The Wound That Keeps Reopening
Every time you check her social media, every time you text and wait, every time you drive by hoping to "accidentally" run into her you're reopening the wound.
This isn't weakness. But it is preventing you from healing. You can't detach from something you keep re-engaging with.
What Counts As Injury
Your nervous system doesn't distinguish between "just looking" and full contact. To your body, these all register as micro-hits that keep the bond active:
- Checking her social media, even "just once"
- Texting to test, seeing if she'll respond
- Asking mutual friends about her, information is another hit
- Replaying memories, your brain treats the past like the present
- Strategizing how to get her back, planning is still pursuing
Every check resets the clock on your nervous system. You're not failing at detachment. You're actively re-attaching every time you chase information.
Containment, Not Weakness
Blocking her isn't running away. It's protecting yourself while your nervous system learns new patterns.
- Muting or blocking, not because you're weak, but because you're building strength
- Deleting her number, you can get it back later if you actually need it
- Setting physical boundaries, no "accidentally" being where she might be
- Creating friction, make it harder to check, not easier
The Injury Audit
List every way you're currently keeping the wound open:
1. What do you check? How often?
2. What are you hoping to find?
3. What would actually help you feel better right now not momentary relief, but actual progress?
Ready for the next lesson?
Make sure you've completed the workbook exercises before moving on.
Continue to Lesson 3 →