<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?><!-- generator=Zoho Sites --><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><channel><atom:link href="https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/blogs/tag/boundaries/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><title>Phasing Out of Trauma - Blog #Boundaries</title><description>Phasing Out of Trauma - Blog #Boundaries</description><link>https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/blogs/tag/boundaries</link><lastBuildDate>Fri, 10 Apr 2026 14:07:21 -0700</lastBuildDate><generator>http://zoho.com/sites/</generator><item><title><![CDATA[Boundaries — The Architecture of Love, Safety, and Spiritual Freedom]]></title><link>https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/blogs/post/boundaries-—-the-architecture-of-love-safety-and-spiritual-freedom</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/Phase 16 Boundaries.png"/>Phase 16 explores how healthy boundaries restore safety, attachment, and spiritual clarity after trauma. Boundaries are not walls — they are stewardship. When we honor our limits, we protect our nervous systems, strengthen relationships, and create space for love to thrive without self-erasure.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_GFF0QsSjR16JycusL6A0cQ" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_ZxnW47iCQFOgiTvXmNirrw" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_-GtaiPLwTFGetLESMKIF4w" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_YIwo3WrMRraqJGcIAhe45g" data-element-type="heading" class="zpelement zpelem-heading "><style></style><h2
 class="zpheading zpheading-align-center zpheading-align-mobile-center zpheading-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><span>Phase 16: Relationships After Trauma</span></h2></div>
<div data-element-id="elm_Uq7x1tNhkVDqt-sfFw1Yxw" data-element-type="image" class="zpelement zpelem-image "><style> @media (min-width: 992px) { [data-element-id="elm_Uq7x1tNhkVDqt-sfFw1Yxw"] .zpimage-container figure img { width: 500px ; height: 500.00px ; } } </style><div data-caption-color="" data-size-tablet="" data-size-mobile="" data-align="center" data-tablet-image-separate="false" data-mobile-image-separate="false" class="zpimage-container zpimage-align-center zpimage-tablet-align-center zpimage-mobile-align-center zpimage-size-medium zpimage-tablet-fallback-fit zpimage-mobile-fallback-fit hb-lightbox " data-lightbox-options="
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                theme:dark"><figure role="none" class="zpimage-data-ref"><span class="zpimage-anchor" role="link" tabindex="0" aria-label="Open Lightbox" style="cursor:pointer;"><picture><img class="zpimage zpimage-style-none zpimage-space-none " src="/Phase%2016%20Boundaries.png" size="medium" data-lightbox="true"/></picture></span></figure></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_H2Ye_dlcR5SZwowkOU5hfg" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p style="text-align:left;"><span>When we begin talking about boundaries, most people do not feel empowered — they feel uneasy. For some, the word carries the weight of conflict. For others, it feels selfish, unkind, or even unspiritual. Many trauma survivors were never taught healthy limits; instead, they experienced either rigid control or total emotional chaos. So when we arrive at Phase 16 and begin exploring relationships after trauma, boundaries can feel foreign — or frightening.<br/><br/>And yet, <span style="font-style:italic;">boundaries are not walls</span>.<br/><br/><strong>They are doorways with hinges</strong>.<br/><br/>Trauma psychiatrist Bessel van der Kolk teaches that trauma reshapes the nervous system. It changes how we experience safety, connection, and agency. Trauma is not simply an event that happened; it is an imprint on the body. When safety was repeatedly violated — emotionally, physically, or relationally — the body learned to adapt in order to survive. Some adapted by becoming hyper-attuned to others’ needs, scanning constantly for approval. Others adapted by disconnecting from their own emotions altogether. Some learned that “no” led to punishment. Others learned that having needs meant being too much.<br/><br/>Over time, survival patterns that once served to keep us safe with an individual, or in certain situations become hard wired into universal relational styles we use with everyone in every situation, and we rationalize it rather than pathologize it - because it's all we've known. People-pleasing begins to look like kindness. Over-giving masquerades as love. Silence becomes self-control. Avoidance becomes independence. But beneath these patterns is often a nervous system that never felt safe enough to differentiate where one person ends and another begins.<br/><br/>Boundaries restore that differentiation where we're able to recognize that we're not being kind to ourselves when we're going out of our way to make our boss's life easier at the detriment to our family. Where we can see that constantly buying our kids the newest toys, games, electronic does not fill their love tank and make up for our inability to spend time with them. We can recognize that stonewalling our beloveds isn't about giving us time to make up our minds, it's about controlling our calendar. They help us recognize that we are not called to be independent - we are called to agency and empowerment within interdependence on supportive people.&nbsp;<br/><br/>Boundaries help us answer a fundamental question trauma disrupts: What belongs to me, and what does not?<br/><br/></span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span>When we've grown up with Adverse Childhood Experiences, and when we've experienced trauma in pivotal years or our adulthood, and when we've had dysfunction in our families, it's easy to understand.&nbsp; Most of us can relate to someone in our families or at school or at work that doesn't seem to &quot;pull their weight&quot; and most of us can recognize the person who always &quot;bails them out&quot;. We can also recognize the people in our lives who are &quot;loners&quot; and who don't work well in groups because they don't know how to ask for help, and those who just ride their coat tails and take credit they don't deserve.&nbsp; &nbsp;Why are these things so common in our experiences?</span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span><br/>Attachment theory deepens this understanding. Clinical psychologist Sue Johnson reminds us that human beings are wired for connection. We are not meant to be emotionally self-contained. We long for closeness, responsiveness, and reassurance, and as babies we do our best to achieve healthy attachment with the caregivers we have. But when attachment has been insecure or chaotic, boundaries feel risky, this could be something we experience very early in life, or it could be something that develops later in fundamental years as dysfunction grows or develops in our lives.&nbsp;</span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span><br/></span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span>This means, if someone grew up anxiously attached where they never knew if their needs would be met, and they had to perform to be affirmed and accepted, setting a boundary may feel like threatening the relationship itself. The internal message might sound like: If I say no, they will leave. If I disappoint them, I will lose them. If I create distance, I will be abandoned. This is not irrational thought - this thought comes from deeply stored, powerful memories of how people left, carried disappointment, and abandonment because they didn't live up to impossible or constantly changing standards of their caregivers or within their primary relationships.<br/><br/>Conversely, someone with avoidant attachment, who rather than getting needs met by caregivers was abused, or suffered further harm when they were near, may feel engulfed by closeness. For them, boundaries may not be missing — they may be rigid and defensive. The internal narrative becomes: If I let you in, I will lose myself. If I depend on you, I will be hurt. Again, this makes sense, as their definition of &quot;love&quot; is distorted by the unhealthy behaviors of caregivers and primary relationships from their past.<br/><br/>Healthy boundaries actually helps us heal our attachment styles, because they do not sever attachment. <span style="font-weight:bold;">They make secure attachment possible</span>.<br/><br/>When expectations are clear - meaning I know what you want from me, and I can clearly let you know what I need from you, when emotional responsibility is not blurred - meaning I am not condemned for how I feel, and I am free to feel it full, and when each person is accountable for their own behavior - meaning you're not &quot;making me do anything&quot; I'm choosing to do this because I respect my dignity or because I'm taking my mental and spiritual health serious, relationships become more stable.&nbsp;</span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span><br/></span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span>Clarity reduces anxiety, we don't need to wonder and stay in panic, because of misunderstandings. Predictability reduces threat, we don't need to say &quot;If you do this again....&quot; and then be love bombed into taking it back. Mutuality increases trust, both parties agree to the boundary, and as the boundary is upheld, true trust forms.&nbsp;</span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span><br/></span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span>Boundaries are not anti-connection; they are the conditions under which connection becomes safe. We set boundaries in order to open the door to vulnerability - boundaries tell the other person about our needs, and ask them to respect them, when we see people respect our needs, we're more likely to ask them to help meet them, and to support us in getting additional needs met down the line.&nbsp;<br/><br/></span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span><strong><span style="font-size:20px;">Boundaries and the Body</span></strong><br/>Attachment styles are a neurological process, and we can see how insecure attachment styles can lead to poor boundaries based on emotional and cognitive feedback.&nbsp; It's fairly easy to see that poor boundaries negatively affect our mental and emotional states, but it goes beyond that. Neuroscientist Stephen Porges, through his work on Polyvagal Theory, explains that safety is not primarily cognitive — it is physiological. The nervous system is constantly scanning for cues of danger or safety. When boundaries are unclear, the body often remains in a low-grade state of alert. We brace for intrusion - yes, our bodies literally harden. We anticipate conflict - yes, we activate stress responses before the conflict ever occurs. We over-explain and apologize for existing - yes we physically diminish ourselves . Or we shut down to avoid overwhelm - yes we turn off biological systems, and stop healthy physical functioning.<br/><br/>A boundary sends a signal to the nervous system: <span style="font-weight:bold;">There is structure here. There is clarity. There is agency.</span><br/><br/>And agency calms the body, allows it to soften and release, allows it to rest an digest, allows it to return to proper hormonal function, metabolic function, and immune-function.<br/><br/>Without boundaries, relationships tend to swing between enmeshment - where we take on the emotional, phsyical and mental responsibilities of the other person, and we let them take on ours,&nbsp; and isolation where we refuse to let someone in because we've already decided they're not trust worthy, and we're just using them for personal gain, as a means to an end. With boundaries, relationships develop rhythm. There is room for closeness when desired and needed and space when warranted and agreed upon. There is room for honesty, vulnerability and discovery and respect for differences without condemnation. There is room for repair when rupture occurs, and recognition that ruptures are healthy as disagreements should happen in a natural flow of every relationship. This rhythm is what allows intimacy to deepen rather than collapse.<br/><br/></span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span><span style="font-weight:bold;font-size:20px;">Are Boundaries Spiritually Pleasing to God?</span></span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span><br/></span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span>Many fundamentalist Christian churches will tell you that to set a boundary is non-Christian. That we are called to die to self, and to take up the crosses the world gives us.&nbsp; However, we are told to love others as we love ourselves, and that God calls us to live a life of abundance, while we carry our own loads and bear the burdens of those around us.&nbsp; Let's look at how boundaries truly coincide with our Christian faith.&nbsp;</span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span><br/>From a spiritual perspective, boundaries are not a modern therapeutic invention. They are embedded in creation. In Genesis, God separates light from darkness, land from sea, day from night. Separation is not rejection; it is order. It is differentiation that allows life to flourish. Even Christ modeled relational boundaries. He withdrew to pray. He did not heal every person in every town. He allowed others to misunderstand Him. He did not abandon His calling to satisfy every demand placed upon Him.<br/><br/><span style="font-weight:bold;">Spiritual maturity is not self-erasure.</span><br/><br/>It is stewardship.<br/><br/></span></p><div style="text-align:left;"><span>Boundaries protect the life entrusted to us — our time, our energy, our bodies, our calling. They are not acts of hostility; they are acts of reverence. They acknowledge something deeply theological: we are finite. Love cannot flourish where there is chronic depletion, and ministry cannot thrive where there is quiet resentment. Healthy limits honor the dignity woven into us at creation. We are made in the image and likeness of God, but we are not God. We reflect Him; we do not replace Him.</span><br/><span></span><br/><span>We are invited to become more Christ-like, but <span style="font-weight:bold;">we are not called to become Christ Himself.</span></span><br/><span><br/></span></div><div style="text-align:left;"><span>That distinction matters.</span><span>&nbsp;In many Christian spaces, we hear language like “less of me and more of Him.” While the sentiment aims toward humility, it can quietly distort into self-neglect. God does not desire the erasure of your personality, your wiring, your limitations, or your humanity. He created you intentionally. Christ is Redeemer, Savior, and Lord. You are not.</span><br/><span></span><br/><span>Part of spiritual growth is relinquishing the subtle temptation to become the redeemer, savior, or lord of the people around us. When we over-function, over-commit, and overextend in the name of service, we can unintentionally step into roles that were never ours to carry. We begin to believe that everything depends on us — that if we do not hold it together, no one will. That posture may look sacrificial, but it is often rooted in anxiety rather than trust.</span><br/><span></span><br/><span>Our lives are meant to point to Christ — not because we are striving to mimic Him perfectly, but because His work in us becomes visible. When people see transformation, peace, humility, and regulated strength in our lives, they grow curious about the source. But if what they see instead is exhaustion, irritability, martyrdom, and chronic over extension, the life we model does not look like good news.</span><br/><span></span><br/><span>Boundaries free us from playing God.</span><br/><span></span><br/><span>They allow us to say yes when we have capacity and no when we do not. They invite us to ask for help. They permit us to rest. They protect our nervous systems so that our love does not turn sharp and brittle. They keep our service aligned with calling rather than compulsion.</span><br/><span></span><br/><span>Perhaps the most Christ-like thing we can do is trust that we are not Christ.</span><span>&nbsp;When we live honestly — acknowledging our limits, honoring our bodies, refusing to over commit — our lives begin to look sustainable. They look peaceful. They look real. And that kind of life, grounded and wholehearted, becomes deeply compelling.</span><br/><span></span><br/><span>Not because we disappeared.</span><span>&nbsp;But because we finally showed up as who God actually created us to be.</span></div><p style="text-align:left;"><span></span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span><br/></span></p><p style="text-align:left;"><span><span style="font-weight:bold;font-size:20px;">What Exactly are Boundaries?</span><br/><br/>It is important to clarify what boundaries are — and what they are not. A boundary is not an attempt to control someone else’s behavior. It is not a silent punishment or a withdrawal meant to induce guilt. A boundary does not say, “You must change.” It says, “This is what I will do if this continues.” It centers responsibility where it belongs — with the self.<br/><br/>For example, instead of saying, “You need to stop yelling,” a boundary might sound like, “If the yelling continues, I will leave the room.” Instead of demanding emotional availability, it may sound like, “I need time to think before responding.” Boundaries focus on one’s own participation.<br/><br/>For trauma survivors, this shift can feel destabilizing. Setting a boundary may activate guilt, shame, or fear of abandonment. The body may react as though danger is imminent. This does not mean the boundary is wrong. It means the nervous system is recalibrating. It is learning that disagreement does not equal catastrophe. It is learning that love can survive clarity.<br/><br/>This recalibration takes practice. In Phase 16, we encourage starting small. Notice where resentment is building — resentment is often a signal that a boundary is needed. Notice where your body tightens before saying yes. Notice where you feel obligated rather than willing. Practice low-risk acts of honesty. Build tolerance for the discomfort that comes with change.<br/><br/>Healing is not becoming harder.<br/><br/>It is becoming clearer.<br/><br/>There is a paradox at the heart of boundary work: healthy limits increase intimacy. When boundaries are absent, hidden anger accumulates. Unspoken expectations fester. People begin keeping score. Over time, connection erodes under the weight of confusion and resentment. But when boundaries are present, relationships gain durability. There is room for difference. There is room for negotiation. There is room for repair.<br/><br/>Boundaries create the architecture within which love can rest.<br/><br/>Phase 16 invites us to examine our relationships not through the lens of obligation, but through the lens of safety and mutuality. It asks us to consider whether we are participating from fear or from freedom. It challenges us to recognize that saying no does not diminish our worth — it affirms it.<br/><br/>You are allowed to take up space.<br/>You are allowed to protect your nervous system.<br/>You are allowed to steward your life.<br/><br/>Healing does not mean becoming infinitely accommodating. It means becoming rooted enough to stand without collapsing and open enough to love without disappearing.<br/><br/>And rooted people love well.</span></p><p style="text-align:left;"></p><p style="text-align:left;"></p><p style="text-align:left;"></p><p style="text-align:left;"></p><p style="text-align:left;"></p></div>
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</div></div></div></div></div></div> ]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2026 19:52:51 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title><![CDATA[Introducing Phase 16]]></title><link>https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/blogs/post/introducing-phase-16</link><description><![CDATA[Phase 16 explores how healing reshapes our relationships. As trauma loosens its grip, we learn to love without abandoning ourselves, set healthy boundaries, release unsafe dynamics, and embrace connection rooted in mutuality, safety, and growth rather than survival.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_crgDXWZXQzyAK8CJ8XoKKg" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_-i3X1plhQ8SctCDAsCHwTA" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_em0UF0DeSZ2x7MsPS3WKhQ" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_jnK8trnnQE6vc2UwDaLxpg" data-element-type="heading" class="zpelement zpelem-heading "><style></style><h2
 class="zpheading zpheading-align-center zpheading-align-mobile-center zpheading-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true">Relationships After Trauma</h2></div>
<div data-element-id="elm_cwk7Bu57MD9NDleu9dc7lw" data-element-type="image" class="zpelement zpelem-image "><style> @media (min-width: 992px) { [data-element-id="elm_cwk7Bu57MD9NDleu9dc7lw"] .zpimage-container figure img { width: 500px ; height: 333.33px ; } } </style><div data-caption-color="" data-size-tablet="" data-size-mobile="" data-align="center" data-tablet-image-separate="false" data-mobile-image-separate="false" class="zpimage-container zpimage-align-center zpimage-tablet-align-center zpimage-mobile-align-center zpimage-size-medium zpimage-tablet-fallback-fit zpimage-mobile-fallback-fit hb-lightbox " data-lightbox-options="
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                theme:dark"><figure role="none" class="zpimage-data-ref"><span class="zpimage-anchor" role="link" tabindex="0" aria-label="Open Lightbox" style="cursor:pointer;"><picture><img class="zpimage zpimage-style-none zpimage-space-none " src="/images/Phase%2016%20Blog%20image.png" size="medium" data-lightbox="true"/></picture></span></figure></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_aM7YsyQ-TMOm1ksz6C-XOA" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p style="text-align:left;"></p><div><div style="text-align:left;"><div><div><div><div><div><div><br/><p>Healing does not end when the flashbacks quiet or when the nightmares soften. It does not even end when forgiveness begins. Healing continues into our relationships. Phase 16 is where trauma recovery meets real life. It is where the internal work begins to show up in conversations, boundaries, friendships, dating, marriage, parenting, church, and community. It is often here that women realize some relationships will grow, some will shift, and some will end — and all of it requires courage.</p><p><br/></p><p>Trauma does not only wound our bodies and memories; it shapes how we attach, trust, withdraw, pursue, over-function, or disappear. Many of us learned to over-give to stay safe, stay silent to avoid conflict, rescue others to feel valuable, accept crumbs because we feared abandonment, or become fiercely independent because dependence once hurt. When survival becomes our relational strategy, it can be difficult to tell the difference between love and fear. Phase 16 gently invites the question: Am I loving from wholeness, or from survival? That question alone has the power to shift an entire relational landscape.</p><p><br/></p><p>One of the greatest myths trauma survivors carry is the belief that setting boundaries is mean, selfish, un-Christian, or unloving. But boundaries are not punishment, and they are not walls. They are clarity. They are the difference between supporting and rescuing, forgiving and tolerating harm, being available and being consumed. Even Jesus walked away from crowds. He did not answer every demand. He did not entrust Himself to everyone. Boundaries are not a lack of love; they are love with wisdom.</p><p><br/></p><p>As healing deepens, relationships often reveal themselves more clearly. You may discover a friendship that strengthens as you become more honest, a partner who respects your growth, or a community that truly supports healing. You may also discover that someone preferred the unhealed version of you, that a dynamic only worked when you stayed small, or that a relationship was built on imbalance rather than mutuality. Growth exposes truth, and truth can feel both freeing and heartbreaking. It is okay to grieve relationships that cannot grow with you. It is okay to release dynamics that cost you your peace. It is okay to choose safety.</p><p><br/></p><p>One of the most difficult lessons in this Phase is recognizing that you are not responsible for someone else’s healing. You are responsible for your honesty, your growth, your boundaries, and your repentance when needed. You are not responsible for forcing someone else to change, managing their emotions, convincing them of your worth, or carrying what they refuse to heal. Mature love is not enabling, controlling, or fixing. Mature love stays open and kind, but it does not abandon itself in the process.</p><p><br/></p><p>As trauma loosens its grip, healthy relationships begin to feel different. There is mutuality instead of imbalance, repair after conflict instead of silent resentment, emotional safety instead of hypervigilance, space for individuality instead of enmeshment, and freedom to say no without fear. You may find yourself laughing more easily, relaxing in rooms you once scanned for danger, sharing without rehearsing, and resting without bracing. These shifts are not accidental. They are the fruit of the work you have done.</p><p><br/></p><p>Phase 16 is not only about what you leave behind; it is about what you step into. It is about friendships that nourish, community that celebrates growth, and moments — perhaps sitting at the beach with trusted friends — where you are no longer scanning for threat but simply enjoying connection. It is about rediscovering ease, belonging, joy, and choice. It is about realizing that you are no longer surviving relationships; you are participating in them.</p><p>This phase is quiet but powerful. It does not always come with dramatic declarations. Instead, it shows up in smaller, braver decisions — speaking honestly, stepping back when needed, leaning in when safe, choosing relationships that reflect growth rather than fear. When you begin to relate from wholeness instead of survival, everything changes. And that is healing.</p></div></div></div></div><div><div></div></div></div></div></div><div><br/></div></div><p></p></div>
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</div></div></div></div></div></div> ]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2026 23:12:40 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title><![CDATA[Responsibility Beyond Trauma: From Survival to a Chosen Life]]></title><link>https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/blogs/post/Responsibility-Beyond-Trauma-From-Survival-to-a-Chosen-Life</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/Phase 15 Teaching Topic Image.png"/>This Phase Topic Teaching explores responsibility beyond survival, examining how agency, accountability, and forgiveness develop as trauma healing unfolds. Drawing from Scripture and trauma experts, it helps translate recovery into daily, embodied living.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_bJSMXssjTfSH67Mh43BXZw" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_0NCwHPVaRFeYVRhZq1Okcw" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_El8CZT8TSPOOHX6GkvL5ZQ" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_AQPTnBIi27HjBxr4ZSnmDQ" data-element-type="image" class="zpelement zpelem-image "><style> @media (min-width: 992px) { [data-element-id="elm_AQPTnBIi27HjBxr4ZSnmDQ"] .zpimage-container figure img { width: 500px ; height: 750.00px ; } } </style><div data-caption-color="" data-size-tablet="" data-size-mobile="" data-align="center" data-tablet-image-separate="false" data-mobile-image-separate="false" class="zpimage-container zpimage-align-center zpimage-tablet-align-center zpimage-mobile-align-center zpimage-size-medium zpimage-tablet-fallback-fit zpimage-mobile-fallback-fit hb-lightbox " data-lightbox-options="
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 class="zpheading zpheading-align-center zpheading-align-mobile-center zpheading-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><span><span><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>God's Invitation to Welcome Responsibility</strong></span></span></span></h2></div>
<div data-element-id="elm_ZAX6YTPuQQu-hosGdZNy9g" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p style="text-align:justify;">For many women, the word <em>responsibility</em> doesn’t arrive as a neutral concept. It carries memory. It can echo voices that demanded too much before safety was ever established, or moments when blame was cloaked in moral or spiritual language and handed to someone who was already overwhelmed. Responsibility can feel like pressure added to a life that has long been shaped by endurance rather than choice.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>In trauma recovery, responsibility has to be reclaimed carefully—not discarded, and never weaponized. When held rightly, responsibility does not crush the wounded. It restores dignity. It returns agency to women who learned how to survive without it, and it opens the door to something many have not experienced in a long time: the ability to choose their lives with intention rather than simply endure them.</p><p><br/></p><p>This is why the question Jesus asks—<em>“Do you want to be made well?”</em> (John 5:6)—is so significant. It is not an accusation or a demand. It is an invitation into partnership. It honors suffering while also awakening agency. Responsibility, in this sense, is not about blame or earning healing; it is about responding to the possibility of restoration. And when a woman begins to answer that question for herself, responsibility becomes one of the clearest signs that she is no longer living only in survival, but stepping into a life that is being consciously—and courageously—chosen.</p><p><br/></p></div><h2><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>Responsibility Begins With the Choice to Heal — The First Act of Agency</strong></span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>For many women who enter <em>Phasing Out of Trauma</em>, the first meaningful responsibility they take is not moral or relational—it is internal. It is the quiet but courageous decision to show up. To name pain rather than continue burying it. To engage a process instead of enduring in silence. To stop waiting for rescue and begin participating in their own restoration. This choice may not look dramatic from the outside, but it is profound, because trauma so often strips people of agency, teaching passivity, hyper-adaptation, or disappearance as the safest ways to survive.</p><p><br/></p><p>Healing begins when a woman makes a different kind of decision—one that may feel small but carries enormous weight. She decides, sometimes for the first time, <em>I will no longer abandon myself.</em> That decision is the first true act of agency. It is not about fixing everything or knowing what comes next; it is about choosing presence over absence and honesty over numbing.</p><p><br/></p><p><span>This is why that earlier question Jesus asks carries so much weight. It is not about worthiness or pressure, and it is never coercive. God does not force healing on us, nor does He rush our readiness. Instead, He continually invites us—day by day, and often moment by moment—into participation. Taking responsibility for healing means choosing, again and again, to stay engaged in the journey: to return when we feel overwhelmed, to reach for support when we want to withdraw, to practice what restores us even when it feels slow. This kind of responsibility is not about getting it right; it is about remaining present. It is the doorway through which agency keeps returning, one choice at a time, as we continue walking the path of healing with God.</span></p><p><span><br/></span></p></div><h2><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>The Trauma You Live With Was Not Your Fault</strong></span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p></p><div><p style="text-align:justify;">Before responsibility can widen or deepen, one truth must be stated clearly and without qualification: <strong>the trauma you are living with is not your fault</strong>. Trauma does not arise from personal weakness or failure. It emerges from experiences where power was misused, boundaries were violated, protection failed, or harm was allowed to continue. Abuse, neglect, betrayal, violence, and injustice do not happen in isolation, and they do not happen without responsibility belonging somewhere outside the survivor.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p><p style="text-align:justify;">Trauma experts have been unequivocal on this point. <strong><span>Bessel van der Kolk</span></strong> reminds us that trauma is not defined by what is “wrong” with a person, but by <em>what happened to them</em> and how their body and nervous system adapted to survive. Survival responses—freezing, appeasing, dissociating, enduring—are not moral failures; they are biological and psychological strategies that kept a person alive. Naming this clearly is not avoidance of responsibility; it is the foundation of healing.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p><p style="text-align:justify;">Moral clarity matters because when responsibility is misassigned, harm multiplies. Survivors end up carrying guilt that does not belong to them, while those who caused harm—or benefited from silence—remain unexamined. This distortion does not heal trauma; it compounds it. Scripture itself refuses this confusion, reminding us that God “rescues the weak and the needy” and does not confuse the victim with the offender (Psalm 82:4). Healing requires that truth be told plainly.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p><p style="text-align:justify;">This pattern of misplaced responsibility is explored in <em><span>Mistakes Were Made (But Not by Me)</span></em>, where the authors explain how human beings instinctively avoid accountability in order to protect their self-image. Denial, minimization, and rationalization allow harm to remain unaddressed and unresolved. For survivors, understanding this dynamic can be profoundly stabilizing—it clarifies that the weight they have carried was never meant to be theirs alone.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p><p style="text-align:justify;">This is why learning to distinguish <em>what is not yours to carry</em> is as essential as learning what is. Healing requires responsibility to be accurately placed—neither inflated through false guilt nor erased through denial. When responsibility is named truthfully, survivors are freed from self-blame, and the path forward becomes clearer, steadier, and grounded in reality rather than shame.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p></div><h2><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>Taking Responsibility for How We Lived While Surviving</strong></span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>As safety and capacity grow, many women arrive at a tender and often surprising realization: <strong>survival shaped them</strong>. Not just internally, but practically. Trauma does not only leave memories behind; it leaves patterns. It teaches the body and mind how to get through what felt impossible at the time.</p><p><br/></p><p>For some women, that meant learning to withdraw—to stay small, quiet, or unseen because visibility once felt dangerous. For others, it meant hyper-control: managing everything and everyone because unpredictability was terrifying. Some learned to people-please to preserve connection, to numb emotions to survive overwhelm, or to stay in a constant state of alertness because danger once arrived without warning. These behaviors were not random. They were intelligent, adaptive responses to unsafe environments. They helped women endure what could not be changed.</p><p><br/></p><p>But what once protected can later begin to constrain.</p><p><br/></p><p>As life becomes safer, the same patterns that once kept a woman alive may start to cost her intimacy, peace, or freedom. She may notice that she avoids conflict even when her needs matter, or that she stays guarded in relationships that are no longer threatening. She may realize that anger still flares quickly, or that shutting down has become automatic even when she wants connection. Healing does not require judging these patterns—it allows them to be seen clearly and compassionately.</p><p><br/></p><p>This is where trauma-informed accountability becomes possible. <strong><span>Janina Fisher</span></strong> reminds us that many survival behaviors are <em>protective parts</em> of the self—strategies that developed when there were no better options. Healing invites curiosity rather than condemnation. A woman may gently say, <em>“This made sense then. It kept me safe. And I don’t want to keep living this way now.”</em> That statement alone marks profound growth.</p><p><br/></p><p>This is also where accountability becomes liberating rather than punishing. <strong><span>Dana Coverstone</span></strong> describes accountability as alignment rather than self-attack. Simple accountability does not dramatize failure or demand endless explanation. It names what is true and chooses redirection. It sounds like honesty without humiliation and responsibility without collapse.</p><p><br/></p><p>In trauma recovery, this means understanding <strong>why</strong> a behavior emerged while also acknowledging its <strong>impact</strong>—on oneself and on others. A woman may recognize that withdrawal once protected her, but now keeps her isolated. She may see that control once created safety, but now strains relationships. Accountability allows her to hold both truths at once. It creates space for change without erasing context, and growth without self-hatred. In that space, responsibility becomes not a burden, but a pathway forward—one that honors the past while making room for a different future.</p><p><br/></p></div><h2><span style="font-weight:bold;font-size:22px;">How Responsibility Brings Health and Safety Into Our Relationships</span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>As responsibility deepens, it begins to take relational form. Healing is no longer something that happens only within us; it reshapes how we engage with others, how we repair what can be repaired, and how we protect what must be protected. This is where responsibility becomes practical, embodied, and deeply life-giving.</p><p><br/></p><p>In this stage of healing, confession—rightly understood—becomes a tool for creating greater health, not a requirement for exposure. In <em><span>The Art of Confession</span></em>, <strong><span>Paul Wilkes</span></strong> reframes confession as an act of liberation rather than humiliation. Confession, he explains, is not about self-loathing or public self-disclosure; it is about truth that restores integrity and makes forward movement possible. For trauma survivors, this distinction is essential.</p><p><br/></p><p>In supportive, safe relationships, confession can be a powerful way to own harmful actions and demonstrate change. A woman may name how survival patterns—withdrawal, control, reactivity, silence—have impacted others, not to punish herself, but to repair trust. Confession in these spaces sounds like honesty paired with responsibility: <em>This is how I showed up. This is how it affected you. And this is how I am choosing to live differently now.</em> When offered freely and received safely, this kind of confession strengthens connection and signals growth.</p><p><br/></p><p>At the same time, trauma-informed responsibility recognizes that confession is not always meant for every relationship. Many women have histories of being exposed without consent, silenced when they spoke, or harmed further by sharing truth in unsafe spaces. Healing does not require continued vulnerability in relationships that remain dismissive, manipulative, or abusive. In those cases, confession may take a different and equally important form: self-confession.</p><p><br/></p><p>Self-confession allows a woman to name, with clarity and compassion, where she has continued to tolerate harm, override her own needs, or remain in relationships that diminish her well-being. This is not self-blame—it is discernment. Naming these patterns creates the clarity needed to establish boundaries of protection. In this way, responsibility is expressed not through disclosure, but through limits. Through choosing distance instead of exposure. Through saying, <em>I will no longer place myself in harm’s way.</em></p><p><em><br/></em></p><p>Used wisely, confession becomes a marker of maturity rather than vulnerability alone. It helps repair what can be repaired and safeguards what must be protected. It reflects a new kind of responsibility—one that honors growth, values safety, and actively shapes a healthier future. In this way, responsibility does not tether a woman to her past; it equips her to move forward with strength, wisdom, and integrity.</p><p><br/></p></div><p></p><h2>What Trauma Experts Teach About Responsibility</h2><p></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>Trauma research consistently confirms what survivors already know in their bodies: <strong>responsibility cannot be demanded before safety exists</strong>. Accountability that arrives too early does not empower—it overwhelms. When the nervous system is still bracing for threat, responsibility feels like danger rather than choice, and expectation feels like pressure rather than invitation. Trauma-informed healing understands that responsibility must be <em>grown</em>, not imposed.</p><p><br/></p><p><strong><span>Bessel van der Kolk</span></strong> has been clear that agency depends on regulation. A nervous system locked in survival mode cannot access meaningful choice. In states of fight, flight, freeze, or collapse, the body is focused on protection, not reflection. From this perspective, responsibility does not begin with behavior correction—it begins with restoring safety in the body. Only when the nervous system settles can a person truly choose, respond, and take ownership in ways that are life-giving rather than self-punishing.</p><p><br/></p><p>Building on this, <strong><span>Janina Fisher</span></strong> emphasizes that healing requires learning to hold oneself accountable <em>without internal attack</em>. Many trauma survivors have highly developed inner critics that confuse responsibility with self-condemnation. Fisher teaches that shame shuts down learning, while curiosity keeps the nervous system open. In healthy healing, responsibility shows up first as awareness—<em>I notice this pattern</em>—then as compassion—<em>I understand why it developed</em>—and eventually as choice—<em>I can respond differently now</em>. Accountability, in this model, is a sign of integration rather than judgment.</p><p><br/></p><p><strong><span>Tim Fletcher</span></strong> adds an important relational dimension to this conversation. Fletcher often speaks about responsibility as one of the clearest indicators that a person is moving out of emotional immaturity and into wholeness. In early trauma recovery, people may externalize responsibility entirely or internalize it excessively. As healing progresses, responsibility becomes more balanced. A person begins to own their emotions, reactions, and choices without taking responsibility for others’ behavior. This shift—owning <em>self</em> while releasing responsibility for <em>others</em>—is a significant marker of emotional health.</p><p><br/></p><p>Similarly, <strong><span>Gabor Maté</span></strong> frames responsibility as inseparable from self-awareness and compassion. Maté teaches that trauma often disconnects people from their authentic needs and boundaries, leading them to override themselves in order to maintain attachment or safety. Healing restores the capacity to take responsibility for one’s inner life—emotions, limits, values—without shame. From this perspective, responsibility expands as a person reconnects with themselves. It becomes less about control and more about alignment with truth.</p><p><br/></p><p>Taken together, these voices offer a consistent message: responsibility is not a prerequisite for healing; it is a <strong>product of healing</strong>. It forms as safety is established, expands as awareness grows, and matures as integration takes place. Trauma-informed responsibility is relationally supported, paced with capacity, and always separated from condemnation. It does not disappear in healing—it becomes one of the clearest signs that healing is actually happening.</p><p><br/></p></div><h2><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>Responsibility in the Present: The Life Being Chosen Now</strong></span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>As healing stabilizes, responsibility naturally begins to shift away from the past and toward the present. Earlier in the journey, much of the work centered on understanding what happened, naming harm accurately, and restoring safety. But as capacity grows, a different question starts to rise—not only <em>What happened to me?</em> but <em>How am I living now?</em> This is not a departure from trauma work; it is evidence that healing is taking root.</p><p><br/></p><p>Scripture speaks plainly into this stage when it invites us to “test our own actions.” This is not harsh scrutiny or self-surveillance. It is an invitation to integrity. It reflects a growing ability to look honestly at our lives without collapsing into shame or defensiveness. Responsibility here is no longer about surviving the past; it is about stewarding the present.</p><p><br/></p><p>This is the heart of <strong>Phase 15</strong>: <em>I can take responsibility for my maladaptive behaviors. I seek forgiveness in a way that honors me, honors God, and supports my continued healing.</em> By this stage, women are often able to see how trauma shaped certain patterns—reactivity, avoidance, control, emotional withdrawal, or numbing—and to name them not as character flaws, but as strategies that no longer serve the life they are choosing now.</p><p><br/></p><p>Responsibility in Phase 15 may look like recognizing that anger once protected you, but now damages connection. It may mean acknowledging that people-pleasing helped you stay safe, but now erodes your sense of self. It may involve seeing how shutting down avoided pain, but now blocks intimacy. Taking responsibility does not mean condemning these behaviors; it means owning their impact and choosing differently with the tools and support you now have.</p><p><br/></p><p>Forgiveness at this stage is also reframed. It is not rushed, coerced, or performative. Seeking forgiveness may involve repairing a relationship where it is safe and appropriate—naming harm honestly, taking responsibility without over-explaining, and demonstrating change over time. In other cases, forgiveness may be inward and spiritual: releasing self-condemnation, grieving what those behaviors cost you, and allowing God’s grace to meet you where growth is still unfolding.</p><p><br/></p><p>Just as importantly, Phase 15 honors that forgiveness does not require reconciliation with unsafe people. Responsibility may instead look like setting firmer boundaries, reducing contact, or choosing distance where continued engagement would cause harm. In this way, responsibility honors not only others, but the woman herself—and the healing God is actively cultivating in her.</p><p><br/></p><p>This stage of responsibility is formation, not punishment. Trauma recovery does not remove moral agency; it restores it. Responsibility becomes a sign of freedom—the growing ability to pause instead of react, to choose instead of repeat, and to live in alignment with values rather than survival instincts. As women move through Phase 15, responsibility becomes less about what trauma shaped, and more about who they are becoming as they move beyond it—grounded, discerning, and increasingly free.</p></div><h2><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>Responsibility as the Path Into Fullness</strong></span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p>Trauma teaches survival.</p><p>Healing teaches choice.</p><p>And responsibility, rightly held, allows a woman to step into the fullness of who God is restoring her to be.</p><p><br/></p><p style="text-align:justify;">Jesus did not promise mere survival. He promised abundant life. Responsibility is not what chains us to the past — it is what anchors us in the present and opens the future.</p><p><br/></p><h3><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>Closing Reflection</strong></span></h3><h3></h3><h3></h3><p><em>I am not responsible for what was done to me.</em><br/><em>I am responsible for how I live now.</em></p><p><em>With God’s help, I choose healing.</em><br/><em>I choose integrity.</em><br/><em>I choose life.</em></p></div><p></p></div>
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