Are You Using Relationships to Escape Yourself? (And What Happens When You Finally Stop Running)
Nov 15, 2025
Have you ever caught yourself scanning for a connection the moment life feels uncomfortable—hoping someone will soothe the ache, distract the loneliness, or pull you out of the heaviness inside you?
Most of us aren’t taught to be with ourselves.
We’re taught to attach instead of reflect.
To look outward instead of inward.
To find someone who can make the pain “less.”
And while connection can absolutely be healing…
It can also become a hiding place.
Especially when you’ve been through trauma, abandonment, or chronic invalidation. The nervous system learns early on that people equal safety—or at least, relief.
So of course your mind says, “Love will fix this. Someone will save me. I just need the right relationship.”
Sometimes, that search even comes with a very specific checklist: financial security, stability, the idea that someone will “provide” for you, take care of things you feel you can’t handle alone.
There’s nothing wrong with wanting partnership that supports you (we all need a team)—but when we chase someone primarily because of what they give, instead of who they are, we risk using love as a crutch rather than a mutual expansion.
What Mutual Expansion Really Means
Mutual expansion is the opposite of escape. It’s when two people show up fully as themselves—not to fix, rescue, or complete the other—but to grow alongside one another.
In a relationship rooted in mutual expansion:
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You challenge each other to evolve, but without fear or coercion.
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You support each other’s independence, knowing that your partner’s growth is not a threat to your love.
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You cultivate curiosity instead of control, exploring the depths of yourself and your partner without needing to fix what feels broken.
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You create a safe container where emotions, dreams, and even failures can be shared without shame.
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You expand your capacity for love, presence, and joy—because you are choosing the relationship from fullness, not scarcity.
In other words, mutual expansion isn’t about one person providing, saving, or completing the other.
It’s about both people stepping into their full selves and bringing that fullness into the connection.
This is the kind of love that transforms your nervous system, deepens your trust in yourself, and allows connection to feel like freedom instead of rescue.
Escaping is a strategy—not a flaw.
Wanting connection when you don’t feel steady inside isn’t weakness… it’s survival.
But when connection becomes your primary escape hatch, a few things usually show up:
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You fall for potential instead of reality.
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You confuse intensity with intimacy.
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You choose partners who feel familiar, not healthy.
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You override your boundaries to avoid abandonment.
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You attach quickly—and lose yourself just as fast.
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You rely on someone else to “provide” what you haven’t given yourself.
And here’s the hardest part to swallow:
As long as you’re using love to escape, you’ll keep choosing people who keep you far away from yourself.
Not because you’re broken.
But because it’s the only template your system knows.
The turning point is always the same:
You finally realize the relationship you want…
requires the version of you who’s no longer running.
The you who can pause instead of panic.
The you who can self-soothe without shutting down.
The you who can choose—not cling.
The you who knows her worth even when someone else is unsure.
That woman isn’t created inside a relationship.
She’s created in the moments you stay with yourself instead of reaching outward for rescue.
This is the moment when love transforms from an escape…
to an extension of who you already are.
If this is where you are, you’re not alone.
This is deep, rewiring-level work.
It’s nervous-system work.
It’s belief-system work.
It’s learned behavior work.
And it’s absolutely possible for you.
Journal Questions
Let these guide you gently inward:
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When I feel overwhelmed or lonely, who or what do I turn to first—and why?
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What emotions do I hope a relationship will fix for me?
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Where do I abandon myself in order to keep someone close?
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Do I find myself attracted to someone for what they provide—financially, materially, or in other ways—rather than for who they are?
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What does a relationship feel like when I’m present with myself instead of escaping myself?
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What would staying with myself—rather than seeking someone else—look like in a small moment today?
If this spoke to you… you’re ready for the next step.
My course, Stop Giving Your Power Away, was created for women who are done leaking energy into relationships that don’t hold them, honor them, or meet them.
It will help you:
✨ regulate your nervous system
✨ set boundaries without spiraling
✨ stop people-pleasing from fear
✨ meet yourself in the places you used to run from
You don’t have to keep escaping yourself.
You can build a life—and love—that meets the real you.
👉 Enroll in Stop Giving Your Power Away today.