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Home > What if I told you your brain is hooked on old survival tricks

What if I told you your brain is hooked on old survival tricks

and you can quit them?

Problem:

Trauma patterns (fight, flight, freeze, fawn) are like addictive loops.

→ People Pleasing (Fawn): Seeking approval, sacrificing your needs.

→ Inactivity (Freeze): Getting stuck in your head without action.

→ Addiction/Workaholism (Flight): Using distractions to escape reality.

→ Self-Centeredness (Fight): Always protecting yourself at others’ expense.

Your brain repeats them for “relief,” even when they cost you long‑term peace.

The New “Abstinence”: 

Emotional Sobriety. Living without compulsive reactions—choosing calm over autopilot.

4-Step “Next Self” Plan to Detox Your Trauma Habit

Notice the Urge

Fight? “They disrespected me—I’ve got to defend!”

Fawn? “I need to be liked—better say yes!”

Pause

Take 5 seconds: breathe, feel your feet.

Break the auto‑react loop.

Ask & Clarify

“Can you explain what you meant?”

Shift from reacting to curious listening. Choose Your Move

“Thanks, but I need to pass on that.” Or, “When I heard X, I felt Y—what would help here?”

Bonus Hacks

Future‑Self Check: Will this “yes” feel like regret tomorrow?

Reward Wins: Each boundary honored deserves a mini‑celebration—a stretch, a snack, a moment of “nice work.”

“Short‑term comfort ≠ long‑term peace.”

Emotional sobriety isn’t about being perfect—it’s about walking away from old habits and into freedom.

Practice: Notice → Pause → Ask → Choose → Reward. 

Over time, those survival loops lose their pull—and you reclaim the wheel.

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