Tag: toxic

  • Breaking Free: A Woman’s Guide to Unlearning Toxic Behaviors

    Breaking Free: A Woman’s Guide to Unlearning Toxic Behaviors

    In a world that often places huge expectations on women, it’s easy to develop patterns of behavior that might seem protective or necessary but ultimately hold us back from living authentically and joyfully. Whether these behaviors were modeled to us, taught as survival mechanisms, or developed as coping strategies, recognizing and unlearning them is a powerful step toward personal freedom.

    What toxic patterns cost you

    Many women navigate life carrying behavioral patterns that silently drain their energy, damage relationships, and limit their potential. These aren’t character flaws—they’re learned responses that once served a purpose but may now be causing more harm than good.

    Research from the American Psychological Association suggests that women are particularly vulnerable to internalizing certain behaviors due to societal expectations and gendered upbringing. The good news? With awareness and intention, these patterns can be unlearned.

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    5 Common Toxic Behaviors Women Can Unlearn

    1. People-Pleasing at Your Own Expense

    Saying “yes” when you want to say “no,” prioritizing others’ comfort over your own needs, and feeling responsible for everyone else’s feelings.

    The Unlearning Toxic Behaviors Process:

    • Start with small boundaries in low-risk situations
    • Practice pausing before responding to requests
    • Create a script for declining invitations or requests
    • Remind yourself that others’ disappointment is not your responsibility to fix

    “Setting boundaries isn’t selfish—it’s necessary for authentic relationships,” says Dr. Marisa Franco, psychologist and friendship expert. “When we constantly please others at our expense, we build resentment that ultimately damages the very relationships we’re trying to preserve.”

    2. Negative Self-Talk and Harsh Self-Criticism

    You may hold yourself to impossible standards, speak to yourself in ways you’d never speak to a friend, and fixate on perceived flaws or mistakes.

    The Unlearning Process:

    • Notice your inner discussion without judgment
    • Question the truth of negative statements (“Would I say this to someone I love?”)
    • Replace criticism with compassionate accountability
    • Practice daily self-compassion exercises

    Studies show that women tend to be more self-critical than men, particularly about appearance and achievement. Breaking this cycle begins with recognizing that perfectionism isn’t the path to excellence—it’s often the barrier.

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    3. Apologizing for Existing

    Saying “sorry” for things that aren’t your fault, apologizing before expressing an opinion, or feeling the need to make yourself smaller in spaces.

    The Unlearning Process:

    • Count your “sorrys” for one day to build awareness
    • Replace unnecessary apologies with gratitude or straightforward statements
    • Remind yourself of your right to exist entirely in every room

    “When women constantly apologize for things that don’t warrant apology, we reinforce the belief that our presence requires justification,” notes social psychologist Dr. Maja Djikic. “This subtle habit shapes how others perceive us and, more importantly, how we perceive ourselves.”

    4. Comparison and Competition with Other Women

    Viewing other women as threats rather than allies, measuring your worth against others’ achievements, and feeling diminished by others’ success.

    The Unlearning Process:

    • Actively celebrate other women’s victories
    • Seek collaborative rather than competitive relationships
    • Identify your unique strengths and contributions
    • Surround yourself with women who lift each other up

    The scarcity mindset—believing there’s only so much success, recognition, or love to go around—keeps women isolated. In reality, when we support each other, we all rise.

    5. Dismissing Your Intuition

    Ignoring gut feelings, doubting your perceptions, and prioritizing external validation over internal knowing.

    The Unlearning Process:

    • Practice checking in with your body’s signals
    • Make small decisions based on inner guidance
    • Question whose voice you’re listening to when you override your instincts

    Your intuition is a powerful ability formed from a subconscious pattern, recognition, and embodied wisdom. Learning to trust it again is a revolutionary act of self-reclamation. Ignoring your intuition shows you don’t trust yourself.

    Creating your unlearning practice

    Unlearning is not a one-time event but a continuous practice of awareness and intentional change. Here’s how to create sustainable transformation:

    1. Start with compassionate awareness. Notice patterns without judgment.
    2. Identify the original purpose these behaviors served—they developed for a reason.
    3. Create alternative responses that honor both your needs and those of others.
    4. Find community support with women on similar journeys.
    5. Celebrate small shifts rather than expecting overnight transformation.

    Remember that unlearning toxic patterns isn’t about becoming perfect—it’s about creating space for authenticity, joy, and connection. Each small step toward healthier patterns ripples outward, affecting not just your life but the lives of women around you.

    When to seek additional support

    While personal reflection and practice are powerful tools for change, sometimes professional support can accelerate healing. Consider working with a therapist or coach if:

    • You find yourself returning to the same patterns despite your best efforts
    • The behaviors are connected to past trauma
    • You’re experiencing significant anxiety or depression alongside these patterns
    • You want structured support in your unlearning journey

    Moving forward from unlearning to new possibilities

    You create space for new possibilities on your journey to unlearning toxic behaviors that no longer serve you. Many women report feeling lighter, more authentic, and more connected after addressing even one toxic pattern.

    “The most beautiful thing about unlearning,” says author and women’s advocate Glennon Doyle, “is discovering who you are beneath the layers of who you were taught to be.”

    Your journey of unlearning isn’t just personal—it’s political. Each woman who reclaims her authentic self helps create a world where other women can do the same. As you break free from limiting patterns, you become a living invitation for others to do the same.

    What toxic pattern will you begin unlearning today?

  • How to Recognize You’re Being Breadcrumbed

    How to Recognize You’re Being Breadcrumbed

    Dating in today’s society has become more challenging than ever. Nowadays everyone is jaded and it is exhausting, but being breadcrumbed can be even more exhausting. It’s good to indicate the signs early and have the important conversations in the beginning. When someone won’t communicate that they’re not interested in you, but wants to keep your attention, they breadcrumb you.

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    What exactly is breadcrumbing? Why are people doing it?

    What is breadcrumbing?

    Breadcrumbing is when someone gives you the bare minimum, just enough to keep you around, leaving you confused and anxious about where you stand in their lives. Typically, they might’ve lost interest or were never interested in the first place. That does not always have to do with you. Psychology Today defines breadcrumbing as a term for for stringing someone along with small nuggets of communication—but never fully committing to a relationship.

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    Breadcrumbing can be intentional or unintentional depending on how self-aware the person doing the breadcrumbing is. Master manipulators and narcisissts are well-known for breadcrumbing and leading people on. Again, being breadcrumbed is not something to blame yourself for. It is a manipulation tactic most cowards who are not good at communicating result to. They tend to have a pattern of breadcrumbing, ghosting, and gaslighting.

    Signs of Breadcrumbing:

    • Inconsistency
    • Often go missing for hours or days at a time
    • Not following through with plans
    • View/like your social media posts without responding to you
    • Ignoring the process of trying to make plans with you
    • You never know where you stand with them
    • Avoid the “committment” conversation
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    Why do people breadcrumb?

    Most of the time they just aren’t ready for a relationship and the responsibility that comes with it. Sometimes people are in a space or not mature enough for responsibility, no matter what age they are.

    Feeding off of the attention they get from you. It is indeed a form of manipulation, and if ignored will lead to emotional abuse.

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    They like you but they aren’t ready to commit. They don’t like you and aren’t ready to commit. Either way, they’re doing just enough to keep you around. Narcissists are popular for treating people this way, as they have a “player” approach to dating and are often only thinking of themselves.

    How to avoid breadcrumbing

    It’s important to recognize the signs and address them right away. You must have standards and boundaries and not settle for anything less. Trust your instincts. If you feel that you are being treated poorly, its important to communicate those feelings and leave when necessary. You are the only person that sets the standards and expectations for how people treat you.

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    However, it is important to know that when someone is breadcrumbing you, it is a reflection of their character, not yours. Being breadcrumbed absolutely sucks, but it is good to identify it early so that you can dodge that [potentially long-lasting] bullet. Your self-love has to be stronger than your loneliness. If you’re feeling confused or hurt, remember that someone who truly values you would not treat you that way.

  • Different Types of Soul Ties: Identifying and Breaking Them

    Different Types of Soul Ties: Identifying and Breaking Them

    Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

    First things first, let’s identify…

    What is a soul tie?

    In simple words, most would people identify a soul tie as a magnet/unity/spiritual connection between two people. According to Mindbodygreen.com, A soul tie is a connection with someone deeply embedded into your soul. A third definition is an emotional/spiritual bond that can make it hard to separate from another being.

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    Although, the most popular soul tie that people are aware of is the physical soul tie that stems from sexual intercourse. What people don’t know is that there can be platonic ones as well. There are healthy soul ties, and then there are unhealthy soul ties. Ever wonder why you can’t step away from someone? When someone you know is toxic and you know you should end it, but can’t seem to do it? It’s most likely is a soul tie.

    Remember…when God and/or the Universe doesn’t want you with someone, your souls will never be at peace together.

    Different Types of soul ties & How they are formed

    You have what is defined as Godly soul ties and Ungodly soul ties…

    • Godly: A connection in the spiritual realm that brings beneficial consequences. Stemming from biological, sexual/physical touch (Ex: parent & child and/or husband & wife).
    • Ungodly: A soul tie that goes against God’s plan, usually brought on by demons (Ex: Sex outside of marriage and/or toxic situations).

    You don’t have to be religious to determine which of these are healthy versus unhealthy.

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    • Physical: As humans, we crave physical touch whether it be a sexual act or a simple hug, which can create and bond and also keep you bonded with a person.
    • Emotional: Sharing feelings, experiences, and going through ups and downs with someone can really strengthen a bond and also create a tie. This explains why it may be hard to cut ties with someone you share an emotional soul tie with.
    • Spiritual: Since we are spiritual beings, this soul tie usually forms when you have a spiritual or emotional relationship with someone, it transforms into something deeper/powerful creating that spiritual soul tie.
    • Social: This usually forms through settings of social interactions, usually with friends or coworkers.
    • Permanent soul ties: When two souls merge without the agreement of each other. Usually, they are aware of it and deal with this soul tie on a more conscious level.

    Key factor: You can have soul ties with multiple people who also aren’t your soulmate.

    Different types of soul ties: Healthy vs Unhealthy Soul ties

    Although I want badly to say “you’ll know” when most people ask the difference between a healthy soul tie vs an unhealthy one, I’m going to list the main points to help differentiate between one another below:

    You’ll know its an unHealthy soul tie when:

    • You want to leave, but can’t…
    • You’re beginning to lose yourself…
    • The energy is off…
    • You feel constant negative emotions…
    • The connection is draining…
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    You’ll know its a healthy soul tie when:

    • You feel connected on a deeper level
    • They feel familiar/comfortable
    • They complete you/you feel like yourself around them
    • You get positive benefits vs negative from being around them
    • You crave their presence/constantly want to be around them

    How can I Break a soul tie?

    Although we identify the different types of soul ties, we can acknowledge that losing or trying to get rid of a connection whether you’re trying to break a soul tie or you’re trying to heal, isn’t easy. The first step would be to acknowledge the soul tie, then take proper action. Here are a few ways to break those unwanted soul ties or the ones that are no longer serving you.

    • Meditate – release this person through the art of meditation
    • Spirit work – Talk to the universe or spirit guides about this person and let them know that you want to get rid of this connection.
    • Talk to the person’s soul – Tell the person that the connection is going to end, they might not hear it but their soul will.

    Of course, this stuff won’t work if you’re not willing to do the work. You can’t just wish the connection away and if you truly want to get rid of this soul tie, you must also back up anything that you ask the universe for.

    Attraction is flesh, connection is soul.