avatarZeenat Merchant Syal, M.A, M.Sc

Summary

The article discusses the process of unlearning dysfunctional love patterns and embracing self-love and healing to foster healthy relationships.

Abstract

The article "How to Unlearn & Heal from Dysfunctional Love" emphasizes the importance of understanding what constitutes healthy love, which is often confused with dysfunctional setups during childhood. It advocates for normalizing self-love and healing, suggesting that individuals are capable of overcoming their past traumas and pains to live their best lives. The author shares their personal journey of unlearning dysfunctional love and highlights the challenges of breaking old habits. The article encourages readers to identify and relabel these habits as dysfunctional to facilitate healing. It also provides reminders for continuous healing, such as embracing positive change, shedding old comforts, and practicing self-love daily. The author concludes with an affirmation of self-worth and invites readers to reflect on their definitions of love and the dysfunctions they've identified in their relationships.

Opinions

  • The author believes that many people grow up without a true understanding of love, often mistaking dysfunctional environments for normalcy.
  • Emotional and physical abuse in the household may have been wrongly accepted as normal love by individuals.
  • Unlearning dysfunctional love and learning to love oneself is challenging but crucial for healing.
  • The mind's preference for familiar, even dysfunctional, comforts can be a significant barrier to healing.
  • The process of healing involves recognizing and letting go of behaviors and relationships that do not serve one's highest good.
  • The author stresses that healing is a daily practice and an active choice to cultivate joy and reject unhealthy patterns.
  • Self-love is presented as a key component in healing from past dysfunction and building a life that aligns with one's desires.

How to Unlearn & Heal from Dysfunctional Love

Do you know really what healthy love looks like?

Photo by Elias Maurer on Unsplash

“Love does not dominate; it cultivates.” ~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Let’s normalise Self Love. Let’s normalise healing. Not only are you worthy of the love you did not recieve as a child, but you are capable of so much more in terms of living your best life.

Understanding Love

We all grew up not knowing what self love was. Honestly, we grew up not knowing what LOVE was to begin with. We accepted the fairy tale versions of love as definitions of real love. We accepted our dysfunctional setups as normal love.

If that meant living in emotionally and physically abusive households, we thought that was normal. Not anyone’s fault, it was all we knew.

It was our normal.

Only as adults who suffer from pains and traumas, do we realize that past was not normal. It was a dysfunctional setup, that fractured our emotional growth.

Photo by Jackson David on Unsplash

Unlearning Dysfunctional Love

Unlearning dysfunction and learning what it meant to love myself and others was difficult for me, as I am sure it is for you too. I lived decades of my life accepting mild attention as love. But, as I learned to love myself and truly understood the meaning of love, healing from old wounds and dysfunctional love became easier.

Mind you, there was a lot, a lot of back tracking. A lot of slipping into old bad habits that I thought were normal and comfortable. Unfortunately our mind loves old comforts, even if they are dysfunctional or detrimental to us.

👉That is why identifying those old comforts and re-labeling them as dysfunction is imperative.

Deciding to start healing from my past trauma, pain, and heartache changed my life for the better.

It wasn’t easy at first. And there are still days that are hard to push through — but I have learned so much about choosing joy and healing vs. staying stuck in unhealthy cycles and patterns.

Photo by Aditya Saxena on Unsplash

Constant Healing Reminders:

Today, as we normalize self love, as we normalize healing from dysfunction remember this:

1️⃣Positive change is possible and important for healing.

2️⃣Shedding old comforts is bound to happen as you live a self loving life.

3️⃣Trust yourself enough to let go of all that does not serve your highest good.

4️⃣Creating the life you want takes action. Simply reading or hearing how is not enough to create the life of your dreams. Doing is key.

5️⃣Choosing to love yourself is a daily practice. A practice in healing from past dysfunction.

Affirm to yourself daily:

“I AM worthy of healthy loving relationships even though I grew up in a toxic environment.”

💭❓Your Turn: What is your definition of love? How did you identify the dysfunctions in your relationships?

💗With Love, Zeenat Merchant Syal, M.A, M.Sc

🦋Connect with me on Faceboook | Instagram | Twitter | Linkedin | Pinterest🦋

💗Zeenat Merchant Syal is a Practicing Counseling Psychologist & Spiritual Counselor. She writes on Healing the Mind, Heart & Soul on Positive Provocations & offers Online Counseling there too.💗

Love
Relationships
Mental Health
Healing
Psychology
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