My Inner Torch
My Inner Torch offers direct and personal insight with help for those of us in a relationship with someone who is undiagnosed/diagnosed with a Cluster B Personality Disorder. This is a safe place to come for words of inspiration that draw from my personal experiences and is produced to gain understanding and to find direction as we navigate through the often difficult relationships with those we love who suffer with a Cluster B personality disorder that includes BPD and NPD. PLEASE NOTE: This podcast is NOT for those who suffer with these disorders. This podcast is for survivors of these challenging and difficult relationships.
My Inner Torch
AFTER you stop trying!
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🎯 Key Takeaways
Core Points:
- I acknowledge my emotional breakdown as a valid signal to disengage from a toxic relationship.
- I understand that the resulting silence is a necessary, albeit disorienting, transition.
- I recognize that missing the relationship’s intensity is normal due to trauma bonding.
- I address the identity void left by dissolved relationship roles, making space for self-discovery.
- I remain cautious of superficial changes in the other person, focusing on genuine transformation.
- I prioritize self-care, viewing it as survival and accepting grief as a natural part of healing.
🔍 Summary
The Aftermath of Disengagement
Ending my efforts in this relationship, especially with a Cluster B individual, led to confusion and an emotional freefall. The abrupt cessation of constant trying, fixing, and rescuing created a profound silence. This silence is unsettling because my nervous system, conditioned to constant engagement and conflict management, experiences it as a terrifying void. The collapse inward, a quiet admission of “I can’t do this anymore,” marked a turning point rather than a dramatic event.
Identity Vacuum and Trauma Bonding
A significant challenge has been the lack of a self-identity independent of the relationship. My roles as peacemaker, caretaker, or rescuer vanished with my disengagement, leaving an identity vacuum. My system, accustomed to emotional extremes, reacted with withdrawal symptoms like numbness or restlessness. Missing the relationship, even its harmful aspects, is common due to trauma bonding; the addiction to intensity means the absence of chaos is acutely felt.
Navigating Changes and Guilt
As I detached, the other individual displayed behavioral shifts, from aggression to manipulation, often aimed at drawing me back. It’s crucial to recognize these as temporary reactions, not genuine transformations. Guilt about “giving up” is common, but compassion for another does not require self-destruction. Grief encompasses the loss of the person, the imagined future, and the realization that individual effort couldn’t sustain the relationship. Healthy love requires mutual emotional availability.
Reconnecting and Finding Peace
The silence has created space for self-reconnection. Moments of peace are emerging, my nervous system is softening, and hypervigilance is lessening. I’m beginning to live rather than just manage, free from constant vigilance and anticipated explosions. While initially uncomfortable, this peace is recalibrating my nervous system. My intuition wasn’t broken, my exhaustion was valid, and my needs matter. I carried an unsustainable burden. This process is about rediscovering my identity, learning that love shouldn’t demand self-destruction. The silence post-chaos is the start of healing.