If you have found your way here because you’ve lived through emotional abuse, physical abuse coercive control, or narcissistic abuse, I want to start by saying this plainly:
There is nothing wrong with you.
What you are experiencing makes sense.
You are not broken, in need of fixing. You are deeply hurt, in need of care.
— Dr. Arielle Schwartz
Many people arrive here with a sense of confusion rather than clear answers. You may have felt for a long time that something wasn’t right, even if you couldn’t put words to it.
You may still find yourself going over conversations, questioning your reactions, or wondering whether you misunderstood what happened.
That constant self-doubt is not a personal failing. It is one of the most common effects of being in a relationship where your reality was repeatedly questioned, minimised, or dismissed.
Narcissistic abuse is rarely obvious from the outside. It often shows up quietly — through being talked down to, subtly blamed, emotionally shut out, or made responsible for another person’s feelings. Over time, this can leave you second-guessing yourself, monitoring your behaviour, and working hard to avoid conflict or disapproval.
Many survivors recognise themselves in experiences such as:
- doubting their own judgement, even in small, everyday decisions
- feeling constantly on edge, or conversely numb and disconnected
- anxiety that lingers even when things appear calm
- needing reassurance before trusting their own choices
- a sense of shame or guilt that doesn’t seem to belong to them
- grief for the person they were before, or for what they hoped the relationship could become
These responses are not signs of weakness. They are understandable adaptations to a prolonged lack of emotional safety.
What this work is about
The work offered here begins from a simple understanding: recovery from narcissistic abuse does not start with analysing the other person, pushing for insight, or being told to let go and move on.
It starts with helping your system feel safe again.
This approach is slow, structured, and led by nervous‑system regulation. Rather than forcing change, we work in a way that allows clarity and self‑trust to return gradually, at a pace your body can tolerate.
This is not a space where you are expected to retell your story over and over.
It is not focused on diagnosing or dissecting the person who harmed you.
And it is not about fixing you.
Instead, the work supports you to:
- settle a nervous system that has been living on high alert
- loosen the grip of internalised blame and chronic self‑doubt
- reconnect with your own perceptions, limits, and timing
- begin relating from choice rather than fear, obligation, or appeasement
- regain a sense of internal steadiness and authority
For many people, the most noticeable shift is not an emotional breakthrough, but a quieter one: realising that their body is no longer bracing for something to go wrong.
A contained and respectful space
This website — and the work it describes — is intentionally calm.
There is no urgency here.
No pressure to share more than you want to.
No assumption that you are ready to take any particular step.
If you decide to explore further, you will find a clear, boundaried, trauma‑informed approach designed specifically for people recovering from relational coercion and narcissistic abuse. The pace is deliberate. The structure is steady. Your autonomy is central throughout.
You are welcome to take your time.
You are welcome to read and then leave.
You are welcome to come back later, or not at all.
This space exists because recovery should not repeat the conditions that caused the harm in the first place.