knowing for ourselves, of course,
because we can only receive information
that partners or potential partners are sharing,
but I feel like the individual journey of awareness of even first reckoning with the possibility that our past is impacting
us, right? And then getting really present to what habits and patterns we are carrying
in to our relationship. And then once I think we get really clear in terms of what is on
our side of the street, then we can simply before we get really clear in terms of what is on our side of the street,
then we can simply, before we know the details of kind of what is in the subconscious world of our potential partners or our loved ones,
we can at least have awareness that they have that world.
Right? That many of the fights that we're having, like you're sharing, many fights I have had over dishes,
isn't necessarily about dishes at all.
For me personally, I know that there was a lot
of reactivity that I used to have
when I would get home from work
and I would come home and dishes weren't done in the sink.
And for me again, all beneath the iceberg,
what was happening is I went through
as if I was removed or brought right back in time
to childhood where I lacked the emotionally attuned caregiver,
though I had a caregiver who was very, the way she expressed love, my mom, was through
daily self-care, making sure that there was dinner on the table, making sure that the
dishes were done.
Those were not chores that I had as children.
So for me, I have this belief that those acts of service communicate someone's consideration
of me, someone's love and support of me.
So now flash forward in time when those kind of household duties aren't done, regardless
of how my partner is showing up, and there were many moments where I was welcomed home
with support, with interest, with curiosity, how was my day going, open for me to talk and share how my day went,
yet my laser focus on the lack of the dishes being done
and the fact that that brought me back
as if I was the child who didn't have that level of attunement,
even though it was available in my adult moment,
it was as if my focus deleted it,
I was back in time, I was wounded,
and I reacted right from that place.
So just using my example, your example,
I think all of these really beautifully give us
when a moment in time elicits a really big reaction,
and this isn't to say, I wanna be really careful here,
the emotion that I was feeling in the moment at the dishes
was very real.
Physiologically, I had tension in my muscles, My heart was racing. I was having an emotion. It's not to
shame ourselves in that moment. Going back in time doesn't negate the reality of the emotional
experience that we're having, which is why a lot of us feel out of control, feel like we can't
choose a responsive choice, feel like we are instinctually kind of compelled
to react in that one way, though we do have that choice.
If we can teach ourselves again that separation,
if we can understand that big emotions are real,
though a lot of times do indicate something
from an earlier time, and a lot of times it explains
why our reaction can be on the more
immature again just developmental side of things. Yeah, no I'm so glad you went
there because I think that is such a poignant example of how this all works
and it's nice to take something as simple as a visual of a dishes and then
where that comes from. What do we do with that awareness though Nicole? Like what
do we do with that awareness? Because I think a lot of people will recognize,
oh, got it, I've just heard what Nicole said.
Yeah, that's right.
When my partner does X,
it reminds me of how my parent did Y.
Or when my partner doesn't do Y,
it reminds me of when my parent did X.
So whatever it may be, that version that you have
while you're listening right now. And for everyone who's listening and watching,
I think we go, I see that, but it's,
I've crossed that bridge so many times that it's,
I've got so used to feeling that it's not only is it real,
but it's true to me that if someone doesn't do the dishes,
they don't care about me.
Like we've put that meaning to it, right?
We've ascribed that very deep self-worth to an act, right?
Because of the amount of times that it's gone on
and on and on.
Let's say we're fortunate enough to even get that awareness
because even that requires so much work
to even be able to admit that even though it's real,
even though I feel it, even though it feels true,
that it necessarily isn't true, it's just a even though I feel it, even though it feels true, that it necessarily isn't true,
it's just a belief that I've built over time,
what do I do with that awareness
because I feel so conditioned by it,
I feel so stuck in it, and guess what?
My partner still doesn't do the dishes,
even when they understand this.
So where do I go from there?
What do I do?
I think that first piece of communication
can go a long way.
As we get clear on ourselves, of course, when we feel safe and secure
in our particular relationships, we can gift that knowledge
because that might be the difference between our partner then.
This is, I think, what happens within relationships
when we kind of enter into conflict cycles.
We have one person, right, regressing back in time, becoming reactive,
and then typically something in their reactivity sets off the receiving partner who then goes
back in time and now we almost have two children kind of like sparring, not able to though
enter their wise adult or more grounded, if you will, mind.
So for a lot of people, that awareness is incredibly helpful.
For a partner in a moment to say, okay, this isn't really about the dishes, even though
I'm feeling very frustrated that I'm getting yelled at that the dishes aren't done right
now, I maybe can compassionately breathe through.
For the person who's uncovering, there's important information in these moments.
Again, it's not to throw away the emotion or to shame ourself for having it.
Those emotions carry important information, right?
So if at the bottom of this,
for a lot of us there is an unmet need,
maybe it's not, maybe the support I need in that moment
isn't about the dishes,
but maybe there is support I'm needing in a different area
or a different type of support that I could benefit from.
So understanding what's driving our reactivity, I think, can give us not only the language
to communicate, it can give us clarity on what's really going on, which then can give
us flexibility in other ways that we can attempt to get that need met.
Because this is where I think it gets even more complicated. that we can attempt to get that need met.
feeling on my chest. that I need because I'm not present in my own emotional body and sharing them, right, you get the picture,
then I will just have a lot of clean dishes
for a very long time and I'll still have that pit
in that hole and I think this is why a lot of us
cycle through reactivity, we maybe do directly communicate,
maybe even sometimes our partner does the dishes
and we still don't feel satisfied,
we still don't feel fulfilled, We still don't feel fulfilled.
We still don't feel that connection or that support
that we're looking for.
Because I think a lot of us are actually looking for
are not the actions,
we're looking for that deep level of attunement.
We're looking for that resonance.
We're looking to just feel a little less alone,
even if no one is saying anything to us,
because they're just sitting in that emotional presence or that emotional space with us.
Yeah. And I think you're so right, going back to what you said earlier, we have to
sit in that space with ourselves in order to invite someone to sit in it with us,
because they can't just find that space, right? It's almost like you have a basement level in your psyche
that you have the key and access to in the elevator.
And if you don't invite someone into that
because you haven't visited it before,
they're just on level one trying to figure out
where you want them to go.
And I'm literally visualizing Inception right now,
the movie where all of his dreams are locked in an elevator.
But I think that feels so true to me that I find that even with my wife,
we had a really interesting conversation recently.
So her book came out this year.
And before the book was coming out, this was like maybe a month before the book came out.
And I said, I really want to understand how you'd like us to celebrate this occasion,
because I don't think I know,
now we've been together for 11 years, married for eight years.
And I just said, I don't think I really have understood
not just how you like to celebrate,
because that I know we've celebrated great birthdays
and you've had a great time.
But I don't know how you'd like to celebrate
this occasion in your life.
It's different, I don't want to take it like anything.
And I said, my assumption, which would be wrong, because it's a projection of how I'd like to celebrate this occasion in your life. It's different. I don't want to take it like anything. And I said, my assumption, which would be wrong because it's a projection of how
I'd like to be celebrated, mine would be to throw you a big party and invite all
your friends over and, you know, have loads of great food and everything.
But I was like, I think that's wrong.
Like I, I know that.
So how would, and she said something really beautiful.
She goes, she goes, we, I felt like we celebrated it last night.
And I was like, what do you mean?
And she was like, well, we had our friends over.
I cooked for them from the cookbook.
I made meals for them.
They all really enjoyed the food.
And I was like, yeah, but we didn't like that.
It was, it was just a, it was just, and she was like, that's how I like to
celebrate it because I got to cook what I love for people I love and they
appreciated it and that was me celebrating it. And I was like, oh wow. to celebrate it because I got to cook what I love for people I love and they appreciated
it and that was me celebrating it.
And I was like, oh wow, I could have just, that would have been easy.
And it was just this really interesting thing about this communication.
And I said to my wife, I said, after she, I said, please inform me of things like that
because I would have no idea.
Like if you don't let me in, if you don't invite me into that space of this is how I
like to be celebrated.
And she goes, you know what? I don't think I've thought about it
until you asked me right now.
And so it was a joint discovery.
And I think if people look at their relationship
as not like, oh, you've kept me out
and you haven't let me in and you don't tell me,
it's actually more like,
we're actually just figuring this out.
Like both of us on an awareness level
of figuring this out.
I think that's such a beautiful story.
I'm smiling.
I was so struck when I first met Lali,
who I've been with her for a little over 10 years now.
And she has such a curiosity,
one of the things that attracted me very early on to her,
about everything.
She's just so interested in life, people,
understanding them,
and this was completely different
than the experience I had in my family.
I was never necessarily asked what I thought about certain things
or how I was experiencing certain things that more or less kind of we operated
with this kind of unified front in my family with a lot of projection.
If one member felt or thought this thing,
there was the assumption that everyone thought or felt that same way.
So now flash forward decades and I'm with Lali,
who's always curiously asking me my perspective on things,
how I'm experiencing things, what I think.
And I was so shocked and at a loss, if I'm honest,
I had a hard time answering a lot of her curiosity in the beginning.
Oh, Robbie too.
I didn't know. I didn't stop to think.
So I'm imagining
myself being asked how I would like to celebrate something and that would have been a gift
of exploration for me to have and to consider. And I think what you're sharing, I had a moment
with Jenna, so my third partner and I the other day in one of these very similar moments
that you're describing and we were sitting in the car and she was very quiet and I noticed
a pattern of when we're out typically driving in a car
and that's a lot of the time where her and I
are out doing things together, she's very quiet.
And so I'm over here, conditioned from my childhood
to assign the meaning to quiet, which is danger,
bad, silent treatment.
You upset someone because this is the experience
that time and time happened again in my childhood.
So I'm sitting in the car and this is,
I mean, we've been together now for over two years,
Jenna and I. So for two years now, I'm driving in silent car rides. I've not said a word,
just in my mind worried, oh gosh, maybe we have nothing to talk about. Like, isn't this
like, I have things on my mind. I would try to engage conversation. She would give me
one word answer.
So finally, just last week, I said, I just want to bring something up. I noticed that
you're quite quiet when we are out in the car week, I said,
and it's really as simple as that. Meanwhile, I spent the better part of two years secretly worried, right?
So, I think these are really beautiful examples of how simple some of the steps that we can take are,
and also how complicated humans make it, because we do project.
Totally.
We do. We are subjective creatures who are projecting all of the time.
And I'm just sitting at like, I have a lot of compassion for myself,
just all of this suffering that, you know,
causing ourselves without just having
the direct conversation and communication.
Yeah, we think we know what someone is thinking,
which is all based on how we think
we feel affected by that, right?
Like we think others are affected by things the way we are.
And therefore, if someone's quiet, we believe they're quiet,
because if I was quiet, that means I'm upset.
And therefore, if they're quiet, they're upset.
And what's really interesting to me is when we communicate,
which I'm so glad you're raising that,
because it sounds basic, but it's not,
because a lot of people, when we communicate,
we just say, well, I wish you'd talk more in the car.
I wish you'd just know how you want to celebrate your birthday.
I wish you'd just tell me what you want me to do.
And that's not communication.
Those are almost demand or control mechanisms
or like kind of, they're kind of orders in one sense,
like giving an order to someone as opposed to saying,
hey, you know, because of how I've grown up, I feel
when someone goes quiet, it means there's something wrong. What does it mean for you? Like why is that
important for you? And I think that's what communication is. It's a safe space to explore
and be curious. And one of the things you brought about earlier was this idea of how the nervous
system seeks familiarity.
And what's really interesting is on the cover, you talk about finding peace.
And what's really interesting is that all of our familiarity is chaos.
And so when there is peace in a relationship, when there is quote unquote boredom in a relationship, when there's quote unquote stillness in a relationship,
a lot of us who are familiar with chaos go,
wait a minute, what's going on?
Because we're familiar with it.
And so I want to clarify what familiarity means,
because I think we think familiarity means a good thing,
but we don't realize familiarity just means
what you're used to.
And so talk to me about how should we respond
to peaceful scenarios when we're familiar
with chaos.
I appreciate this because I think this is such a common experience, myself included,
with a lot of stress, overwhelming stress in the home.
There was a sense of home that I would receive when in stressful relationships or when interacting
with stressful individuals.
So familiarity really simply is repetition.
It's that which is predictable, right?
It's kind of thinking of the neural networks even.
I think that is very common in our language.
I can't think of the word, you know, dialogue these days.
So understanding, again, familiar is repeated, right?
It doesn't mean there is no good, bad label that we can put on it. understanding again familiar is repeated.
It doesn't mean there is no good, bad label that we can put on it.
A lot of people who have had chaotic early experiences will, exactly like you beautifully said,
get to those moments, even meet a person, and without that rush of chemicals,
will assume it's not the appropriate relationship. And one of the biggest takeaways I hope that people get from reading this book is kind of two part. First being the awareness that
the way we're defining and relating to other individuals, like I said at the beginning,
is more of an imprint or an artifact of our past than an objective reality about our present.
And then once we understand that, I think that could open the door for some of us
to become aware that what we are seeking and recreating
in terms of familiarity, repetition,
is grounded more in stress, chaos,
maybe even trauma, unmet needs,
than in a grounded, secure, peaceful love.
Because that's what we're really looking to create.
And understanding that our nervous system
is playing a foundational role in that meaning.
If I'm not able, as an individual,
to self-soothe or to find safe, secure others
with which I can co-regulate with,
if I'm not able to create safety in myself,
then chances are I'm not going to be able to interact
with another human and find that secure grounding.
So when I understand again the role that I'm playing,
the role that my nervous system is playing,
that my nervous system is playing a role,
right, that I can't just wish my way into a calm, grounded relationship,
I actually have to teach my body how to have one.
And I also understand that that does not mean
that I won't experience conflict or disagreement
or disconnection.
Because I think sometimes after we unlearn
and create the possibility of even being safe and secure,
I think sometimes people then have the immediate expectation
that a safe, secure relationship is one without conflict,
without disagreement, right?
Without unmet needs in any given moment because things need to be negotiated, right?
And that is included in a safely grounded relationship in actuality because anytime
two individuals who are uniquely different are trying to relate and navigate life and
make decisions for a future of shared interest, there are going to be those moments of disconnection.
So the goal is not to remove or expect those to not be present.
How can I always find my way back to safety and security
is the great, the best question.
How can I repair after these moments of explosion
or these moments of disconnection,
assuming that they will still be present?
And how can I always continue to expand that foundation
within my relationship of safety and security.
It doesn't mean that there won't be upsetting emotions
or moments of dysregulation,
but we can as a system return back to that peace
and that grounded state of calm.
Yeah, how do you know on that point of when there is love?
I think we always hear things like, you'll know when you know,
and you know, you just feel it, like no matter what, you love someone.
Like, I find that it's so interesting because, like we said,
you're not familiar with peace.
So when peace comes up, you create chaos.
We're not familiar with love.
And so how do you know love is there?
Because you may not be familiar from your childhood with what it feels like to be loved unconditionally or wonderfully in whatever way that means. How do we then find it? How do we then notice it? Because we don't necessarily have a clear experience of it.
Yeah, that's a really, it's a beautiful question even to consider and a painful, I think, question too, to come to the reality that we might not have that embodied memory, if you will, of what it actually feels like
to be in this sense of safety and security and love.
And I think maybe this, it would benefit a discussion of love, maybe really generally,
because I think when people think of love,
and it's not to say it's not a feeling,
though the way I define love at least is,
it is a feeling in connection with an action, right?
It's a sense of compassion, of consideration,
of let me even bring it back, of awareness of another individual,
and then the ability to be considerate, compassionate,
not only in thought and feeling, right?
I can sit here and feel a sense of love for you,
but I believe love extends beyond that into an action, right?
Am I able to then show up in this embodiment,
whether it's just to support you in being present with you
when you're in an emotion that's upsetting or overwhelming,
whether it's to show up in more active
or objective support of you in whatever way that it is
that you might need it.
So to know if we're able to,
or when in which we're in that space,
again, all of this goes back to the body,
because unless we're present in our body, in our emotions,
unless we're able to feel, right,
to attune emotionally, to hold space,
and to sense that there is someone else that I want to consider
and to show those, you know, levels of care,
we have to be grounded in our body.
To connect with our heart,
to connect with the emotion of compassion and care,
and then to act from that embodied place.
Because again, what we're looking for is that presence.
That's a loving action in and of itself,
outside of the other ways, of course, that we can more objectively support someone.
So again, I think it's if we're looking for that roller coaster of biochemical emotions,
if we're looking for us to be like,
kind of hit over the head with this like love spell,
I think again, we're going to be looking for something
that might not necessarily exist.
Because again, I think love happens
in those grounded moments,
we're able to extend space and awareness
that there is someone else that I can
and want to care about.
Because when we're in a survival mode,
when we're not calm and grounded and safe and secure
in our own body, we can't even consider a perspective
outside of our own, let alone show up in care and compassion
of that perspective or that individual
and their best interest.
So again, foundationally in the body,
I can't make a case enough for how important it is
to be in loving action. We have to beally in the body, I can't make a case enough for how important it is to be in loving action.
We have to be connected to our body,
our heart in particular.
We have to be grounded and safe in our nervous system
and responsive in how we choose to show up.
This point about being connected to your body
is so valuable and I recently discovered,
I felt deeply for the first time,
a disconnect I had with mine and it came from my childhood.
So I remember when I was young,
I would say probably pre-teens,
and maybe into my early teenage years,
there was a, I used to experience my heart being fast,
losing my breath, like feeling quite,
physically what would be considered like,
even like pain in the heart region,
like tight chestedness, like physically.
And I remember I would tell my mom,
and my mom would take me to the doctors.
And we'd go to the doctors,
they'd wire me up with certain like technology or tools
that would measure my heart rate and things like that.
And they'd tell me to wear it for the next 24 hours,
sometimes the next 72 hours.
And I'd wear it to school or whatever,
it'd be under my shirt, I remember.
And then they'd look at the records
and they'd be like, he's absolutely fine.
Like he's fine.
And I'd be like, I'm pretty sure I'm not fine.
Like I definitely feel something.
I don't feel it for 72 hours,
but I do have moments where I feel it.
And my mom would be like, well, I'm not,
I'm going to get you checked again,
because she'd always care.
And my mom's always been a very loving individual.
So she'd introduce me to more specialists and they'd always come back and just say,
Oh, maybe he needs an inhaler because he has asthma.
And then I remember testing that for a bit and that wasn't it.
And they were like, Oh no, sorry, we gave him an inhaler.
It wasn't that.
And so they wouldn't know.
And I forgot about that.
I think I actually started living so disconnected
from my body because I didn't know what that meant.
And so I didn't want to feel it anymore.
And so I started reliving quite cerebrally and mentally.
And I got fascinated with mastering the mind
and everything else that I've done in my life.
And it's so interesting that recently
I was sitting with my wife and we were talking about this.
I was like, I was experiencing anxiety
and I was experiencing nervousness
and I was experiencing stress.
And when I was 10 years old, 26 years ago,
no one was talking about those things.
And doctors, no one was telling me that.
And where I grew up in England,
like I didn't know anyone who had a therapist
until even recently.
So I didn't have a therapist that was telling me that.
And I feel like I focused to live outside of my body for so long
because I couldn't make sense of it
and because authorities and elders and experts in my life
couldn't validate an experience that I was having
and almost made me feel stupid for having it when I was a kid.
And now I look back and I go,
no wonder I lost touch with my body.
And so getting back in touch with my body again is looking back at something
at childhood, which I lost.
And now in my life today, I feel so much more closely connected with it again,
where I'm like, I can spot stress.
Oh, that is inside.
Okay.
I know what I know what's going on.
I know breath work now.
I have my meditation tools.
I have my toolkit to help me, but I can now experience all of it in my body.
If I'm waking up earlier or I'm having disrupted sleep,
I know it's because I'm stressed about something in my daytime.
So, does that make any sense with this connectedness to body?
I'm shaking my head so hard, L.H.A., because that feeling that I described earlier in my chest,
very young, I remember being a very little kid sitting there,
usually laying awake at night when a lot of anxiety would happen for me,
I now, looking back, believe was anxiety.
And I was emotionally alone, so completely overwhelmed.
And I lived then with near constant anxiety.
Up through my 20s, I had panic attack after panic attack.
And so, two things that translated to a general disconnect
from my body, so much so that when
I've been an athlete my whole life, I played softball through college and generally lived
in cities, walked, things like that, tried to keep myself active.
Anytime I would be doing a more vigorous movement and my heart rate would start to elevate and
my body would start to mimic the panic attack feelings, I would start to immediately
think I was gonna have a panic attack, I need to avoid it.
So over time, gradually, I start to even limit,
not only generally how much time I spend on my body,
how much time I was moving, because certain movements
would mimic and bring me back.
So any time I would feel a discomfort,
especially in my heart, I'd be like,
oh, avoid that exercise, that's not for me.
And so over time, disconnect it from my body,
avoiding anything that could help me reconnect with my body
because it felt too much like anxiety,
living that same embodied way away from my emotions,
on my spaceship like I call it,
yet my number one complaint in relationship after relationship
was how emotionally disconnected I felt.
Just like we've been talking about,
pointed the finger outside of myself,
it must be the person I'm picking,
you're not able to meet me on my emotional level,
onto the next relationship where, lo and behold,
after a couple months of honeymoon
and those chemicals were off,
and then I was back into, we're disconnected again,
not seeing how all of this connected back to my childhood.
Overwhelmed with emotion, my body and the emotions
which were totally normal, too much for me to handle.
I created this disconnect that I then lived in
on this spaceship and then I held everyone responsible
for that disconnection that I was playing a part in creating.
And again, if that isn't for me, was an invitation to rebuild, and I think this is the other side of the coin here,
all that awareness was beautiful. Now I'm still tasked with the daily commitment of reconnecting and living in my body.
And there are a lot of moments where I still meet, whether it's physical discomfort, emotional discomfort,
because now I have a lot of tension that I carry,
a lot of muscles and hunched posture
that I'm always trying to stretch and, you know,
work out of my body, and that physical discomfort
makes me want to say, you know what,
I don't want to do this today, I'll do this tomorrow,
yet staying committed to releasing that tension.
Same thing emotionally, feeling really vulnerable
and uncomfortable, being emotionally vulnerable and asking for the support I need,
but knowing that that's what's going to create that level of attunement that I'm looking for.
So all of this for me remains a daily commitment because even though logically I can stay here
on podcast after podcast how important these things are,
yet all of this wiring and this discomfort and this vulnerability
and all of these beliefs are still present,
that it is a conscious, intentional choice every day for me to say,
no, Nicole, foundationally, your day begins in your body,
whether it's just, you know, 20 to 30 minutes of gentle stretching
and silent reflection, I'm in my own, you know, vessel
before I then go and serve the world.
And that isn't to say that my email isn't distracting me,
I don't have all these things I should be doing
running through my head every morning.
But I use this as an illustration again,
because I think some people think that,
oh, awareness equals, oh, I just shift and change
and become this new person.
And especially if we're talking about reconnecting with our body
and developing the ability to tolerate stress
and upsetting emotions,
that awareness is gonna take a lot of practice
to put into place the tools and the resources in our bodies
so that we can begin to contain the discomfort.
Yeah, and I think that negativity,
you've just sparked for me this thought
that recently I've been practicing more as well,
is that that negativity we feel externally
when we don't like someone or someone's causing us pain,
we start seeing our body in the same way.
And so I found that often, even though I consider myself
to be quite a positive, uplifting person for myself
and for the people around me, with my body,
I've actually, some of them have a very different
relationship, and I found myself critiquing my body.
I found myself being negative about it.
If I've got a cold or if I've developed over Christmas,
I had a really bad pedunculated tonsil.
Like it was really, really swollen and it was huge.
You could see it if I just opened my mouth.
And I was just constantly like, God, just go away.
Like I've got so much to deal with.
Like, you know, I need to use my voice for my work.
And I had this negative cycle.
And one of my friends who's a healer
and you know, a wonderful teacher in his own right,
he said to me, it was just like, Jay, like, you know,
you need to take the medicine and you need,
and I'd been taking, at this point,
I'd been taking antibiotics and everything
and nothing was, it wasn't going away.
I was like, God, I've been on a course for two weeks.
Like nothing's happening.
And he gave me some natural remedies, but he was saying, obviously you need to do
the right remedy and take the right practice.
But he was like, you need to change your relationship with this.
Like your relationship with your body is your body's your best friend.
It's telling you, Hey, I'm not feeling so good right now.
There's I'm trying to warn you of something.
I'm trying to let you know what's going on.
And you're telling your body to shut up and go away and get lost and just sort it
out. And he was just like, just think about it differently. Like the idea that your body to shut up and go away and get lost and just sort it out.
And he was just like, just think about it differently. Like the idea that your body's actually trying to help you. If your body is tired because you haven't slept enough,
guess what? Your body's saying, take some rest. If your body is panicking because you've finally
done some exercise or done something challenging, it's your body saying, we're not used to this.
We need to get used to it. And so your body's actually on your side and even pain is helping you recognize
that there's something to shift, whether it's your diet, whether it's your, and
you talk about this in the book, but whether it's your diet, whether it's
your supplements, whether it's activity, whether it's meditation, stillness, but
we look at it as a negative signal rather than a sign of actual help.
I'm really, really relating to this coming from a childhood
where there was a lot of not only chronic pain, chronic illness.
And so for me, any sort of physiological symptom,
near immediately, my mind goes to the possibility of,
or even likelihood of it being a catastrophic, even, illness.
And so, for so long, I, on moment, you know, the second I sensed a shift or a possible
symptom or a sickness or something coming on, I would go into kind of that fear-based, oh my gosh, what is this a sign of kind of mentality?
And at the same time, for me, physical illness was a point of connection with my mom. Because
my mom, one of the moments in time, especially with my older sister who suffered from a lot
of chronic illness, my mom was able to be present when she needed to physically care
for myself or my siblings.
So now, right, I have this complicated nature and I would see a kind of a remnant of this
through my 20s when I'm 20 years old, right?
I have a sinus infection.
I, at this point know exactly what to take.
It's the same thing I've taken for probably the decade before for my sinus infection.
Yet I have memories of being in the drug store in New York, calling my mom and saying,
oh, mom, I'm sick again, you know, what do I need?
And she was like, okay, Claritin,
which is the thing I always get, you know.
And for me, I'm understanding now that was a moment
where I was looking for connection.
So how complicated my relationship became with my body,
right, where there was a certain almost desire to be sick,
because now I can have the love and attention of my body, right? Where there was a certain almost desire to be sick
because now I can have the love and attention of my mom.
And then there's a fear of being sick
because that could mean something catastrophic.
Then sometimes in my mind, when upset with someone else,
I go down to exactly what I heard in my childhood growing up
where a statement my mom used to make is,
you'll miss me when I'm gone.
So sometimes my mind now will fantasize to hurt someone that has hurt me,
something that happens to me typically, probably guess by now, where I'm sick.
Oh, well, you'll be upset.
Won't you be upset if something were to really happen to me?
How will that be for you?
Right?
And all of this world now manufactured, created from this early experience,
complicating my relationship with my body
and is still to this day,
I have a lot of unlearning that symptoms,
like you beautifully said, Jay, are just signals,
not signals of a terminal illness, just a signal.
Right? So really for me,
not only learning how to connect with my body,
how to unlearn some of these more kind of catastrophic beliefs
and how to learn how to connect with people outside of
me needing someone to physically care for me
is all still kind of really a complicated mess.
Yeah, how do you start or what are the therapy-based, healing-based,
neurological actions and habits we can take to rewire that.
Because you're so right, like some people get ill
and then they're manifesting like, I'm gonna get cancer.
Right, like it's like a feeling of like,
oh no, this is the worst.
I was speaking to someone else the other day
who said to me, they really believe that their success
is one day just gonna crumble because they don't deserve it.
And it's something they've always believed.
And so how do you unmanifest?
Like how do you almost rewire that thought process?
Because that again is a repetitive thought.
A belief, just kind of start there.
The way I simply define a belief,
it's a repeated thought grounded in our lived experience.
So kind of breaking those two kind of sections,
the way we navigate then beliefs,
right, because we can't just affirm our way out of them. We can't just give ourselves a new belief.
It doesn't necessarily work, though we can acknowledge that we have repeated certain
narratives, certain beliefs in our mind, right, those neural networks have fired outside of our
awareness time and time again, and will continue to fire outside of our awareness time and time again.
And we'll continue to fire outside of our awareness time and time again.
Every time a similar event happens, that would elicit that sort of interpretation.
Meaning, what we do in the moment, we don't anticipate that, oh, these beliefs aren't working for me,
so I'm just going to shut the volume off and they'll go away, absolutely not. They will occur again, the same time a similar experience
warrants them.
What we can do is show up as the empowered presence,
the conscious being, and we can choose
how much attention we're giving.
Are we gonna hook our full attention on
and keep repeating the belief
once it is kind of offered in our mind?
Or are we gonna say, oh, right,
there's that old belief again in my mind.
It isn't necessarily accurate or true
or I know it's not true.
And now I can choose somewhere else to put my attention.
That's the first half.
The second half, the more powerful half,
why we can't just affirm our belief
is because of what's happening in our body, right?
Like we were talking about earlier,
we've validated this experience,
we feel this to be true.
So the only way we're going to shift that embodied experience is if we begin to
make new embodied choices, right?
To show up in action, countering that belief, even before I believe otherwise.
So just to use an example, common belief, I think that is at the core of many of
our relational habits is how we're not worthy.
Right?
So the next time when you hear all the litany of reasons reminding you of why you're not
worthy, right?
We notice it, we pull our attention away.
Doesn't mean that I'm going to feel worthy immediately.
Does mean though that I can show up and begin to show up in actions of worthiness.
How might someone who is worthy treat themselves,
generally or in this moment?
And then consistently over time make those choices,
even before you believe you're worthy.
And knowing somewhere down the line,
if we weaken that belief network
by pulling our attention away every time it fires,
and if we're now strengthening a new belief network
by inaction, embodying a new choice that will allow us to feel differently,
and maybe affirming a new thought,
now we have the beginnings of a new network that will, over time,
take over where that old network existed.
Yes, yes, yes.
I remember kind of discovering this through the studies I did when I was a monk.
And one of the practices that I developed, and this was to develop qualities that were recommended for people of spiritual culture to have,
and to reduce the effect of qualities that were not seen as aspirational.
And so I remember writing down my top three to five
most repeated thoughts around a particular thing.
And I'd put a line down the middle of a piece of paper
and I would write down the script
of what my mind currently says in that trigger,
in that response, in that moment.
And then for each point, I would write an alternative script. And the key was the alternative
script was not about being positive or not about being the opposite. I think that's what I've
often seen. So for example, if we took, if we took the basic premise of I'm not enough or I'm not
worthy, as you just said,
and on the other side, if you just run under besting
in the world, like that doesn't work.
Like it needs to be more comprehensive
and thoughtful than that.
It needs to be more valuable than that.
It may be I'm worthy as I am.
I have always been worthy.
There's not a moment of becoming worthy.
And what I found is the more that I reset those,
the more that I read books like this
and created paragraphs to support it.
And the more I rehearsed it, like an actor, like a script,
you started realizing your script just changed.
And all that you ever did was memorize an old script
and learn a new one and trade it.
That's all it was anyway.
It was never that one was true and one was false.
It was just that you had a script that you learned from your caregivers since the beginning
and from the people that loved you first. And all of a sudden you have a new script
now. And it's so interesting to me that we so deeply define ourselves by thinking we
are our thoughts and how much our thoughts are seen as non-different from ourselves.
But actually they're scripts, they're just scripts.
And which script you've read the most and practiced the most and rehearsed the most is your reality.
Yeah.
And I think what we are missing is the foundational role that our and other people's body sensations played at the creation and repetition of those scripts.
And I've been talking a lot about a good old Descartes, I think, Therefore I Am.
And a lot of us do have and embody that belief that all of the power is in the mind and the mind carries this reality.
And that's just so simply not true.
All of the power actually lives in our body, in our instinctual body.
And what participated in creating those scripts again
was what was happening in our body
and all of the other bodies that were navigating
those moments around us.
And then that continues to be the case.
We pay most attention to what's going on in our mind,
not becoming aware that even in the current moment,
what was happening in our mind was usually activated by the shifts in our body, by the
fact that our nervous system outside of our awareness is always assessing and looking for
possible threat based on what was once threatening to us. Right? So all of these physiological shifts
that you and I keep focusing on and talking about are initiating for a lot of us
the thoughts that we then become
present to in our minds.
So until we understand again the foundational role that the body continues even to play in shaping our thoughts
ultimately in shaping our beliefs and then creating the opportunity to change both of those
categories of thinking and believing, right,
we're not gonna be able to create the shifts
ultimately that we want.
And when we do, that's when I think we can create
incredible transformation.
One of the things I love doing on the show
is really clearly defining terms
that I think are starting to become very mainstream
or viral on TikTok or, you know, these terms that I think
often all to get thrown around.
And so I wanted you to please define for us,
what is a trauma bond?
Because I feel like that's a term that is gaining popularity
and gaining traction, but often we're not really sure
of what it means.
What is a trauma bond?
I think a trauma bond is a relationship
in which dysfunctional habits exist.
And I'm giving a very, intentionally giving a very expanded definition
because I know clinically in the field for a very long time,
trauma bond, I forget who it is that coined the term years ago now,
Carnes, I'm forgetting his exact name,
but around a relationship in which there was abuse,
usually active physical or sexual abuse,
and a kind of felt connection or commitment
within that relationship.
And I actually think this kind of mirrors
my own expansion of definitions such as trauma included
to, I think, categorize the many other versions
of trauma bond patterning, of breaking cycles,
as I share in this subtitle,
that exist within relationships.
So again, really simply simply it's the relational pattern
that a lot of us learned that was adaptive
in early childhood and those earliest relationships
that we then rely on because it's predictable,
it includes our identity,
it includes the predictable identities
of all of those that we're relating to,
and we rely on that kind of dynamic,
the felt security in that dynamic, let me say it
that way, as our home base. So a trauma bond I think applies to a lot of us. I think there's a
lot of dysfunctional habits that many of us are carrying in, particularly around emotions and how
we relate to and navigate emotions in relationships
that many of us are still experiencing.
And to answer a question that maybe listeners are having,
because sometimes I do then get asked,
well, can you change a trauma bond? Is a trauma bond doomed?
And I will be the first to say that when I began my relationship with Lali,
it was absolutely had a lot of trauma bond patterning.
It's what attracted us to each other on some level and through dedicated action on both
of our parts.
I absolutely believe and have seen obviously many other instances where trauma bond, just
like attachment patterns, I think this is another very common language.
In my opinion at least, they are not be all end all categories that are, you know,
kind of for a lifetime or a terminal sentence, if you will.
So trauma bond again, dysfunctional habits that exist in our relationships,
typically habits that were once adaptive or protective at one time, they get
repeated, that can absolutely be changed.
That's so interesting though, what you said that they were once protective.
That's so interesting though, what you said that they were once protective.
And what's really interesting that you said was that now they become in the relationship, oh, that you're even attracted to each other because of those.
Like it can even be the foundation of why you get together with someone, which
is even harder to lose because that was what brought together.
So you almost feel like there's so much value to it.
So how do you break that cycle then
when it's almost like I'm attracted to you
because of this trauma bond
and we're starting to have that dependence on each other.
How does one then break that apart
when it feels like that's the reason you came together?
This is kind of, I think, going down another rabbit hole
in a sense of attraction,
because I think attraction is another word, you know, like we were talking about earlier
in terms of familiarity and habitual, right?
A lot of times that which we think we're attracted to is really that which is familiar to us.
It's kind of like attraction based on the familiarity principle, if you will.
So I think when we're considering that aspect, what, yes, does feel familiar
and therefore attracts, quote unquote, us to many of the partners that we choose are
the habits that we are used to, right? Not necessarily what we want to consciously choose
to create. So when we, again, become aware of what we're carrying in, what
those early dynamics are, then I think we could get a bit clearer in terms of
whether or not we're attracted to familiarity or whether or not this is
someone that we want to pursue a future with. And regardless again because like I
said we can become attracted to familiar and then create a future that's not familiar at all for the
two of us, you know, walking in a direction that we are intentionally choosing.
What empowers that shift is intentionality, in my opinion, conscious awareness.
Each separately or together as partners showing up and saying, I'm understanding, right, these
dynamics about myself.
These are the changes that I want to make, right?
This is how I see us going together in the future.
So I think when we have the awareness
and then have the communication,
we can create the opportunity
to not only get clearer in terms of,
even if we were attracted to something that was familiar,
doesn't mean that it's not workable
for us to keep both of our best interests in mind and create a future that works for both of us.
What is real, another term or another practice that I think has also gained again,
mass attention more recently is inner child work.
And I feel like it's really interesting because we are starting to gain this language
around how we have an inner child at all times and a lot of our inner child's needs are unmet. You talk about authentic needs in the book.
And now we spend our adult life in some way trying to fulfill those unmet inner child needs.
But often in our adult life, it can take us in so many different directions and keep us lost.
What are some of the mistakes we make
in trying to meet an inner child's needs?
And what are some of the healthier ways we could choose
to meet our inner child's needs?
And even if they're needed.
Yeah.
Understanding, I think, even just this concept
of inner child, I think this is another one of them
that we could, upon hearing it,
inner child, I'm an adult, this doesn't apply to me. And I think what kind, inner child, I'm an adult, that's right, this doesn't apply to me. And I think
what kind of inner child, how we can define that is the subconscious space of our mind, as I've been
describing throughout, right, that houses a lot of this patterned way of being that was created
at that time, right? That was the adaptation in terms of how we had to shift and change and what needs
were getting met or not getting met and what emotions that we had to or aspects of our self
expression like I described earlier that weren't appropriate or that we were shamed for having so
that ultimately all of this now is beneath the surface. It's still for a lot of us driving a
lot of our reactivity. Even those moments that I've been sharing with the dishes, right, I'm becoming emotional, right?
That was a moment where my inner child was very alive, right?
I was feeling the feelings back in time
of that unmet need of not having that attunement.
So when we, I think the first shift is understanding
that that exists inside of us,
that we are kind of compelled and wired and we do have needs.
And beginning then to explore how we are showing up
in service of our needs. Is there space in our general day?
Is there space in our relational day
to make sure that I'm caring for my physical self?
Is there room and space for my emotions?
Am I giving and receiving the support
that relationships allow for?
And do I feel safe to be who I am?
Right?
And chances are, if you're not kind of overwhelmingly saying,
yeah, I'm feeling pretty calm, grounded,
I can take care of my needs, I can share my emotions,
we can negotiate for future, I'm able to be myself,
then a lot of what probably is happening
are the habits of our inner child.
So becoming then clear how it is and creating space to break those patterns first, right?
Kind of shifting out of those habitual ways of being and creating an opportunity to show
up newly.
And for a lot of us, that means even bringing a full circle, learning a new relationship
with our body, really simplifying it, looking into our sleep habits, looking into our nutritional habits,
looking at how we navigate stress and the impact that it has on us.
And then creating new habits that can better care for our nervous system
so that ultimately we can be more attuned to our emotions
and more able to share those with somebody else.
Yeah, one of the things you talk about in the book, which I really resonated with, was
the seven conditioned selves.
Caretaker, overachiever, underachiever, rescuer, protector, life of the party, yes person and
hero worshipper.
And I was thinking about this a lot because I found that a lot of people, naturally the
way we see it, they're still playing that role. That role that allowed them to feel safe,
protected, in control when they were younger.
They're still demonstrating that role.
And often that role today can actually lead them
to becoming extremely successful, extremely accomplished,
extremely adored, famous, rich, everything else.
Like it can do so much.
But then they almost get exhausted of playing that role
or you recognize it's a role
and it was a role that you took on
but it was never you.
It wasn't the you you wanted to be.
It was the you you had to be.
How do you reconcile that?
How does someone reconcile whether they're externally
quote unquote successful or not?
Just they've recognized now, they're like,
I've been playing this role.
Maybe I was the peacekeeper.
Maybe I was the comedian.
Maybe I was the mediator since I was young.
But actually, I don't like that role.
I don't want to be that role.
But now not only has that role been protective of me for so long,
how do I give it up?
Who would I be without it?
And can I construct another self?
Yeah, I mean, you're beautifully giving language
to not only the questions,
though to the process of, I think, reconciliation.
So once we become aware that there is a role we're playing,
which for a lot of us is very shame relieving,
because I know for
me very much identifying with the overachiever, very much being validated by society that
celebrated many of my achievements, I carried a ton of shame as I started to feel really
disconnected and unfulfilled with this life that was supposedly created to make me feel
validated and happy and fulfilled.
And so when I didn't immediately feel that way, I started to worry and wonder what was
wrong with me.
Right?
So without the language to have kind of zoomed back and say, oh, well, it's understandable
you don't feel disconnected to your life, Nicole, because you're not authentically living
it.
Right?
You achieved all of these things in service
of seeking your mom's attention, seeking your mom's love,
seeking the sense of worthiness in action.
And in reality, it doesn't represent who you authentically
are because in many moments, you're not even sharing
who you authentically are with anyone.
So that awareness piece, I think for a lot of us
can be hugely shame relieving,
though it doesn't shift us into maybe the embodied self or the self-expression or authentic expression
that we want and need to create, right? We have to break the habit of being this person,
of playing this role of wearing this mask, and create a new habit of showing up in our authenticity, which for a lot of us
is very destabilizing. We've wrapped these identities, some of us even prided ourselves,
some of us like myself created a whole life around this identity that now we're questioning.
We could feel shameful because we're older now. We should know who we are and what we
want. So that could feel overwhelming.
We might need to shed some of the actual identity
in service, like how we are showing up now.
We are making strategically new choices,
so we're shedding identity.
For a lot of us, it means mourning and grieving.
The circumstances that create it,
the need for me to play that role, right?
The unmet needs, the aspects of myself that I was taught was too unworthy to be expressed.
So for a lot of us, it's getting curious, it's questioning, it's creating the space
to grieve and be with our pain and the resilience to begin to make new choices.
Because again, all of that is still governed by our body.
Because now we're going to show up against the expectation of a lot of people.
We're going to be challenging a lot of people, other people's perception of us.
We're going to be challenging the dynamic like we talked about earlier that was repeated
and validated over time.
And now we're showing up not playing this role that we've already played.
And so the stress that we're going to create in all of the systems outside of us is going to create the scenario where we feel now overwhelmed
and before we know it, we're right back in those old habits. So powerful. Everyone in the book is
called How to be the Love You Seek, Break Cycles, Find Peace and Heal Your Relationships. Dr. Nicole
Lepora, the holistic psychologist on Instagram, if you don't follow relationships. Dr. Nicole Lepera, the holistic psychologist on Instagram,
if you don't follow already.
Dr. Nicole, Nicole, thank you so much
for giving us a masterclass on this.
And like I said, we've dived into 1% of what's inside the book.
There is so much more inside this book.
I highly recommend it.
And I was very grateful that you included my testimonial on the back,
which I very deeply felt very deeply in my heart to share with you.
But I'm so grateful for everything you've shared today, all the insights.
Thank you for going there with me on so many different pathways.
I wanted to make sure, Nicole, is there anything that I didn't ask you
that you'd love to share or anything that's on your heart right now
that you feel compelled to share with the community?
Well, I appreciate you asking.
I appreciate, as always, Jay, your support.
I did appreciate the opportunity to kind of go into
a lot of aspects of my own journey in this conversation.
So I'm hoping it was of service, of course,
to everyone out there listening,
and I thank you all for tuning in.
Absolutely.
Thank you, Dr. Mekha.
If you loved this episode,
you'll love my interview with Dr. Mekha.