Birth Trauma and Relationships in Adulthood

Why your beginning in life still influences your relationships today

There is a quiet question many people carry within themselves — often for years:

Why do I feel insecure in relationships, even though I long for closeness?
Why am I afraid of being abandoned — or pull away when things become too intense?
Why do certain patterns keep repeating, even though I’ve already recognized them?

And at some point, a thought arises: “What is actually wrong with me?”

The truth is: There is far more right with you than you think.

Because many of these patterns don’t begin in the present moment. They begin much earlier — at the very start of your life.

The moment you don’t remember — but your body does

Birth is the first major experience of transition. From complete safety… into a world of stimulation, pressure, and separation. The psychoanalyst Otto Rank, a student of Sigmund Freud, was one of the first to recognize that birth is not only a physical process, but also a deeply formative emotional experience.

For a newborn, this moment means:

  • a sudden loss of safety

  • intense physical sensations

  • the first experience of separation

  • a state of complete dependency

And here is the key point: The system does not store this as a memory - it stores it as a feeling. A feeling of:
“I am safe” — or “I am not safe.”

Why your nervous system still reacts today

If this first transition was experienced as stressful, overwhelming, or unsafe, a basic state can become anchored in the nervous system:

  • “I am alone”

  • “I have to adapt”

  • “I have to do something to maintain connection”

These states don’t appear later as conscious thoughts. They show up as: reactions, emotions, relationship patterns

Typical patterns — explained more deeply

Fear of abandonment “Please don’t leave…”

Often, this is the echo of the original experience of separation at birth. The system unconsciously remembers: “Connection can suddenly disappear.”

Real-life example:
A woman feels anxious when her partner withdraws or doesn’t respond immediately. Objectively, nothing has happened — but internally it feels like an emotional collapse Not because her partner is actually leaving, but because her nervous system has stored separation as a threat to survival.

Fear of intimacy “Closeness suddenly feels too much”

This may sound paradoxical - but it isn’t. If early closeness was associated with stress, overwhelm, or insecurity, the system may later respond with: “Too much closeness = danger.”

Example:
A man deeply desires a relationship. But as soon as it becomes real, he feels restless, distances himself, or starts doubting everything. Not because he cannot love - but because his nervous system does not recognize closeness as safe.

Emotional dependency “Without you, I am not complete”

This often originates from an early state where the system learned: “I cannot regulate myself on my own.”

A baby is completely dependent on its caregiver. If that regulation was inconsistent or insecure, this can later lead to:

  • strong attachment to others

  • fear of being alone

  • a sense of inner emptiness without another person

Over-adaptation — safety through adjustment

This is not about control. It is about something much more subtle: “I adapt to stay safe.”
The system learns early:

  • “I must behave correctly to be safe”

  • “I must not be a burden”

  • “I must meet expectations”

Example:
A woman immediately senses how others feel, adapts, avoids conflict, and puts herself aside. Not out of weakness - but because her nervous system learned: “Adaptation preserves connection.”

The feeling of “not being enough” — how it develops

This is one of the most central patterns. It rarely appears out of nowhere. It is often reinforced over years through caregivers:

  • parents who criticize instead of reflecting

  • grandparents who compare

  • teachers who evaluate instead of truly seeing

  • environments that normalize conformity

Typical messages may sound like:

  • “The way you are is not enough.”

  • “You can do better.”

  • “Why aren’t you like others?”

  • “Try harder.”

And most importantly: Love becomes conditional.

  • praise only for performance

  • attention only for “good behavior”

  • withdrawal when mistakes happen

The child learns: “I am loved when I am right.” “I am not enough as I am.”

Why these patterns are so powerful

Because they are not thoughts. They are stored in the nervous system.

This means:

  • they run automatically

  • they feel “true”

  • they are difficult to change through willpower alone

A vivid overall example

Imagine a woman: She is successful, empathetic, and self-aware - yet she repeatedly finds herself in relationships where she loses herself.

  • she adapts

  • she senses others instantly

  • she fears never being enough

  • she doubts herself when distance appears

Inside, an invisible program is running: “I must adapt to be loved.” “If I am not enough, I will lose connection.” This program is not logical. It is embodied.

Why you can’t just “change it”

Maybe you have already understood a lot. Reflected. Analyzed. And yet, sometimes you still feel the same. That’s because these patterns don’t live in your thinking mind. They live in your nervous system.

They are:

  • embodied

  • automatic

  • deeply stored

And here comes the relief: When you truly understand this, something shifts. You don’t have to “fix” yourself.
You can begin to understand yourself.

What becomes possible now

These patterns are not mistakes. They are: old survival strategies
At some point, your system decided: “This is how I stay safe.” And back then - that was right. But today, you are no longer that child.

And your system can learn something new:

  • that closeness can be safe

  • that you are allowed to remain who you are

  • that you don’t have to perform to be worthy

  • that connection doesn’t disappear when you are yourself

How real change happens

Not through pressure. Not through force.

But through:

  • safety in the nervous system

  • access to the subconscious

  • new emotional experiences

This is where the combination of hypnosis and frequency work becomes so powerful. It brings you into the state
where your system is ready to let go.

The moment something shifts

Many people describe it in a similar way: “It suddenly becomes quiet inside.” “I no longer react the way I used to.” “I stay connected to myself.”

And from that space, something new emerges:

  • clarity

  • self-worth

  • inner freedom

A new way of seeing yourself

Perhaps, as you read this, you can already feel: It’s not because you are “too much” or “not enough” or “too sensitive” or “not strong enough”. Maybe your system was simply very intelligent. And maybe this is the moment you begin to see yourself differently.

If you feel that your relationship patterns run deeper and you truly want to change them, I would be honored to support you.

Through hypnosis and frequency work, I help you:

  • regulate your nervous system

  • realign your subconscious

  • reconnect with your inner strength

Book your free initial consultation and experience what change from within can truly feel like.

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