I am learning more about my little girl and the many ways she has tried to protect me.
For years, she whispered stories born of fear: You can’t trust people. You can’t trust yourself. You are not enough.
Those stories held me hostage for much of my life. None of them were true, but I didn’t know that then. I believed them.
Recovery changed that. Slowly, those emotional wounds began to heal, and my relationship with myself transformed. I learned self-compassion. I learned trust. I learned love for myself and others.
But my clever little girl found another way to protect me.
She moved into my body.
When pain arrived, she filled my mind with frightening stories. She kept me searching, fixing, trying harder. Doctor after doctor. Treatment after treatment. Yet nothing seemed to help.
Today, I see it more clearly.
It was never about my body.
It was about a frightened child and a nervous system that had been once again, trying to keep me safe.
How does a little girl protect herself?
She makes her world smaller.
When pain comes, she wants to pull inward. Stay home. Stay focused on her body. Figure out how to make the pain go away.
Just as she once taught me not to trust others, she now tries to protect me by keeping me confined.
But I see her now.
And I understand.
Fear does not get to decide the size of my life.
My little girl no longer gets to be my protector.
She gets to be what she always was—a sweet, sensitive child who deserves love, safety, and freedom.
My protector is no longer fear.
My protector is intuition.
And intuition always leads me toward life.