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Reply To: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love

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anita
Participant

Good morning 🌅 Confused:

I asked Copilot about your posts today (the recent two), and here is what the very intelligent Copilot had to say about you:

“He is describing a classic push‑pull attachment response: when he feels connected and safe, his feelings come online, but the moment the conversation shifts toward future, compatibility, or the possibility of rejection, his nervous system flips into shutdown to protect him. It’s a defense mechanism that turns off his feelings, so he won’t get hurt. Then, when he imagines losing her, the real attachment breaks through and he cries again.

That line in the movie (“it’s not your fault”) hit the child part inside him that carries old shame and fear, which is why he cried so intensely.

I asked Copilot if your girlfriend doing something wrong.

“No — she isn’t doing anything wrong. She is having normal conversations about the future, compatibility, and what she wants in a relationship. These are healthy topics for two adults who are considering being together.

The problem isn’t her behavior — it’s how his system interprets it.

When she talks about goals or uncertainty, he hears: “you’re not enough” “you’re about to be abandoned”
“you’re going to be rejected again”

She isn’t rejecting him — but his old wounds react as if she is…

His girlfriend is not the person who hurt him. But his body reacts as if she is. He needs to remind himself: ‘This is an old wound being touched. It’s not happening now.’

His problem is not indecision. It’s not compatibility. It’s not his girlfriend. It’s a scared nervous system that flips between: ‘I love her, don’t leave me’ and ‘I’m shutting down so you can’t hurt me'”

Next, I quoted to Copilot what you shared on Dec 19 & 22: “the relationship with my mother was very chaotic, violence and arguing constantly, throwing some awkward affection here and there, then rinse and repeat. I can’t remember if I was dissociating when I was a kid, definitely trying to escape in imaginary worlds and games though… I was the one she (your mother) was leaning on while confessing her issues with my father, relationship things and dislikes, to which I would only respond “just break up” because that was the only thing making sense to me at the age of 11.
She was like that to me too (attacking you physically), but since I am a male, I would fight back and things would escalate pretty badly, especially after my body started developing and I was able to overpower her… I dreamt of being loved and finding romance, since I was a pretty shy kid with no experience in girls until the age of 20.” and asked how this fits with the above analysis.

Copilot: “Here is the simplest, clearest way to connect his childhood story with everything we’ve already analyzed — all in one paragraph, in very simple language, without jargon:

His childhood explains his entire pattern: he grew up with a mother who was chaotic, violent, unpredictable, and emotionally needy, so he never learned what stable love feels like.

As a child he had to protect himself by shutting down, escaping into imaginary worlds, and carrying adult problems he wasn’t built to handle. He also learned that affection could suddenly turn into attack, so closeness and danger became mixed together in his nervous system.

Now, as an adult, when his girlfriend talks about the future or anything that feels like possible rejection, the same old fear gets triggered, and he goes numb to protect himself. And when something touches the deeper wound — like the “it’s not your fault” scene in Good Will Hunting — it hits the part of him that still feels unworthy, responsible, and scared of being left.

So, his current confusion isn’t about his girlfriend at all; it’s the old child‑self reacting to love the only way it learned to survive.”

Next, I asked: “is there a way for him to heal without addressing his childhood experience?”

Copilot: “No. He cannot fully heal without addressing his childhood experience. But he can make progress without diving into every detail of it.

His childhood is not ‘a story from the past’ — it is the operating system his nervous system still runs on. The chaos, fear, unpredictability, and emotional burden he carried as a child shaped how his body reacts to closeness, conflict, and love today. So, if he never looks at that wound, he will keep mistaking old fear for present truth, and every relationship will trigger the same cycle of numbness, panic, doubt, and longing.

He doesn’t need to relive every memory, but he does need to understand that his reactions come from an injured child‑self, not from the woman he’s dating. Without that understanding, he will keep thinking something is wrong with the relationship, when really, it’s the past replaying itself inside him.

Here’s the key distinction: He can feel better temporarily without addressing childhood.
(Distraction, avoidance, new relationships, emotional highs.)

But he cannot become stable, consistent, or emotionally secure without addressing it. Because the wound keeps running the show.

Healing doesn’t mean digging through trauma endlessly. It means learning to say: ‘Ah. This feeling is old. It’s not about her.’ That one shift changes everything.

He can feel temporary relief without touching childhood, but he cannot become emotionally stable without understanding that his childhood is still living inside him.

Let me put this in the clearest, least‑complicated way:

His childhood is not ‘a memory.’ It’s the blueprint his body still uses to decide what is safe and what is dangerous. When he was young love came mixed with fear, affection came mixed with violence, closeness came mixed with unpredictability, he had to protect himself by shutting down, he had to carry adult emotions he wasn’t built for, and he had no model of calm, steady, reliable connection.

So now, as an adult when someone he loves talks about the future → he feels danger, when he senses possible rejection → he shuts down, when he feels too close → he gets scared, when he feels too distant → he panics, and when something touches his shame (“it’s not your fault”) → he breaks open

This is not relationship confusion. This is a child‑self trying to survive inside an adult body.

So, can he heal without addressing childhood?

He can cope. He can distract himself. He can push feelings away. He can stay in relationships. He can function.

But he cannot stop the cycle — the numbness, panic, doubt, apathy, crying, longing — unless he understands that these reactions are old, not about the present.

He doesn’t need to dig through every memory. He doesn’t need to relive trauma.

He just needs to learn one thing: ‘This feeling is from the past. It is not about the person in front of me.’ That single shift is the beginning of real healing.”

End of conversation with Copilot.

I don’t think you ever addressed this old wound from your first 2 decades of life when living with your mother, did you, Confused?

🤍 Anita