Beyond Insecurity: How Spiritual Wounds Shape Your Adult Relationships (and What to Do About It)

Have you ever wondered why you constantly attract people who need "fixing"? Or why, no matter how much you do for your church or spouse, it never feels like enough? We often dismiss this as just "being insecure"—but what if your insecurity is actually a map pointing directly to your deepest childhood wound? In this video, we go beyond standard relationship advice to look at the intersection of spiritual trauma and attachment theory. Using frameworks from behavioral expert Chase Hughes, we uncover how "good Christian" behaviors—like over-serving, rigid truth-telling, or constant crisis—are often survival masks for deep emotional pain. If you are tired of performing for love or fighting for control, this video will help you trace the fruit back to the root so you can finally heal. In This Video, We Cover: 🕊️ The "Good Christian" Mask: Why the need for approval is actually a Wound of Unworthiness. 🛡️ The "Truth Teller" Mask: How theological rigidity protects us from the Wound of Powerlessness. 🚑 The "Crisis" Mask: Why spiritual chaos can sometimes be a cry to be seen (Wound of Invisibility). 🧠 Somatic Safety: Practical tools to stop the trauma response in its tracks and regulate your nervous system. Recommended Next: 📺 Is It Trauma or Spiritual Attack? https://youtu.be/5SMBwoNkrpE 📺 Trauma Responses Aren't Weakness https://youtu.be/emZJKfj8BBo #spiritualtrauma #attachmentwounds #christiancounseling #childhoodtrauma #relationshipadvice #somatichealing #elishasspace #chasehughes #mentalhealth

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