Pattern Breakers Collective
What happens when the man who emotionally hurt you for years suddenly changes… after you finally try to leave? In this deeply personal episode of Pattern Breakers Collective, Lisa responds to a real message from a listener who ended a 20-year marriage after recognizing emotional abuse, financial abuse, sexual coercion, narcissistic relationship patterns, and years of survival-based living. Now she’s left asking the questions so many women silently carry: • If he changed, was it really abuse? • Why do I still miss him? • Why do I still feel confused after leaving? • Why does healing feel so disorienting? • How do I find myself again after years of losing myself in marriage, motherhood, and survival? Lisa breaks down the psychological reality of trauma bonds, emotional abuse, coercive control, narcissistic relationship dynamics, sexual pressure in long-term marriages, grief after divorce, nervous system healing, and identity loss after toxic relationships. This episode explores: * Why abusive partners sometimes “change” after consequences appear * The difference between accountability and consequence management * Sexual coercion and emotional pressure inside marriage * Why women often minimize abuse for years * Trauma bonding and why leaving feels emotionally devastating * The grief of losing yourself inside a relationship * Rebuilding identity after emotional abuse or narcissistic abuse * Healing after divorce and long-term toxic relationships * How to reconnect with yourself after years of survival mode If you’ve ever felt emotionally alone in your marriage, questioned your own reality, struggled with leaving a toxic relationship, or wondered why healing feels so complicated… this episode is for you. You are not weak for grieving. You are not crazy for feeling conflicted. And you are not alone in the in-between. Please share this episode with someone who may need it, and leave a review wherever you listen to podcasts. It helps more women find these conversations and reminds survivors they are not alone. National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-7233
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