A personal reflection on trauma, silence, and the fear of disconnection.
I’ve noticed something about myself that used to confuse me:
When someone’s upset with me — and they won’t talk to me about it — I don’t just feel uncomfortable.
I feel unsafe.
My stomach drops.
My mind races.
I want to fix it immediately — apologise, explain, make it stop.
Why Silence Feels Like a Threat
For years, I thought I was being too sensitive.
Overreacting.
Taking things too personally.
But now I understand:
This is a trauma response.
Silence doesn’t feel neutral to me.
It feels like:
- Rejection
- Punishment
- Abandonment
- The quiet before something painful
It’s not just about now — it’s about then.
A Nervous System Shaped by Disconnection
When I was younger, emotional withdrawal or disconnection often came with:
- Shame
- Fear
- Being left alone with feelings I couldn’t make sense of
So now, even as an adult, my nervous system still reacts as if:
“Something is terribly wrong. And no one is telling me what.”
I fawn.
I over-apologise.
I replay every interaction.
I start to lose my sense of safety — not because of what’s happening now, but because of what my body remembers.
What I’m Learning
I can’t control how others respond.
I can’t make someone talk before they’re ready.
But I can stay with myself.
I can:
- Slow down
- Breathe
- Place a hand on my chest and say:
“This feels scary. But I am safe right now.”
I can choose not to abandon myself, even when someone else is pulling away.
If You’ve Felt This Too
Maybe silence feels louder than words.
Maybe you’ve been told you’re:
- Too much
- Too sensitive
- Overly reactive
But your reactions make sense — especially if you’ve lived through painful disconnection.
This is the slow, messy work of healing:
- Learning to respond with care instead of fear
- Learning to sit with discomfort instead of rushing to fix it
- Learning to trust yourself, even in uncertainty
You are not broken.
You are someone who is learning what safety really feels like.
And that’s something worth honouring.
Ness


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