Born Tired: Where Survival Meets Healing
Sometimes the most confusing part of growing up around abuse is not only the person causing harm. It is the silence surrounding it. The excuses, minimization, and the way everyone in the family quietly adjusts themselves around the dysfunction so life can continue without anyone fully naming what is happening. In this episode of Born Tired: Where Survival Meets Healing, I reflect on the role enablers play inside dysfunctional family systems and how those dynamics shape a child’s relationship with truth, safety, boundaries, and self trust. I talk about growing up with an alcoholic father and the emotional confusion that comes from watching harmful behavior repeatedly normalized by the people around it. The way children learn to read tension before they have language for it, the hypervigilance that develops when instability becomes part of daily life, and the psychological disorientation that happens when the harm is visible, but the environment encourages you to question your own perception of it. This episode explores how enabling often develops as a survival strategy inside dysfunctional homes. The ways family members smooth things over, protect the illusion of stability, encourage silence, or prioritize keeping the family together over confronting what is causing harm. I reflect on how some enablers are also victims themselves, and how holding compassion for that reality can still coexist with acknowledging the damage those dynamics create. I also talk about the long term nervous system impact of growing up in environments where emotional inconsistency becomes normalized. The way many survivors learn to prioritize attachment over self protection. How people pleasing, emotional overextension, difficulty setting boundaries, and hyper independence often begin as adaptations to childhood environments where stability depended on keeping other people emotionally regulated. This conversation reflects on the roles dysfunctional families unconsciously organize themselves around. The scapegoat. The enabler. The truth teller. And how the person who finally names the dysfunction often becomes viewed as disruptive simply because they stopped participating in the silence that allowed the system to continue functioning. At the same time, this episode is also about clarity, and understanding that the confusion many survivors carry was never a personal flaw. It was a natural response to growing up in environments where truth and denial existed side by side. I reflect on the process of rebuilding trust in your own instincts, learning that protecting your sense of reality is not betrayal, and recognizing that safe relationships do not require you to disappear in order to maintain connection. This episode is about breaking silence, and allowing yourself to acknowledge the full picture of what you lived through without minimizing it to protect the comfort of others. And about understanding that healing begins the moment truth no longer has to compete with denial just to exist. Because survivors deserve relationships where honesty is not punished, where boundaries are respected, and where safety does not depend on staying quiet. Gentle Reminder: This podcast includes conversations about trauma, alcoholism, addiction, emotional abuse, dysfunctional family systems, enabling, hypervigilance, parentification, mental health, and lived experiences. Listener discretion is advised. 🤍 Support the podcast: Buy Me a Coffee — https://buymeacoffee.com/mzd5yc89kkk 📌 Follow me: Instagram: @borntiredpodcast Threads: @borntiredpodcast TikTok: @borntiredpodcast Substack: https://substack.com/@borntiredpodcast Credits: Written & narrated by Eirene Torres Audio production by Carlos Torres Original music by Carlos Torres Disclaimer: Born Tired is a personal storytelling podcast based on lived experience. This content is not a substitute for professional mental health care and does not provide medical or clinical advice. If you are struggling or in crisis, please consider reaching out to a qualified mental health professional or local support services.
28 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Born Tired: Where Survival Meets Healing!