Fear | Orit Krug Dance Movement Therapist https://oritkrug.com/category/fear/ Thu, 30 May 2024 19:05:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 Understanding where your fear of being trapped in a relationship comes from https://oritkrug.com/fear-of-being-trapped-in-a-relationship/ Wed, 15 Jul 2020 21:41:50 +0000 https://oritkrug.com/?p=4011 Understanding where your fear of being trapped in a relationship comes from By Orit Krug  |  July 15th, 2020 Is your fear of being trapped in a relationship getting in the way of enjoying your partner’s love? It’s common to have a fear of being trapped in a relationship and want to [...]

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Understanding where your fear of being trapped in a relationship comes from

By Orit Krug  |  July 15th, 2020

Is your fear of being trapped in a relationship getting in the way of enjoying your partner’s love?

It’s common to have a fear of being trapped in a relationship and want to get OUT when we have old trauma stored inside of our bodies. 

Maybe your body is screaming, “I JUST WANT TO BE FREE!”

Is it a sign that you’re in the wrong relationship? Or is it past trauma tricking you into thinking you need to escape the situation? 

This happens to many people even with the most loving, supportive partners.

Let’s break down why this happens and why you might want to wait before thinking about leaving the relationship.

You’ve been trapped in an unhealthy, negative relationship before.

Maybe it was the family you grew up with or a past romantic relationship that was very unsafe. You were trapped in these relationships and couldn’t get out when you wanted to. 

Even though the relationship you’re in right now is nothing like those ones from the past, this feeling of being trapped still takes over your entire body and it feels like you NEED to act on it. 

This is your flight response getting triggered whenever things aren’t “perfect” or at the first sign of conflict in your relationship. Or maybe it’s always there in the background as a result of not speaking up to your partner, so you feel that the only way to get your needs met is to leave the relationship.

Maybe you tell yourself to stop over exaggerating, but convincing the mind rarely works. Your flight response feels potent and real because it’s a primal survival response that serves to save our lives if we need to run away from a beastly predator.

Old trauma can make us feel trapped in a relationship that is healthy, loving, and perfect for us. How do we know what’s real or imagined?

I’m going to be 100% honest with you. When Aaron and I used to go through rough patches, I sometimes imagined leaving our marriage or fantasized about how I would cope with us being apart. 

The reality is that I would NEVER want any of that to happen as I know he is my love for life. Even when I was in those thoughts, I recognized that it’s my past trauma trying to sneak its way back in. I never acted on it or verbalized it because I know they had no legitimate meaning.

However, before I released the trauma from my body, I had an unhealthy habit of prematurely dumping my partners and making threats to break up in all of my relationships.

Does this sound familiar to you? 

Whenever there’s a little bit of conflict or disharmony, your primal body immediately reacts as if something terrible is going to happen again, like it did in the past. 

Rationally, you know it’s normal to fight with your partner, but based on traumatic experiences from your past, your nervous system immediately kicks into survival mode, because the story trapped inside of you is that this disagreement will only lead to hurt, pain, and even life-threatening danger.

This is why the old trauma stored inside your body makes it almost impossible to distinguish between healthy, normal conflict vs. a disagreement that’s going to end in some form of neglect or abuse. You cannot talk your nervous system out of impulsively protecting you until you release the old memories that still feel very real and likely to happen again today.

Our physical bodies hold onto old trauma that literally makes us feel trapped inside our bodies.

It’s not just our nervous systems reacting in these moments of conflict with our partners. 

When we hold onto trauma for so long, we actually become prisoners inside our own bodies, where the trauma is trapped within. You might feel this as chronic stiffness or tension in your body. For many of our clients, they feel this most in their jaw, neck and shoulders, but it can happen anywhere.

Our client Jodi recently shared that as soon as she started releasing the trauma from her body, she realized how much fear she’d been holding inside that made her so guarded and closed off to her partner and all of her other relationships. 

When you’re that trapped inside your OWN body, you’re going to feel trapped no matter where you go. 

This is one of the reasons why many people with unresolved trauma will feel trapped and leave one relationship, only to find themselves feeling the exact same way in the next healthy relationship. It’s not their fault. But this feeling isn’t going to go away until they release their old trauma.

Release the trauma that’s driving the fear of being trapped in a relationship.

Because unresolved trauma makes it impossible to distinguish real fear from perceived fear, we can’t REALLY know if our fear of being trapped is an accurate reflection of the state of our relationship until the old trauma is gone.

Perhaps you’ve been in therapy or couples counseling for years and this feeling still hasn’t gone away. You may be on the brink of separation because you figure it must be the relationship since all these years of therapy hasn’t worked (or you just assume you’re damaged goods and better off single).

Please don’t give up on yourself or your relationship if there’s at least a part of you that knows it’s the right one for you. I almost pushed away my husband forever, even after 3 years of talk therapy. It wasn’t until I truly released my old trauma from my body and nervous system that I could finally let his love IN without blaming him and sabotaging our amazing relationship.

It’s not your fault that those other forms of therapy didn’t work. It’s just that they only address the thoughts in your mind, while the trauma trapped in your body desperately wants a way out.

This deep primal feeling will not SHIFT just by talking, “sitting with your thoughts” or spending hours reflecting through journaling.

In order to release unresolved trauma, you need to rewire your nervous system so you can break the old patterns of reacting in flight and end the constant anxiety of second-guessing your relationship.

You deserve to find peace in your body & let love in without fear.

The latest trauma research shows that cognitive-based therapies cannot fully access trauma stored in the non-verbal brain and body. Even alternative approaches, such as EMDR and Brain-Mapping, are often not enough to fully heal trauma from the physical body or nervous system.

This makes trauma healing a very frustrating journey for many people. They end up feeling stuck, even after spending decades of therapy and gaining so much self-awareness.

If you relate, you might’ve considered giving up on your healing. You might wonder if a fully integrated healing is not possible for you.

Every human being is 100% neurophysiologically capable of healing deeply & wholly, because we all have neural pathways that can be rewired from fear and overprotection to love, joy, and openness.

But even with an effective neuroscience-backed Somatic approach, going to weekly sessions could still require many more months or years until you feel that “click” in your body that finally makes you feel WHOLE.

That’s why I run Somatic Trauma Healing Retreats where many people experience accelerated, integrated, and lasting healing in just a few days.

(Disclaimer: each attendee must go through an application process that ensures this accelerated healing is possible for them).

If this sounds like something you might be interested in, I’d love to invite you to check out my retreats! There are several options from women’s healing, plant-assisted, 1:1, and more.

somatic retreats

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5 signs you have a fear of intimacy and how you can release that fear https://oritkrug.com/fear-of-intimacy/ Wed, 03 Jun 2020 23:32:59 +0000 https://oritkrug.com/?p=4004 5 signs you have a fear of intimacy and how you can release that fear By Orit Krug  |  June 3rd, 2020 Is your fear of intimacy getting in the way of having a healthy loving relationship with your partner? Your fear of intimacy most likely stems from past trauma stored in [...]

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5 signs you have a fear of intimacy and how you can release that fear

By Orit Krug  |  June 3rd, 2020

Is your fear of intimacy getting in the way of having a healthy loving relationship with your partner?

Your fear of intimacy most likely stems from past trauma stored in the body.

You know in your mind that you want to be closer to your partner emotionally, physically, or sexually. But the moment it happens, red sirens go off in your body, and before you know it, you’re pushing them away again.

It’s NOT your fault. You’ve been so hurt and betrayed in the past that your nervous system is now wired to automatically defend against your partner, even though they’re just trying to love you in the healthiest way.

The good news is that you can rewire your nervous system to release your fear of intimacy, no matter what kind of trauma you’ve been through in the past.

Let’s look at 5 signs which indicate that you have a fear of intimacy and how to release it:

1. You reject your partner’s acts of love.

You feel awkward whenever your partner compliments you. You get in your head and wonder, what do they REALLY mean when they say “you look nice”? Maybe they actually think I look weird but they don’t want to hurt my feelings, so they cover it up with a fake compliment.

Maybe your partner likes to give you gifts and you immediately suspect that they did something wrong. You might question if they’re hiding something or have an ulterior motive. 

Or they simply do nice things for you and you feel an intense pressure to reciprocate equally or with a grander gesture. You worry that you’re not doing enough instead of just taking in how much they love and appreciate you.

2. You lack physical affection in your relationship.

You tense up and feel awkward whenever your partner puts their hand on your shoulder or around your waist. You’re never quite comfortable with their touch and you might even flinch when they put their hands on you.

This has created a pattern in your relationship where your partner has become guarded and afraid to give you more physical affection because they’ve learned that you don’t like it, even though you deeply crave it.

At this point, you want to create a stronger physical connection, but you’re afraid to reach out for a hug because you don’t know if your partner will reach back. You might even blame them for not showing you enough physical affection, but if you look more closely and honestly, you might discover that it was actually you who started this pattern.

3. You get defensive when your partner expresses their needs to you.

They might ask you to get off your phone and pay more attention to them. They might ask you to spend more quality time with them. Whatever it is, they want MORE from you because they constantly feel that you’re checked out of the relationship.

Instead of appreciating how they want more of your amazingness, you automatically get defensive and think “Ugh, I messed up again. They’re gonna leave me.” or “I can’t make them happy. I’m never good enough.” 

You make it all about you and go into old victim patterns. Instead of staying connected in the conversation, even when it’s uncomfortable, you get in your head and emotionally block them out. This is a defense mechanism that prevents you from being present, listening, and taking in their attempt to be more emotionally intimate with you.

4. Conflict is HARD for you.

A huge part of emotional intimacy is having the ability to stay connected with your partner through conflict so that you can become even closer as a result of working through it together.

Your fear of intimacy shows up when you yell, get aggressive and basically lose your sh*t whenever you have a disagreement. You might escape and lock yourself in another room. Or maybe you freeze up like a deer in the headlights and say nothing at all. 

These are nervous system reactions that hijack your behaviors in the moment of conflict because your body doesn’t feel safe with this level of closeness and raw-ness.

5. You check out during sex.

You know those sex scenes in movies where they are looking deeply into each other’s eyes through the WHOLE thing? Does that freak you out?

If you physically freeze up, start making to-do lists, or compulsively talk through sex, then you’re avoiding one of the greatest opportunities to have a deep and intimate connection with your partner. All of these responses serve you to LEAVE your body and go into your head because the intimacy feels unsafe or is too intense for you.

Maybe you don’t even have much sex (or at all) with your partner. You have trouble initiating or you reject your partner when they try. This is another sign that your nervous system and body will do whatever it takes to avoid this level of intimacy in your relationship.

You deserve to find peace in your body & let love in without fear.

The latest trauma research shows that cognitive-based therapies cannot fully access trauma stored in the non-verbal brain and body. Even alternative approaches, such as EMDR and Brain-Mapping, are often not enough to fully heal trauma from the physical body or nervous system.

This makes trauma healing a very frustrating journey for many people. They end up feeling stuck, even after spending decades of therapy and gaining so much self-awareness.

If you relate, you might’ve considered giving up on your healing. You might wonder if a fully integrated healing is not possible for you.

Every human being is 100% neurophysiologically capable of healing deeply & wholly, because we all have neural pathways that can be rewired from fear and overprotection to love, joy, and openness.

But even with an effective neuroscience-backed Somatic approach, going to weekly sessions could still require many more months or years until you feel that “click” in your body that finally makes you feel WHOLE.

That’s why I run Somatic Trauma Healing Retreats where many people experience accelerated, integrated, and lasting healing in just a few days.

(Disclaimer: each attendee must go through an application process that ensures this accelerated healing is possible for them).

If this sounds like something you might be interested in, I’d love to invite you to check out my retreats! There are several options from women’s healing, plant-assisted, 1:1, and more.

somatic retreats

The post 5 signs you have a fear of intimacy and how you can release that fear appeared first on Orit Krug | Dance Movement Therapist.

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