Avoidance Is Not Always About Triggers – Rebuild Trust and Set Boundaries

Many people going through⁤ grief,infertility, loss, ‌or prolonged ⁤ stress find themselves quietly withdrawing from family gatherings, holidays, baby showers, weddings, and⁣ even casual get-togethers. Often, this​ is explained in terms of not wanting to get triggered. That⁤ clarification is ​valid. Triggers ⁢are real,and the emotional pain can be sharp,sudden,and last for hours. Framed this ‍way, stepping back can ‍feel ‌like a very ‍good form ⁣of self-care.

On the flip side, when fertility treatment or prolonged stress​ stretches on for‌ years,‌ loneliness and isolation emerge, and a different⁢ kind⁤ of stress takes hold.⁢ But for many people,⁤ that is only part of the story.

Underneath the trigger, a question is often hiding in plain sight.​ Is it the situation⁣ itself that ‌feels like​ too much, or is it the fear of what it might activate inside you once you are there?

Feeling overwhelmed and unsure of how long it ⁤will take to recover afterward can be hard to manage, not only as of⁤ the emotions themselves,⁣ but because of⁣ where the mind goes next.Thoughts begin to⁤ spiral. Sometimes into failure. Sometimes ⁣into not being good ‌enough. Sometimes into feeling singled out by the unfairness of it all.Once the mind goes there,⁤ there is no clear way back​ to the surface. It’s a terrible way to feel because, in those moments, we tend to believe our⁤ most biased‍ thoughts. We‌ gather evidence, stew on it, and‌ let it take over. This is why ⁣avoidance can feel ​like relief. It reduces the ​risk of an emotional rupture.

Beneath Avoidance

What is being tested in these ‍moments is ⁢your‍ confidence

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