Wednesday, October 15, 2025

How Emotional Safety Rewrites Every Story You’ve Ever Told Yourself

 


How Emotional Safety Rewrites Every Story You’ve Ever Told Yourself


There comes a moment in every healing journey when awareness alone stops being enough.  You can name your patterns, trace them back to childhood, and intellectually understand why you are the way you are, yet you still find yourself repeating old patterns and cycling through old wounds.  That's because healing doesn't live just in the mind.  It also lives in the body, and until the body feels safe, the stories you tell yourself will always be written through the lens of survival.

When you grow up in environments that don't feel emotionally safe, or where your feelings were dismissed, your boundaries ignored, or love felt conditional, your nervous system learns to adapt in an effort to keep you safe (think fight or flight response).  You learn to protect yourself through performance, perfection, people-pleasing or emotional shutdown.  In these moments, your body isn't asking, "What's true?" It's asking, "What will keep me safe?"

So you begin to form stories like:
~ "I can't trust anyone."
~ "If I'm not useful, I will be forgotten."
~ "My feelings are too much."
~ "I have to stay strong to be loved."
These stories weren't lies.  They were your survival codes that allowed your body to make sense of unsafe experiences.  And they served a purpose, but the same stories that once protected you become the walls that keep you from freedom.

When your body begins to experience emotional safety, real safety, your stories begin to soften.  Safety allows you to feel without fear.  It's what lets your body finally exhale after years of being on guard.  It's what makes you realize that peace doesn't mean that danger is coming.  It's what allows your nervous system to believe: I can exist without performing.  I can trust without guilt.  I can feel my feelings and still be loved.  From this place, healing deepens.  The stories that once defined you begin to lose their grip.  Safety doesn't erase the past, but it does rewrite it.  You begin to understand that what happened to you is not what to keep happening within you.

Emotional Safety isn't something someone else gives you; it's something you learn to give yourself.  It begins in the smallest moments:
~ Listen to your body, instead of forcing it to push through.
~ Allowing your emotions, rather than forcing yourself to suppress them because they are wrong.
~ Setting boundaries not to control others, but to protect your peace.
~ Speaking gently to yourself when old stories resurface.
Safety builds through consistency, not intensity.  Each time you meet yourself with compassion instead of criticism, your body learns a new story: "I am safe now."  And when your body believes it's safe, your healing stops being an act of survival and instead becomes a return to authenticity and wholeness.

As safety becomes your foundation, your life starts to shift in ways that feel subtle yet profound.  You stop attracting chaos because your nervous system no longer craves what's familiar; it craves what's calm.  You stop needing to prove yourself because you already feel enough.  You stop seeking external validation because you trust your own inner voice. The person you once created to survive no longer runs your life.  And the version of you who's been waiting beneath all the noise, grounded, open, and real, finally begins to lead.   Because when you feel safe within yourself, you no longer have to perform healing. You embody it.

By: Dr. Laurie Williams D.Ms



Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Detaching from Your Outdated Stories: How to Rewrite the Narrative that's Holding You Back

 

Detaching from Your Outdated Stories: How to Rewrite the Narrative That's Holding You Back


Every single one of us is walking around with a story-a collection of beliefs, memories, and meanings we've attached to who we think we are.  Some of these stories empower us.  But others keep us repeating patterns, staying small, and living inside limits that no longer fit.

The truth?  Most of our stories were written years ago-shaped by childhood, trauma, relationships, or moments when we didn't yet know our power.  And unless we consciously choose to update them, we will continue to relive the same narrative, even when we desperately want to start a new chapter.  

Now let's focus on a grounded, practical way of detaching from the outdated stories that will actually help you shift your life.  

Name the Story You Keep Repeating: You can't detach from what you can't/won't acknowledge.  Start by naming the dominant story that's running your life.  Ask yourself:
~ "What story do I keep telling myself about who I am?"
~ "What do I always say when something doesn't work out?"
~ "How do I explain my pain to myself and others?"

Some examples of what you may find are:
~ "People always leave me."
~ "I'm bad with money."
~ "Nothing ever works out for me."
When you write it down, you are moving the thought out of your subconscious mind and bringing it into the light.  Awareness is the first form of detachment.

Trace the Origin: Most of our stories didn't start with us.  They were passed down through family, culture, or experiences where we felt powerless.  Asking yourself questions like, "Where did I first learn this story?" and "Whose voice does this sound like?" and "Is this true?" all help you realize that your stories are not your truth; they are simply programming.  The one good thing about programming is that you can always rewrite your programming.

Stop Arguing for Your Perceived Limitations: Notice how often you catch yourself saying things like, " I can't do that because..." or you limit yourself by using lines like, "That's just the way I am." or "It's always been like this." Every time you justify the story, you are reinforcing it in your mind.  So, the next time you catch yourself saying something that keeps you small, stop yourself mid-sentence.  Pause.  Breath. Choose silence instead of repeating the old pattern.  That silence is where new possibility starts to form.

Reframe the Story-Don't Erase It:  You don't need to pretend it never happened.  Healing isn't about denial; it's about new meaning.  For example, instead of saying "People always leave me," try "I've learned how to stand strong and be true to myself through endings."  Reframing gives your nervous system permission to believe something new without rejecting your past.  

Align Your Actions with the New Story:  The most powerful way to rewrite a story is through evidence.  If your new story is, "I am worthy of having healthy relationships," then it's up to you to start saying no to relationships that drain you or leave you feeling unworthy.  Every aligned action is sending a message to your subconscious to let it know that this is who you are now.

Regulate While You Rewrite:  Changing your story can feel unsafe at first because, although your old story may have been painful, it was still familiar.  Make sure you are taking time to ground yourself as you are shifting your stories.  Doing things like shaking, stretching or walking helps to release stored emotions through your body.  Meditation and prayer can help calm and focus the mind.  Eating and sleeping well are also very important.  Your nervous system needs to feel safe enough to believe the new story.

Keep Asking: "Is This True Right Now?" Old stories will resurface from time to time.  When they do, don't fight them; simply question them.  Asking yourself clarifying questions like "Is this true right now?" or "Is this my past trying to protect me?" will help you be able to understand if this is a thought that is helping you or your old programming resurfacing.  

Please remember you are NOT your past.  You are the awareness behind it-the author who gets to choose what comes next.  When you detach from the outdated stories, you stop living on repeat and start living on purpose.  So today, choose one story that no longer serves you.  Name it.  Trace it.  Reframe it.  And begin showing up as the version of you who's already living the new story.  


By: Dr. Laurie Williams D.Ms






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