How Can Trauma Bond Feel Like Chemistry
The first place the confusion takes root is in the body itself. Dr Tugnait points to something that most people have never been told: the nervous system does not reliably distinguish between excitement and anxiety. Physiologically, they produce similar responses. Your heart races. Your attention narrows. You become hyperaware of the other person, their mood, their messages, their silences. via GIPHY In a relationship that keeps you in a state of low-level tension, waiting for a reply, watching for a shift in their energy, never quite sure where you stand, the body registers all of that as intensity. And for many people, particularly those who grew up in environments that were emotionally unpredictable or inconsistent, that specific kind of intensity feels like home. That is the first and perhaps most painful layer of the confusion. As Dr Tugnait puts it directly, “The nervous system does not distinguish between excitement and anxiety. When a relationship keeps you on edge, waiting for a text, dreading a mood shift, cycling between highs and crushing lows, the body experiences that as intensity.” And for someone whose early life was shaped by emotional inconsistency, that intensity does not read as a warning sign. It reads as something deeply, uncomfortably familiar. As she explains, “The familiarity of chaos is mistaken, time and again, for passion.” What the nervous system recognises as familiar, the heart translates as meaningful. And so a relationship that is keeping you in a state of chronic low-grade stress gets interpreted as something more alive, more real, more worth holding onto than anything calm has ever felt.The Cycle That Keeps You Hooked
Trauma bonds do not sustain themselves through consistent misery. If they did, leaving would be straightforward. What makes them so genuinely difficult to step away from is the rhythm they create, a pattern of tension building, something breaking, and then the reconciliation that follows. And it is in that reconciliation that the bond deepens most powerfully. via GIPHY Dr Tugnait describes it with precision. “Trauma bonds are sustained by a pattern of tension, rupture, reconciliation, and calm. The relief that follows conflict releases a genuine emotional response in the body. That relief feels like love.” The calm after the storm. The version of the person who shows up after the difficult period passes is warm, apologetic, and present in the way you have been desperately wanting them to be. The body exhales. The anxiety lifts. And because that relief is genuine and physiological, it gets filed in the brain as something meaningful.The Question Worth Sitting With
Dr Tugnait closes with something that is both simple and genuinely confronting. “You cannot heal what you refuse to see,” she says. “If a relationship brings more anxiety than peace, more confusion than clarity, it is worth pausing to ask honestly, is this chemistry, or is this a pattern you have lived before?” That question does not come with an easy answer. But the willingness to sit with it honestly, to look at what a relationship is actually producing in you rather than what you hope it might eventually become, is, as she puts it, the beginning of something far healthier. The most electric feeling in the room is not always the most real one. And sometimes the quietest, steadiest, most undramatic connection is the one that was worth choosing all along.The articles, news features, interviews, quotes, and media content displayed on this page are the property of their respective publishers and media houses. All such materials have been sourced from publicly available online platforms where our name, views, or contributions have been referenced, quoted, or featured.
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