02/06/2026
As a therapist, I once worked with someone who seemed extremely anxious in relationships. A delayed reply could ruin their entire day. A small change in someone’s tone would send them into overthinking for hours. They constantly needed reassurance and felt ashamed of how deeply they reacted. Everyone around them told them they were too sensitive, too attached, too emotional. But during one session, they said something that completely changed the way people would see them if they truly understood it. They said, “It’s not them leaving that scares me. It’s the feeling of being emotionally alone again.”
That was the real wound.
What they were reacting to wasn’t just the present moment. Their body was remembering a time when connection didn’t feel safe or stable. Somewhere in their past, they learned that love could suddenly become silence. Warmth could become distance. Emotional closeness could disappear without explanation. So now, every unanswered message, every moment of disconnection, felt much bigger than it actually was because an older part of them believed abandonment was happening again.
This is why so many people lose themselves in relationships. They overgive, overexplain, tolerate things they shouldn’t, and stay emotionally hypervigilant, not because they are weak, but because they are trying to protect themselves from reliving an old pain. Most people think they are chasing love, but often they are chasing the feeling of safety they never fully had.
Healing started when this person stopped abandoning themselves in order to keep someone else close. Instead of fighting their emotions or searching for constant reassurance, they began learning how to sit with their feelings without collapsing into them. They started asking themselves, “What do I need right now to feel safe within myself?” And slowly, relationships stopped feeling like survival.
Because real security is not just about finding someone who stays. It’s about learning that even when fear appears, you are still able to stay connected to yourself.