How long before dating gain?

This is one of the most important questions in recovery — and neuroscience gives a clear, compassionate answer that is very different from cultural pressure to “move on”. I’ll speak directly to you, not in generic advice. The short answer (grounded in neuroscience) After decades of abuse, the nervous system needs time to re-baseline before it can choose safely. Not… Read More How long before dating gain?

#LucieClayton

We were trained to be composed, capable, and considerate.To manage situations quietly.To endure with grace. That training gave us poise, perception, and emotional intelligence.What it did not teach us was that grace should never require self-sacrifice. Keeping the strengths now means:✨ composure without compliance✨ empathy without endurance✨ generosity without depletion✨ love without disappearance Calm is not complacency.Kindness… Read More #LucieClayton

What a Lucie Clayton qualification signalled in 1975

In that era, having “Lucie Clayton” on a CV implied: Graduates were often recruited into: The psychological dimension (important) Lucie Clayton training emphasised: From a modern trauma-informed lens, many women trained this way: But also: This matters when looking back at relationships later in life. Why “Lucie Clayton 1975” still gets mentioned When people reference it today,… Read More What a Lucie Clayton qualification signalled in 1975

Global withholding

When withholding crosses into every domain of life, neuroscience and psychology recognise it as a global control strategy rooted in deep dysregulation and personality structure, not circumstance. I’ll explain this carefully and clearly. 1. The core pattern: Global withholding When someone is: …what you are seeing is not many separate flaws.It is one central operating system: “Nothing flows unless it benefits… Read More Global withholding

1. Calm removes the “survival anesthesia”

During abuse or chronic stress, the nervous system protects you by: Stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline act like a kind of anesthetic. They keep grief, anger, and loss out of conscious awareness because feeling them would have been unsafe or overwhelming at the time. When calm returns: So emotions that were deferred, not resolved, finally get airtime. This isn’t… Read More 1. Calm removes the “survival anesthesia”

Why calm can feel unfamiliar (and even unsettling)

When someone lives for years in an abusive, unpredictable environment, the nervous system adapts for survival, not comfort. 1. Your nervous system was trained for threat, not peace Chronic abuse keeps the brain in sympathetic dominance (fight/flight) or freeze. Over time, calm becomes unfamiliar. The body learns: “Stillness = danger might be coming.” So when calm finally appears, the brain… Read More Why calm can feel unfamiliar (and even unsettling)