
09/09/2025
In my latest memoir, To Be Loved, I write about the painful realization that, despite everything I swore I’d never repeat, I still found myself echoing the very patterns I once hated.
So many people know this feeling. You work so hard to break free, only to hear the same words leave your mouth, or feel the same reactions take over your body.
It feels like a war inside of you - the part that despises the behavior battling against the part that can’t seem to stop.
At times, it can feel almost like being taken over, as if your body is acting faster than your mind can catch up.
This isn’t because you’re doomed to become what hurt you. Trauma gets stored in several parts of the brain and body, priming you to react before you even realize what’s happening.
Under stress, those stored experiences often take over, no matter how determined your mind is to do differently.
That’s why healing isn’t about trying harder - it’s about finding new ways to work with what’s happening inside you.
The good news is the brain can change. With the right kind of support - whether through therapy, somatic work, or integrative approaches that combine neuroscience and coaching - those stored patterns can be released and new ones can be created.
Healing gives you the ability to pause, to choose differently, and to create the kind of connection you’ve always longed for.