
Understand the patterns that shape your relationships and discover a path to deeper connection with yourself and others. Why do some moments in relationships feel so much bigger than they should? A forgotten task becomes a fight. A simple comment lands like criticism. You want to stay calm, but something inside reacts before you can stop it, or you shut down entirely, unable to find words even when you want to connect. These are often signs that your nervous system is responding to something deeper than the present moment. This book explores why that happens and how to work with it. Surviving Unmet Needs examines how early attachment experiences with safety, autonomy, and connection shape the ways we protect ourselves in relationships. The survival strategies we learned, like pursuing closeness, people-pleasing, emotional withdrawal, or shutting down under stress, made sense in their original context. In adulthood, they often create the very disconnection we're trying to avoid. The challenge isn't lack of insight or willpower. It's that nervous system responses activate protective patterns before conscious awareness can intervene. We can't think our way out of reactions that live in the body. Drawing from trauma and attachment theory, polyvagal theory, somatic practices, Internal Family Systems (IFS), and Nonviolent Communication (NVC), this book weaves multiple perspectives into an accessible, integrative framework for understanding: - Why certain interactions trigger emotional or physiological reactions - How to recognize your unique attachment patterns and unmet needs - How survival strategies shape your boundaries, self-esteem, and emotional capacity - Ways to work with protective parts rather than fighting or suppressing them - How to build the capacity to stay grounded, connected, and authentic in
Page Count:
156
Publication Date:
2025-11-24
Publisher:
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp
ISBN-10:
1069664804
ISBN-13:
9781069664808
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