Why You Abandon Yourself

Dr. Nima Rahmany
2 min readJun 23, 2022

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Co-Dependency, Toxic Relationships, and Trauma Bonds… These are all unconscious patterns.

We’ve been conditioned from a very young age to feel that our sense of being is only worthy of love as long as we fulfill certain criteria and achievement.

On one hand, this is done with all the right intentions and helps drive us to succeed.

On the other hand, it creates a feeling of anxiety, an “unsafe” feeling in the body, a constant yearning to try to prove our worth,nas deep inside we crave being seen, understood and appreciated for exactly who we are.

If we don’t sort this out, relationships become inauthentic and we end up feeling hollow and completely reliant on how others perceive us.

WE ABANDON OURSELVES IN SERVICE OF EXTERNAL VALIDATION AND APPROVAL.

We then become needy and insecure,
and that type of energy keeps us stuck
in business and in life.

What’s in the way of us reconnecting to ourselves is our INTOLERANCE to feeling our feelings.

We start to become afraid of fear itself.

When you finally stop distracting, start taking responsibility, and taking the steps, YOU then gain access to the “Crowning Achievement” of humanity:

Secure and healthy attachments in family dynamics, with healthy boundaries… Romantic relationships that are based on mutuality, and INTER-DEPENDENCE instead of Co-Dependence…
A feeling of safety in the body…
Breaking the cycle of trauma in family systems…
And lowered sense of anxiety as your level of confidence and resilience with the challenges of life emerge.

You then look around in this current pandemic going on around you but you are like a rock throughout the challenge.

But not until you turn self-abandonment around.

This is a clip from a 90-minute training on How to Regulate your Nervous System to create Stable and Healthy Relationships.

Send me a DM saying “I want the training” and I’ll give you a promo code to make it FREE.

Grab a tissue. This will deeply impact you and will help you make sense of your relationship challenges.

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Dr. Nima Rahmany
Dr. Nima Rahmany

Written by Dr. Nima Rahmany

Dr. Nima Rahmany is a retired Chiropractor and interpersonal trauma specialist studying and teaching principles of healing mind and body.

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