Verification: 7240dec21618b03b

Trauma Bonding & the Narcissist – Twisted Attachment

emotional-rollar-coasterFeeling attached to a narcissist or sociopath even though he treats us badly is a constant source of angst for those in recovery from toxic relationships. Victims want to know why…why can’t I just let go of this guy? Why can’t I move on? Why am I obsessed with no closure? Why do I feel so connected to someone who feels no connection to me? One logical answer to this is that we’re normal and they’re not and normal people want to fix things that are broken so that they work again.

The problem, of course, is that a narcissist can’t be fixed because he was never right to begin with. In essence, the narcissist isn’t really broken at all. He simply is what he is and what he is is no good. This being true, what do we do, after a Discard, when we can’t shake the feeling of being only ½ a person without him…of feeling utterly attached even when we’re apart and even when he’s with someone else? Why can’t we disconnect from the Bad Man? Well, there is an answer to this for those who seek a deeper psychological reason for the suffering and it’s a condition often referred to as trauma bonding.

Zari’s on YouTube – Subscribe Today!

When we think of trauma bonding, we typically associate it with The Stockholm Syndrome (TSS) – a condition named after a real-life situation where a group of hostages became emotionally attached to their kidnapers. TSS, however, although certainly similar to trauma bonding, typically occurs in life-threatening situations where the victim is literally in fear of dying at the hands of her toxic, abusive partner. Trauma bonding is more descriptive of the attachment dilemma that occurs from the type of trauma caused to our emotions (i.e. betrayal and neglect, over and over and over). It’s the type of bonding that can easily occur via passive-aggressive manipulation (i.e. sex, lies, silent treatments) and other forms of narcissistic control.

When-love-is-a-lie
Click Image to Order via Amazon

The narcissist partner, as cunning as he or she is, understands the process for streamlining a victim’s codependency to point of least resistance. He has actually figured out – without a single day of formal training – that the best way to ensure narcissistic supply is to create trauma bonds with his targets via the method of “seduce and discard”.  He has figured out an easy way to turn us into a narcissist’s enabler.

The conditioning that leads to trauma bonding focuses on two powerful sources of reinforcement recurring in succession over and over and at perfectly timed intervals. Psychologists call this reinforcement the ‘arousal-jag’ which actually refers to the excitement before the trauma (arousal) and the peace of surrender afterwards (jag). Take a second to reflect on the narcissist’s behaviors. Creating trauma bonds is what he’s been doing his whole life!

‘Arousal-jag’ reinforcement is all about giving a little and then taking it away over and over and over in well timed intervals. Narcissists do this all the time (disappearing/reappearing, silence/chaos) whereby creating an illusion of twisted excitement that reinforces the traumatic bond between us and them. And to be clear, the narcissist feels a connection here as well only his connection is to the excitement alone and not to us. This is why a narcissist always has multiple partners because it doubles and triples his excitement factor. The fact that we – as his victims – become so attached to the chaos that we’ll eagerly await a hoover is quite an added bonus!

Are you getting it yet??

The excitement before the trauma (of betrayal and neglect) is created during the devalue stage…that point in time right before a discard when our intuition has already told us he’s going to leave based on his behaviors. It’s that knot-in-the-stomach feeling, the overwhelming urge to call his phone 100 times, the torment of cognitive dissonance…. it’s the hours spent scouring the internet looking for clues…it’s the feeling we get from the chaos that a narcissist ALWAYS creates right before the silence. Like it or not, we become highly addicted to his narcissistic behaviors and all of the nonsense that goes with it… and we miss it like a motherfucker when it’s gone…when, suddenly, the narcissist goes silent. We long for the connection – as manipulated and fabricated as it is – until we can barely breathe. Then, right before we either kill ourselves or come to our senses, in swoops the narcissist once again – like a Phoenix rising – to give us the second reinforcement: the peace of surrender that happens afterwards. His reappearance is meticulously timed for maximum effect and usually follows a silent treatment that has lasted just a tad longer than the one before. The narcissist is conditioning us to accept less and less so he can get away with more each time he vanishes.

Click Here to Download When Love Is a Lie
from Amazon Today – $5.99

Either way, this second dose of reinforcement – the peace of surrender – is absolutely heaven! Again, it’s an addiction – to the narcissist and the make-up sex, to the vanishing of our anxiety, and to the feeling of calmness and euphoria we get from knowing that, once again, we’ve been given a reprieve to breathe until the cycle repeats again. Seduce and discard…seduce and discard…till the end of all fucking time. And, at the moment it’s happening, we’re actually okay with that! In fact, there’s no place in the world we’d rather be.

As I am writing this, I am realizing that my ex worked very, very hard at trauma bonding. In fact, he was a Master at it, subjecting me to silent treatments (two weeks on/two weeks off) like clockwork, for months at a time, and with no explanation at all. In addition, from mid-October to mid-January every year for 13 years he made like Houdini and fell completely off the grid.  And right before leaving, he’d ramp up the chaos, making me feel horribly anxious and angry yet desperate for his attention. But I was addicted to it and he knew it.  Wayne knew exactly what he was doing!

Our addiction to the narcissistic chaos and then to the reprieve also explains why we find it so hard to maintain No Contact and/or to move on into new relationships after it’s over. No one excites us in quite the same way or with the same intensity as a toxic partner. Via trauma bonding, we become the suffering and the suffering becomes us. We forget what normalcy feels like. We stop differentiating between good excitement and bad excitement. The chaos and turmoil becomes almost as big a turn-on for us as it does for the N.

If we look back on or inward on (if we’re still in it) our relationship, we see that at the moment the Idolize Phase ends, the trauma bonding began. We may not have even known this but you can be sure that the narcissist did. As time passed and the narcissistic partner became more successful at managing down our expectations of the relationship, our connection to the nonsense began to stick like super glue. But now that we know it….that there is a name for that strange hold this bizarre person had over us..we can make sure it never happens to us again. If we’re still in the relationship, then we can get out (and fast!) because, unlike a hostage victim who trauma bonds with a kidnapper, we are NOT being held at gunpoint and we CAN escape. Let us be grateful for that fact and do what we need to do to save our sanity.

 

(Visited 171,816 times, 1 visits today)

125 Comments

  • Nicky

    August 22, 2018 at 10:06 pm Reply

    You need to be aware of solid patterns in that relationship to get free and to stay free and get selftrust again to trust on your own intuition. Maybe a mentor or guide wh is at home in this kind of symbiotic realtionships. There is no devolopment in it and growth and it costs time and understanding

  • T. Huisman

    August 22, 2018 at 10:02 pm Reply

    It is not a concious process. I think you need a guide to get rid of and in this relationship . It is an unconcious habit you get used to. More selftrust and awareness.. There are patterns you need to be aware of but it is not easy as it seems to be. .

  • lorraine clayton

    August 21, 2018 at 10:05 am Reply

    I am now 3 month on from my narc husband of 26 year relationship and i am finally i think beginning to like myself again he has ramped up the emotional blackmail to make me sell the house by continuing with the suspected cancer and brain tumour story which i have now played detective and found out by following to his appointment was a pack of lies and he was at a orthopeadic clinic his face dropped when i walked in and he went on defense mode but insisted on telling me how much weight he,d lost how much running he,d done how great his life was and pretending to itch his stomach to show off his abs (non there) for the first time ever i told him how discgusting he was to lie about his illness to myself and our daughter. I apologised to the nursing staff for wasting there time on such a pathetic cretin and left to which 10 minutes later he was screaming down the phone to me to not call him names because he was brilliant. 4 times i put the phone down he then rang our daughter shouting at her saying she was a liar and he was coming home to sort it out. 20 minutes later he appeared raging with anger cause he had been found out and i had for once confronted him he then proceeded to push me about got a knife out waving it at us and threatened to cave my skull in. I answered back with the simplest of answers leave this house dont come back and do not ring contact or come round again. I then rang the police who have interviews him and now the only way he can contact us is through a solicitor . I hope i am getting their now with the discard its like a bereavement but on another level. I do not like him he makes me sick i cannot wish him well with his future because he is only concerned with superficial people who he thinks adore him but i have now found out from alot of people that they never liked him any way they only spoke to him cause he was with me. im a little embarrassed about this but i,ll have to get over this fact and move on for the sake of my daughter and me

  • Danielle

    August 8, 2018 at 2:16 pm Reply

    I’m currently with a narcissist and it is the hardest things I have ever gone through. I have never thought about suicide before until now. I am so glad I am getting answers. I want to get out and I always asked why I can’t. And this helps so much! Thank you.

    • Zari Ballard

      August 12, 2018 at 12:50 am Reply

      Your welcome, Danielle! Stay strong and stay the course!

  • lorraine clayton

    August 3, 2018 at 9:50 am Reply

    wow my husband of 26 years recently walked out of the door after i did not agree to his needs which begin in may and end in august for the past 14 years during this period i have given in to what he wants ie cars, bikes, gym equipment golf gear to even buying houses to rent and moving house all to be given away after august to raise its ugly head to appear the following year with the exception of the houses this year he wants me to sort out sell both houses and give him a fast buck to fulfill his yearly fix. he still keeps coming round and the first words are will you sign to sell the houses answer NO you want it you do it i am sick of your games. after my friend told me to read up of narcissists i cant help but feel that is who i have been with the last 26 years I thought i was a stong person but on reading these articles i realise what a mentally cruel relationship i have been in. when we met i had a successful career and was the bread winner but over the years he as stopped me working to be at his beck and call 24/7. He is on to his next victim already a blast from the past lol given up all his friends because he does not need past friends he is better than any of them anyway and does not need them. i do not contact him at all but he keeps calling me once or twice a week to twist the knife, i answer his questions calmly which he hates then starts mouthing and shouting threatening me, but when i ask he does not want a divorce. Too late jog on lead a lonely life cos thats what he had before me no love from his family just ridiculed and made a fool of even disowned for the past 23 years. I feel better for writing my comment rant over i am getting my self worth back day by day hopefully.

  • Viv K

    July 31, 2018 at 3:22 pm Reply

    Currently going through this with a toxic husband. After years of continuous infidelity, lies, etc. I have left the marriage and gone back several times just cos I struggled to be on my own. Fast forward to today – I am reading all I can and building the strength to pick up my self and walk out of the relationship. I am actually angry at myself for tolerating him this long.

  • Melissa

    July 22, 2018 at 12:20 am Reply

    I accidentally happened on this tonight after all these years in my life I never quite understood why I kept going into relationships and even friendships that strung me out and reeled me back in only to use me. I thought something was wrong with me and that I wasn’t good enough. Actually I guess there was something wrong with me. I just didn’t understand I was in an unhealthy traumatic bond. Please help me to find a healthy way of healing and finding myself and what to do with these relationships and so called friendships.
    Sincerely,
    Melissa

Post a Comment

Get Zari's Book