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Why self-regulation is one of the most important relationship skills you can build

Years ago, I watched My Big Fat Greek Wedding—a film I have returned to many times since. There is a line in it that has stayed with me, one I often share with clients.

When Toula is struggling with her father, her mother Maria offers this bit of wisdom: “The man is the head, but the woman is the neck. And she can turn the head any way she wants.”

At the time, I took it as the funny, culturally loaded line it was meant to be. But over the years, I have come to hear something else in it.   Not that one person should control another, but that, in a relationship, the person who can see the clearest path forward often has the greatest ability to influence what happens next.

And in my experience, that clarity is rarely about who is smarter, more persuasive, or more “right.”  It is more about who is most regulated.

Being regulated means you have greater access to perspective. That you can often see beyond the immediate hurt, fear, anger, or misunderstanding. That you are more able to pause before reacting, to stay connected to yourself, and to remember what matters most.

This does not make you superior. Nor does it mean you carry the entire relationship. It simply means you may be the person with enough internal steadiness, in that moment, to help create a different path forward.

That is why I believe your nervous system is in the relationship too.

There is you. There is the other person. And there are the nervous systems both of you bring into every conversation, disagreement, disappointment, rupture, repair, and moment of connection.

The Part of You That’s Always Listening

Everywhere we look, there’s a great deal of conversation today about nervous system regulation. And for good reason. Yet it can sometimes feel overly scientific, overly clinical, or disconnected from the ordinary moments where relationships actually unfold.

At its most basic, your nervous system is your body’s command center and communication network. It is constantly taking in information from the world around you and from within you. It helps determine whether you feel safe, threatened, connected, overwhelmed, calm, alert, shut down, or ready to act.

It influences your breathing, your sleep, your memory, your capacity to focus, and your emotional responses. It is always listening for cues: the tone in someone’s voice, the pause before they respond, the look on their face, the text that goes unanswered, the familiar feeling that tells you something is wrong.

And when it perceives threat, it moves quickly before you have had time to think.

That is why you can know you do not want to react in a certain way and still find yourself reacting. You can understand that a conversation is not really about the dishes, the vacation, the money, or the missed phone call—and still feel yourself becoming defensive, shutting down, over-explaining, criticizing, or trying desperately to make the discomfort stop.

The good news is that your nervous system is adaptive.

You are not trapped by the baseline you were born with or the patterns you learned in earlier relationships. You are not destined to repeat the same reactions for the rest of your life. Your nervous system can learn new ways of responding. It can become more resilient, develop greater capacity for staying present when life becomes difficult.

And that changes everything.

When Protection Takes Over

Most people do not recognize dysregulation when it is happening. They simply think, “This is how I feel,” or “This is what they made me do.”

But dysregulation can look very familiar. It can look like:

  • emotions that go from zero to one hundred in a matter of seconds.
  • replaying a conversation in your mind long after it is over,
  • trying to find the moment where everything went wrong.
  • making a decision quickly because sitting with uncertainty feels unbearable.
  • withdrawing from someone you love because closeness suddenly feels too vulnerable.
  • becoming intensely focused on getting reassurance, agreement, or resolution right now.
  • losing trust in yourself because your feelings feel so large that you no longer know which part of you to believe.

In relationships, dysregulation may show up as explosive reactions, emotional distance, silent treatment, criticism, defensiveness, blame, people-pleasing, or the exhausting experience of walking on eggshells around one another.

Many people assume these are communication problems.

Often, they are nervous system problems first.

This does not excuse harmful behavior. We are still responsible for how we treat one another. But it does help us understand why good intentions can disappear so quickly when we feel threatened.

When the nervous system is activated, we are often no longer operating from our deepest values. We are operating from protection.

Why Knowing Better Is Not Always Enough

One of the most common things I hear from clients is, “I know better, but I still do the same thing.”

That sentence holds so much tenderness.

Because it is not usually a lack of intelligence, awareness, or desire that keeps someone repeating an old pattern. Most people already know what they wish they could do differently. They have read the books. They have listened to the podcasts. They have had the conversations with friends. They may even have been in therapy or coaching before.

And yet, when the charged moment arrives, the old response takes over.

There are often several layers involved.

The first is the nervous system. When something in a relationship feels threatening—criticism, withdrawal, conflict, disappointment, rejection, or uncertainty—the body responds before the thinking mind has a chance to catch up.

The second is attachment learning. Most of us absorbed powerful messages about love early in life. We learned whether love was stable or unpredictable, freely given or something we had to earn, safe or something that could be withdrawn without warning. Those experiences become internal maps. And when relationships become emotionally intense, we often follow the map we learned long ago, even when it no longer serves us.

The third layer is what I call old agreements. These are quiet promises we made somewhere along the way: “Keep the peace.” “Do not need too much.” “Take care of everyone else first.” “If I tell the truth, I will lose love.” “If I am perfect, maybe I will be safe.” These agreements can operate beneath conscious awareness for decades.

So when someone says, “I know better, but I still do the same thing,” what they are often noticing is that their thinking mind has updated, but their body and relational habits have not caught up yet.

Growing Down: Regulation as an Act of Responsibility

In my practice and in my book Unbreakable Us: Removing the Barriers to Love, this is part of what I call Growing Down work.

We spend much of our lives learning how to grow up:  gaining knowledge, building careers, developing skills, and become increasingly capable in the world. Yet many of us discover that emotional maturity asks something different of us.

Becoming more intimate with the parts of ourselves that learned to protect us.

Growing Down is not about becoming less capable. It is about returning to the places where our patterns began and developing the capacity to care for ourselves there, rather than asking our partners, children, friends, or colleagues to manage what we have not yet learned to hold.

This is why the first thing I teach is regulation as an act of personal and energetic responsibility.

Regulation is about resourcing yourself so that you can remain present with what is happening. It is about creating enough internal safety that you have choices. It is about being able to pause, notice what is occurring in your body, and choose a response rather than simply reacting from an old wound.

This is the first line of action in relationship. We each tasked to take one hundred percent responsibility for our fifty percent of the relational equation.  That includes learning how to manage our nervous system and mindset so that we can show up with greater clarity, integrity, and care.

The Most Regulated Person Leads

This does not mean that you dominate the conversation or become responsible for everyone else’s feelings.  Instead, regulation gives us access to a wider field of possibility.

When we are caught in fear, anger, shame, or overwhelm, our choices narrow. We see threats, become focused on being right, being safe, or making the discomfort stop.

When we are more regulated, we can see more.

We can ask better questions,  recognize that the person in front of us may be struggling too,  hold a boundary without attacking, tell the truth without abandoning ourselves, make room for complexity.

We can lead not by controlling the outcome, but by helping create conditions where a different outcome becomes possible.

This is one of the things I support my clients in developing through specific tools and practices. They learn how to recognize activation before it escalates, calm their biology, interrupt old patterns, and return to themselves in the moments when it matters most.

The goal is not to become an unaffected robot… it’s to become available.  To yourself. To your values. To the relationship you are trying to build.

Co-Regulation and the Sacred Third

Self-regulation is deeply personal. But relationships also invite us into co-regulation: the mutual exchange of calm, safety, and connection between two people.

To be clear, this does not mean one person becomes the other person’s emotional caretaker. It means both people learn how to participate in creating safety together.

In Chapter 20 of my book, Unbreakable Us: Removing the Barriers to Love, I introduce an orientation I call the Sacred Third.

The Sacred Third is the relationship itself.

Not you. Not me. The relationship.

When two people agree to orient toward what benefits the relationship itself, they gain an objective place from which to examine what is happening. Instead of asking, “How do I win?” or “Whose feelings matter more?” they begin asking, “What serves the relationship here?”

This does not erase individual needs. It gives them a more grounded place to be heard.

When we co-agree to honor the Sacred Third, we create an anchor for the moments when life becomes hard. We begin to understand that conflict, difference, disappointment, and adversity do not have to tear us apart. They can become the very places where we learn how to become stronger together.

Tell Me

The next time relational stress appears, pause and ask yourself:

Am I responding from the person I most want to be in this relationship—or from the part of me that is trying to protect itself?

That single question can create enough space to choose a different next step.

Ready to Explore What Is Possible?

If this reflection brought something into focus for you—perhaps a familiar reaction, a recurring relationship pattern, or a place where you long to show up differently—I invite you to schedule a one-to-one Discovery Call with me.

This is a space for us to look beneath what is happening on the surface and explore what may be shaping your experience of connection, conflict, trust, and love. Together, we will identify what may be asking for your attention and consider what a more grounded, resilient path forward could look like.

You do not need to have it all figured out before we speak. You only need to be willing to become curious about what is possible.

[To Schedule Your Discovery Call]

For years, I thought being in relationship meant being flexible, forgiving, accommodating, easy to be with — never too much, never a burden.  What escaped my awareness was that all the self-sacrifice was actually self-abandonment in service of not being abandoned.

That approach to love proved painful because it created relationships where my good nature was welcomed… but not always protected.

I deeply craved a committed, intimate, genuine partnership.

At the same time, I was a card-carrying member of the “men are pigs club” — which created its own kind of conflict. I longed for partnership while simultaneously mistrusting men and doubting their ability to truly have my back.

So I ignored my gut.

I clung to small signs of hope, convincing myself that if I were patient enough, forgiving enough, understanding enough, things would eventually turn around.  But eventually I had to face a difficult truth: if I wanted the relationship I truly craved, there was work to do within me.

I had to learn how to choose myself — even when that meant not choosing someone else.

That did not come easily.

I had to become someone who believed healthy love was possible… and that I was worthy of receiving it.  Because when you abandon yourself in one area of life, it rarely stays contained there. Self-abandonment has a subtle way of echoing outward — into relationships, work, boundaries, dreams, and the way you move through the world.

And at the center of all of it is self-trust.

Because every healthy relationship is built upon the ability to trust yourself: your instincts, your limits, your needs, your values, and your ability to respond when something feels misaligned.

Without self-trust, we override ourselves in order to keep connection.

With self-trust, we create relationships where connection no longer requires self-betrayal.

What Is Self-Abandonment?

Self-abandonment is the chronic habit of prioritizing another person’s preferences, limits, needs, or deal breakers over your own.  It sounds like:

  • “I’ll take one for the team.”
  • “It’s easier if I just go along with it.”
  • “I’ll do it because I love you.”

Over time, this pattern slowly erodes both your identity and the possibility for genuine intimacy within your relationships. Because true intimacy cannot exist where authenticity is absent.

What Does Self-Abandonment Look Like?

Self-abandonment commonly presents in three ways:

1. Abandoning Your Needs

This is where you chronically say “yes” while your gut screams “no.”

It can look like altering your preferences, ignoring your boundaries, minimizing your needs, or hiding your emotions so you are “easier” to love.

Over time, you stop trusting yourself because you repeatedly override your own inner knowing.

2. Abandoning Your Values

This happens when you silence your opinions or shrink yourself to avoid conflict or disapproval.

Instead of expressing hurt or communicating your needs, you convince yourself things are “not a big deal” in order to preserve the relationship dynamic.

But every time you betray your values to maintain connection, self-trust weakens.

3. Abandoning Yourself Emotionally

This is where your mood, security, and self-worth become dependent upon how someone else is treating you.

If they become distant, you feel disconnected from yourself. If they offer affection, you feel anchored again.

This creates emotional instability because your sense of safety no longer comes from within. Over time, this often leads to deep, unspoken resentment.

Why We Do It

Most self-abandonment patterns begin honestly and unconsciously in childhood.

If you grew up in a chaotic home where addiction, abuse, illness, emotional unpredictability, or instability were present, you may have learned very early that focusing on others was necessary for survival.

You learned not to rock the boat.
Not to make demands.
Not to inconvenience anyone with your needs.

Hypervigilance became protection.  Self-sacrifice became safety.

For some, self-abandonment is also rooted in a deep sense of unworthiness. Constant comparison, cultural expectations, or feeling “less than” can quietly reinforce the belief that other people’s needs matter more than your own.

How Resentment Forms

Over time, feeling unseen, unvalued, and emotionally unfulfilled creates deep resentment.

When you consistently pour energy, care, and attention outward while neglecting yourself, the relationship eventually begins to feel uneven and emotionally exhausting and that imbalance creates distance.

And, rather than acknowledging the imbalance, many people turn the frustration inward — criticizing themselves for being “too sensitive,” “too needy,” or “asking for too much.”

But resentment is rarely the first problem.  It is often the accumulated pain of repeatedly abandoning yourself.

Bottom line: resentment is a signal that you have been betraying yourself for too long.

3 Steps to Rebuild Self-Trust

Breaking free from self-abandonment takes time, compassion, and consistent practice. But healing begins the moment you start returning to yourself.

1. Honor Your Boundaries

Self-trust erodes when we allow others to cross lines we have not clearly defined.

Get honest about what you need in order to feel safe, respected, valued, and emotionally well.  Then practice standing beside those needs instead of negotiating them away for connection.  Every boundary you honor strengthens trust within yourself.

2. Keep Your Promises to Yourself

Rebuild faith in your own judgment through consistent daily actions.

Follow through on the things you say matter to you. Treat your needs with the same care and priority you offer others.  Self-trust grows when you learn that you can reliably count on yourself.

3. Reflect on Your Relationship Patterns with Compassion

Rather than shaming yourself for past choices, approach your history with curiosity.

Notice the patterns.
Acknowledge the growth.
Understand the reasons behind your choices.

Your past is not proof that you are broken. It is information that can help you make more aligned decisions moving forward.

I share additional self-trust practices in my book Unbreakable Us: Removing the Barriers to Love because rebuilding self-trust is essential to breaking the cycle of self-abandonment.

And if you are someone who believes it is “too late” to change these patterns, I want you to hear this clearly:

It is never too late to stop abandoning yourself or to build relationships rooted in truth, safety, and self-trust.

For your complimentary 60 minute private conversation with Joëlle apply here.