
Is Your Relationship Emotionally Safe?
Not every unhealthy relationship is abusive.
Not every conflict means your relationship is doomed.
And not every difficult season means you should leave.
But emotional safety matters.

Not every unhealthy relationship is abusive.
Not every conflict means your relationship is doomed.
And not every difficult season means you should leave.
But emotional safety matters.

It’s one of the most confusing emotional experiences:
You know someone wasn’t good for you—maybe even harmful—and yet… you miss them.
Not just occasionally. Deeply. Viscerally. Sometimes to the point where it makes you question your own judgment.
This isn’t weakness. It isn’t lack of insight. And it definitely isn’t proof that the relationship was actually “good.”
It’s attachment—and often, trauma.

arenting a teenager can feel like walking a tightrope. Lean too far in one direction and you risk becoming overly controlling; lean too far in the other and you may unintentionally leave your teen without the guidance they still need. Many parents find themselves caught between two extremes: the “helicopter parent” and the “permissive parent.”

Many people use the phrase “attachment disorder,” but in adult relationships, we’re more often talking about attachment wounds—patterns of relating that developed in response to early caregiving experiences. These early experiences shape how safe—or unsafe—connection feels.

Deciding to go to therapy as a couple isn’t always obvious. Many people assume couples therapy is only for relationships in crisis—but in reality, it can be helpful long before things reach that point. In fact, the earlier couples seek support, the more options they often have.

Dating someone with bipolar disorder can be deeply meaningful, intense, and at times—confusing. You may find yourself thinking, “I know who they are… but sometimes it feels like they’re a completely different person.”
That experience is more common than people talk about. And it doesn’t mean your relationship is doomed—it means you’re navigating something complex that requires understanding, boundaries, and emotional steadiness.

If you’re parenting a teen who seems both deeply sensitive and constantly overwhelmed, who can hyperfocus for hours but also forget basic tasks, who craves structure yet resists it—you might be looking at something called AuDHD.

People often say they want better communication in their relationships, but few people actually know what that means. Many couples imagine healthy communication looks like calm voices, perfect understanding, and quick resolution.
In reality, healthy communication is often messier, slower, and more intentional than people expect.
It involves dialogue, negotiation, sacrifice, and sometimes even taking breaks when emotions run too high. It also requires understanding the ways our attachment styles and past experiences shape how we show up in conflict.

How fast is too fast?
When should you define it?
When should you move in?
When should you say “I love you”?
But healthy love isn’t built on a timeline. It’s built on attunement.
And often, the loudest voices telling you to “slow down” or “hurry up” aren’t coming from wisdom — they’re coming from fear.

Most adults don’t walk into relationships thinking, “I can’t wait to reenact my childhood wounds.”
And yet — we do.
Not because we’re broken.
Not because we’re dramatic.
But because unresolved trauma doesn’t disappear. It reorganizes itself.