domingo, 19 de julho de 2026

Freedom

 
Dunca Daniel







Freedom from fear is the freedom
I claim for you my motherland!
Freedom from the burden of the ages, bending your head,
breaking your back, blinding your eyes to the beckoning
call of the future;
Freedom from the shackles of slumber wherewith
you fasten yourself in night's stillness,
mistrusting the star that speaks of truth's adventurous paths;
freedom from the anarchy of destiny
whole sails are weakly yielded to the blind uncertain winds,
and the helm to a hand ever rigid and cold as death.
Freedom from the insult of dwelling in a puppet's world,
where movements are started through brainless wires,
repeated through mindless habits,
where figures wait with patience and obedience for the
master of show,
to be stirred into a mimicry of life.



Rabindranath Tagore




Mother-Wounded Men


StockCake






We like to believe that when we meet someone in love, we are meeting the person as he is now. 

We look at his face, the way he speaks, the way he holds back, the way his body makes us feel when he is near. We notice his warmth, his restraint, his humor, and we think we are seeing the whole man. 

But love does not begin in the present as cleanly as we want it to. 
No one arrives only as the adult standing in front of us. 
Something older comes with him, and it often appears in the most intimate places, where desire becomes frightening, where tenderness feels too exposed, where a simple need from another person touches a danger he may not yet understand in himself.

Some people have more room inside them when they love. 
Others come close while childhood is still alive in the body, moving through them before they can think, explain, or even find language. 

A man may want a woman sincerely and still carry the first woman inside the way he responds to closeness. 

If that first bond taught him that love could control him, shame him, need too much from him, disappear from him, or make him responsible for feelings no child should have carried, then adult intimacy may not feel only beautiful. It may wake the boy in him who first learned that love was not safe unless there was still a way out.

I am not writing here about predatory men, psychopathic men, or men who have no real capacity for empathy and only borrow the language of injury to keep access to another person. That is a different creature. People often call such men wounded because the word sounds more forgiving, but wound is not the same as emptiness. 

A mother-wounded man can still have a conscience. 
He can be tender, protective, ashamed, confused, capable of love, even deeply human. 
The tragedy is that his humanity does not always protect the woman from what his defenses do to her.

This essay is for the woman who knows she is dealing with a man who carries something behind him, and who also knows that her own love has not gone dead. 
He may have hurt her. His closeness may have confused her, especially when he then began protecting himself from what had started to happen between them. The experience may have left her disappointed, frightened, even ashamed of how much she still feels. 
Something in her has been hurt, and still the love has not fully left her body. 
She is not excusing him, mothering him, or handing herself over to his childhood. 
She is facing the harder truth that the body does not always stop loving at the same moment the mind begins looking for a way out. 
When that happens, a woman needs language that does not mock her for staying and does not ask her to abandon herself if she stays.

It is also for the man who knows, even if he cannot always say it cleanly, that he wants the woman more than he wants the defense. 
I do not mean the man who hides forever inside his injury or treats the past as permission to wound someone else. 
I mean the man who keeps finding himself at the same edge: he wants love, and then something in him turns against it. At the edge of real closeness, something in him begins to shut down or become suspicious, and suddenly the woman or the bond itself starts to feel like the danger. 
What has actually happened is that being reached by her has touched something older than her. 

That is what I mean here by a mother wound. 
His mother does not explain the whole man, and his history does not absolve him, but the first female bond can leave a shape inside him that every later woman has to meet before he can see her as herself.



What a mother wound teaches a boy about women
A mother wound does not mean a man had an imperfect mother. 
Every mother is imperfect. 
Every child meets disappointment long before adulthood. 

The wound begins when the mother is not only someone he loves, but someone he has to survive. 
Her face becomes the first weather in the room. 
Through her, he learns whether his need is welcome, whether the truth is safe, and whether he can still be loved when he is not easy to love.

For a boy, the mother is the first woman before he has any idea what a woman is. 
He learns her through his body first. 
Her silence, her face, the way the room changes when she is disappointed, all of it reaches him before he can name what is happening. Conflict teaches him its rules early. He discovers when speaking helps and when it makes the room worse, when silence protects him and when it only leaves him alone with the tension. Over time, he may stop explaining himself, become useful, apologize before he understands his own guilt, or study her mood so carefully that his own truth disappears from the room. 
This is how closeness enters the body before it becomes a thought. Long before he chooses a woman as a man, something in him has already learned what a woman’s nearness can cost.


In some homes, the mother’s control is visible. 
She has a plan for the son before he has a self strong enough to resist it. 
Her care comes with ownership inside it. She may know what is best for him, and perhaps sometimes she is right, but the child does not experience himself as discovered. 
He experiences himself as arranged. If he resists, she becomes hurt or angry, and the atmosphere changes. 

Later, he may meet a woman who asks only for ordinary consideration and feel the old panic of being taken over. What looks to her like mutuality may feel to him like the beginning of capture, because the first woman taught him that closeness meant losing the right to belong to himself.


Another mother controls through quiet. 
She does not need to shout or call him names. 
She goes cold, and the whole house begins to organize itself around her silence. 
The child studies her face, the pause before she answers, the unfinished sentence, the air after she has been displeased. He learns that anger is not always the most frightening thing. Sometimes the real punishment is a woman who refuses to speak and makes everyone live inside the silence until they obey it. 

A boy raised there may become a man who avoids direct conversations with a calm that looks mature from the outside. He may tell himself he is being reasonable, when he is really returning to the silence that once protected him. The woman beside him feels the punishment, even while he insists nothing has happened.


Some sons grow up around maternal pain that has no clear edge. 
The mother is suffering, and the child learns to move carefully around the suffering before anyone ever gives him the job. Her life has hurt her in ways he cannot fix, but he still begins to feel responsible for not making it worse. His own truth starts to feel heavy in the room. Need becomes something to hide. He becomes good by making himself easy to have nearby. 

Later, he may know how to help many people and still fail the woman who asks him to be emotionally present. Her hurt does not reach him as something that belongs to her. It lands in him as weight, as demand, as the old feeling of being pulled back into a pain he spent his life trying not to disturb.


There is also the mother who leaves. 
Not only emotionally, not only through silence, but with her body. 
After conflict, she walks out of the room, leaves the house, sends the child away, takes him to someone else, or makes even a brief disappearance feel like proof that love can be withdrawn
To an adult, it may look like a minute. To a child, it can feel like the world has lost its only wall. He learns that conflict does not just create tension. It can make the woman he depends on disappear. So he begins to live carefully around her, measuring his words, his needs, his protest, his anger, anything that might make her leave again. 

Later, he may become a man who avoids conflict as if the conversation itself contains abandonment. A woman may think she is asking him to stay present for an honest moment, while his body is already preparing for the old terror: if this goes badly, I will be left alone.


There is also the mother who loves most warmly when the boy reflects well on her. 
He is admired when he is impressive, charming, gifted, strong, obedient, special in the way she needs him to be special. The bond may contain real affection, but the child begins to understand that love comes through a preferred version of himself. He learns to bring the self that keeps the mirror intact. 

Later, when a woman sees something in him that does not flatter him, shame may rise faster than reflection. He may defend himself before he understands what she is saying, because the admired boy inside him cannot tolerate becoming disappointing.


There is also the mother who is there, but cannot really be reached. 
She may live in the same house, make meals, ask ordinary questions, even appear devoted from the outside, while some essential part of her remains unavailable to the child. The boy grows up reaching toward a woman who is near enough to long for and far enough to never fully find. From this kind of childhood, longing can become more familiar than trust

As a man, he may desire women most intensely when they remain just beyond him. Distance keeps the feeling alive without asking him to live inside it. A woman far away can be imagined, wanted, protected in fantasy. A woman who wants him back becomes dangerous, because now the longing has a body, and now something can actually be lost.


Other mothers shame the boy’s softness. 
They may not understand male need, or they may fear it, despise it, mock it, or treat it as weakness. 
The son learns to hide the part of himself that wants comfort. He may keep the stronger-looking self available for the world while the needing self goes underground. 

Later, a woman may feel that he wants her body, her warmth, her admiration, and the feeling of being restored by her, but cannot bear the moment when his own dependence becomes visible. He can be confident in one form of closeness and terrified in another.




Real mothers rarely fit one clean description. 
The same woman can sacrifice for her child and still use him emotionally. 
She can be tender in one moment and impossible in the next. 
She can love him and still make him carry what was never his to carry. 

Often she has her own history behind her, her own wound, her own unfinished life moving through the way she mothers. This is not about putting the mother on trial. It is about seeing how early a child’s body begins to learn what closeness means, long before he has any freedom to choose the lesson.

By the time the boy becomes a man, the original room may be gone, but its rules can remain. 
He may not think about his mother when he pulls away from a woman. 
He may only feel that the conversation is too much, that her disappointment is unbearable, that tenderness has become debt, that her face is asking for something he cannot give. 
He may call it privacy, caution, principle, freedom, or simply the wrong timing. 
Sometimes those words are honest. Sometimes they are the adult language of an old exit.

The mother wound matters in love because it can quietly change the woman in front of him into someone she is not. It does not explain the whole man, and it does not excuse what he does. But when the old imprint remains unseen, he may respond to the present woman through the first one. 
  • Her hurt can arrive in him as control. 
  • Her need can feel like being swallowed. 
  • Her disappointment can burn like humiliation. 
  • Even her love can begin to feel like a room he cannot leave. 

If the woman does not understand what has entered the bond, she may spend years trying to become gentle enough, patient enough, harmless enough for a fear that did not begin with her.




The useful but avoidant man
One strange thing a mother wound can teach a man is how to stay close enough to look present while keeping the most vulnerable part of himself out of reach. 
He may not disappear in any obvious way. He may live in the house, answer the phone, take care of the practical crisis, sit beside her in the hospital, remember what needs to be done. 
From the outside, and often from inside his own mind, this looks like love. 
Sometimes it is love. It is simply the form of love that does not ask him to expose himself too much.

The woman beside him can be helped by him and still feel abandoned.

This usually begins early. 
A boy who grows up around a mother whose feelings take over the room may discover that being useful is safer than being honest. If he can make himself helpful, calm, easy to have nearby, the bond can survive without anyone having to say the more dangerous thing. 
He learns to move around feeling instead of entering it. 
He does his way through the places where speech once felt unsafe.

Later, when his partner says she is lonely, he may hear it as if she has dismissed everything he has done. He looks at the life he has helped hold together and cannot understand why it does not answer her. In his mind, the work, the staying, the practical loyalty, the daily evidence should mean something. And it does. It just does not reach the place in her that is asking for contact.

After a fight, action may be the only repair he can manage. 
Words would bring him too close to shame, so he reaches for what can be done with his hands. 
He makes coffee, cleans the kitchen, fills the car, becomes gentler when she is tired or sick. 
None of it has to be fake. A woman can feel the love inside the gesture and still remain alone where the hurt actually happened. The coffee may soften the morning, but it cannot say the sentence he is still afraid to say.

There is another version of him who goes still when a woman is hurt. 
He remains in the room, but something in him is no longer reachable. 
To her, it can look like indifference. 
Inside him, it may be the old helplessness of a boy who never found a safe move around female pain. Words made him guilty. Silence left him trapped. Leaving turned him into the one who had done harm. So he learned to survive by becoming very still.

This is where the woman can become deeply confused. 
She may not be dealing with a cruel man. She may be dealing with a man who learned to survive a woman’s pain, not meet it. 
In childhood, that may have protected him. In adult love, it starves the person beside him. 
She is not asking him to solve her like a problem. She is asking him to remain emotionally present while something difficult is happening between them.

The failure is not that he shows love through what he does. That kind of love can be real. 
The failure begins when usefulness becomes the only place he is willing to stand. 
A woman can be grateful for his effort and still know that the effort has not reached her. She can see his loyalty to the structure of life and still feel that her inner life has nowhere to land.

His resentment often begins when she says she feels unseen. 
He remembers the work, the effort, the restraint, the years of holding things together, and hears her pain as if she has erased all of it. What she is trying to name is different. She is not saying he did nothing. She is saying there is a place in her he has never reached. If his mother treated dissatisfaction as betrayal, the present woman starts to carry the old accusation. She becomes, in his mind, the woman who can never be satisfied.

If he wants to love differently, he has to recognize that leaving does not always look like walking away. A man can hide inside practicality, calm, or helpfulness, staying close enough to seem devoted while keeping the woman herself at a distance. He can spend years fixing the life around her and still fail to meet her. He may not be a bad man, but she may eventually stop feeling loved by gestures that once touched her.

Many of these men were also loved by their mothers. That is part of the confusion. 
The boy did not necessarily grow up without tenderness. 
He grew up where tenderness and danger came from the same woman. 
So when another woman says “I love you,” those words may reach him, but they may also disturb something old. More love from her does not automatically heal him. Sometimes it only brings him closer to the place where love first became unsafe.

For the woman, the danger is accepting his safest language as the whole relationship. 
She may tell herself he shows love differently, and sometimes he does. But when his way of loving requires her to give up being emotionally met, the difference has become an injury. Over time, her body may begin to search for the only places where he still responds. Illness, exhaustion, crisis, practical need. If loneliness does not bring him close, need might
Then both people become trapped in a miserable arrangement: she receives care only by becoming more depleted, and he feels used by the dependence his emotional absence helped create.

She does not need to reject the care he can give. She needs to stop pretending it is enough when her body knows it is not.



Displacement: when the woman becomes the mother
Displacement is one of the ways the mind protects itself from what it cannot face directly. 
A feeling that belongs to one person moves onto someone else. 
A man can carry anger at his mother, fear of her need, shame before her disappointment, or loyalty to her pain without experiencing any of it as memory. It arrives as a reaction to the woman in front of him. She begins to carry the feeling that belongs somewhere else. 
Her need no longer reaches him as need. 
Her sadness no longer reaches him as sadness. 
Something old has entered the exchange, and now normal closeness feels like danger.

He is not usually thinking, she reminds me of my mother. That would almost be easier. 
More often, the reaction feels like truth. His body is certain before his mind has questioned anything. 
He feels trapped, judged, shamed, or pulled into something he has to escape
Because the feeling is so immediate, he trusts it. 
The past enters the room wearing the face of the present woman.

A woman caught in this projection often feels the injustice before she can explain it. 
Something small happens. 
She asks a question, names a hurt, reaches for clarity, and the response comes back much larger than the moment. His face changes. His tone hardens. He defends himself as if she has accused him of something far worse than what she actually said. Sometimes there is even a flash of aggression around a gesture that was not aggressive at all. She knows, in her body, that he is not only answering her. She almost wants to say, yes, and I suppose I tilted the Leaning Tower of Pisa too. But the argument is happening now, with her name attached to it, so she begins defending herself inside a story she did not create.

This is how a woman becomes exhausted. 
She explains her intention, makes her voice softer, chooses a better time, reduces the need, tries to prove that love is not control. Not every conflict comes from displacement. People misread each other, and sometimes better words are all that is needed. But this is different. He is not simply hearing her words incorrectly. He is placing her inside an older emotional reality, and childhood has already given that reality its authority.

The cruelty is that she can start losing herself while trying to prove she is not the danger he thinks she is. After a while, she no longer enters the conversation as herself. She enters it already edited, already cautious, already trying not to become the woman his body is prepared to fear. 

What looks like communication from the outside has become something lonelier: 
she is speaking to the man she loves, but also to the mother inside him, the one who taught him what a woman’s displeasure means.

For him, freedom begins when he can pause before believing the first alarm in his body. 
He has to ask whether this woman is actually humiliating him, or whether shame arrived before evidence. He has to notice the difference between being controlled and being affected, between a woman’s pain and a weapon, between intimacy and ownership. No woman who matters will remain perfectly neutral. 

If he needs a woman who never activates anything old in him, he is not looking for love. 
He is looking for safety without contact.

Until he can tell the difference, the woman in front of him keeps being asked to answer for someone else’s history. She becomes guilty before she has done anything, dangerous before she has harmed him, controlling before she has made a demand. 
Love cannot breathe inside that arrangement. 
It becomes childhood using the present woman as a screen.



Desire and fear in the same man
When a woman has been hurt by a man’s withdrawal, it can be tempting to make the whole thing smaller afterward. She may tell herself he never cared, that she imagined the warmth, that the tenderness was only performance, that his body meant nothing because he would not follow it with truth. Sometimes that is exactly what happened. 

Some men do use closeness for conquest and disappear once they have taken what they wanted. 
But sometimes the story is different. 
Sometimes he did not withdraw because there was nothing there. He withdrew because something was there, and the old fear rose faster than his courage.

A mother-wounded man can want a woman and still fail her badly. 
The wanting may be real. So may the tenderness. He may notice more than he admits and be more affected by her than his behavior allows her to trust. But feeling something does not mean he knows how to stand inside it. Sometimes avoidance is not emptiness. Sometimes it is fear taking over before the man in him can answer.

That is what makes this kind of bond so confusing. 
The woman is not only dealing with absence. She is dealing with a presence that comes close, creates meaning, and then loses its nerve. He may speak through care, attention, the body, small gestures that carry more intimacy than he is willing to name. Then, when she needs him to admit that something real has happened between them, he retreats to the safer surface and behaves as if nothing has been said.

For a woman, this can feel almost maddening. 
Her body has already registered the difference between kindness and charged care. She knows when attention has become personal, when the air between two people has changed, when something private has begun to form. But if he will not name his part, she is left holding a reality with no witness. Shame often enters there. Not because she did anything wrong, but because unnamed mutuality makes the more honest person feel exposed.

He may tell himself a different story. 
Because he did not make a promise, cross an obvious line, or say the sentence that would make everything undeniable, he may believe he has not created anything he has to answer for. 

But intimacy does not wait for official language before it begins to matter. 
A person can be invited inward through repeated attention, secrecy, care, physical charge, emotional reliance, or the feeling of being specially held in another person’s mind. 
When one person treats that atmosphere as meaningful and the other hides behind the fact that nothing was named, the unnamed thing does not disappear. It is left with the person who had less protection.

Fear starts doing damage when he will not recognize it as fear. 
Wanting may frighten him. The cost may be real. He may be afraid of hurting someone, losing control, or seeing himself in a way he cannot tolerate. That part is human. 
The wound to the woman begins when he pushes that fear onto her and makes her the reason he has to pull back. Timing, risk, and circumstance may all matter, but they can also become a place to hide from the simpler truth: I feel something, and I am afraid of what it means.

A woman can have compassion for that fear without accepting the shame he leaves with her. 
That is the line. If she calls him heartless when he is frightened, she may miss the real conflict. If she excuses everything because he is frightened, she loses herself. 
Both truths have to remain in the room. 
He may feel deeply and still fail her. He may want her and still make her unsafe. His tenderness can be real, and his avoidance can still become an injury.

For him, desire is not enough. 
Wanting a woman does not make him honest. 
Missing her does not repair what silence does. 
Touching her with care does not absolve him from leaving her alone with the meaning of that care. 
If he wants to love as a man, he has to stop treating fear as proof that the woman is dangerous. Sometimes fear only means that love has reached the place where he has not yet grown.

The woman’s dilemma: do not become the anti-mother
A woman who loves a man like this often begins in the most human place: she tries to understand him. She can feel that his reactions have history inside them, even when he has no language for that history himself. Certain words reach him badly. Disappointment changes his face. Closeness may frighten him at the exact moment when another man might soften into it. Because she loves him, she adjusts. At first, the adjustment feels like care. She waits a little longer. She chooses a gentler entrance. She explains before the misunderstanding has fully formed. She apologizes for needing something that should not have required apology.

The trouble is that care can slowly become an assignment. 
Without anyone naming it, she begins carrying the burden of proving that she is not the woman he already fears. Her emotional life starts passing through a private checkpoint before it reaches him. 
  • Is this too much? 
  • Will this make him leave? 
  • Will he hear pressure where I mean pain? 
  • Can I make the truth small enough to be safe? 
Once those questions become part of her daily inner life, she is no longer only relating to the man. She is negotiating with the old mother inside him.

This is one of the quiet distortions of such love. 
The woman may be trusted with something real in him. She may understand parts of him that other people have never reached. She may also recognize tenderness in him that is difficult to dismiss, even when it fails her. The intimacy of understanding can become seductive because it makes suffering feel meaningful. It gives her the sense that patience has a hidden purpose, that if she loves him with enough precision, one day he will finally see her without the old shadow over her face.

Psychoanalytically, she is being pulled into a corrective role. 
She is no longer only the woman he loves or desires. 
She becomes the one who is supposed to show him that closeness can be safe, that need will not swallow him, that disappointment will not destroy him, that a woman can stay without owning him. The role can feel painfully intimate because it brings her close to the child in him. 

But a woman cannot become the cure for a wound he will not name. 
If she tries, her own womanhood becomes the material he uses to survive his past.

There is a particular humiliation in being treated as dangerous while offering tenderness. 
A woman may speak with more care than she has ever used in her life and still be received as a threat.
Space may be interpreted as coldness. 
Less need may still be felt as too much. 
Eventually she begins to understand that the exact wording was never the whole problem. The problem lives in the place inside him where a woman’s need arrives already charged with old meaning.

This is where dignity has to enter. 
Dignity is the refusal to keep shrinking the truth so another person never has to meet it. 
  • Love does not require her to erase the evidence of injury from her own body. 
  • Understanding his fear does not make her responsible for preventing it. 
  • Careful speech should not become emotional disappearance. 
  • His wound may deserve compassion, but it does not get to decide how much of her is allowed to exist.
If she stays, and sometimes love does make staying feel more truthful than leaving, she needs to stay as herself. That is the hard part. 
His mother is not her assignment. 
The purified opposite of his mother is not her assignment either. 
She is not required to become endlessly patient, perfectly safe, endlessly available, or grateful for every small sign that he can tolerate closeness for another day. 
She has to remain real enough that love does not become another place where she disappears.



How to love him with dignity
To love a man like this with dignity, a woman has to stop confusing compassion with emotional overwork. Compassion sees the wound. Emotional overwork begins when she starts managing every consequence of it for him. There is a difference between understanding why a man becomes frightened and arranging the relationship so his fear never has to meet reality. 
One preserves tenderness. The other quietly trains the woman to disappear from the places where love should have made her more visible.

Dignity does not require coldness. 
A woman does not have to punish a man for being wounded, withdraw affection to teach him a lesson, or turn every injury into a moral trial. But she also cannot keep supplying warmth to cover the exact places where trust has been damaged. If something hurt her, then something hurt her. The fact that his reaction has history does not erase the fact that her body had to live through it in the present.

A woman often wants to explain one more time because she believes the right wording will finally make him understand without feeling accused. Sometimes language helps. Sometimes the man understood enough the first time and retreated from the responsibility of understanding it. 
There is a point where explanation stops being communication and becomes a way of begging the other person to recognize what he already knows. That is the point where dignity asks her to stop performing clarity for someone who is using confusion as shelter.
The same is true of reassurance. 
When a man disappears into shame, the loving impulse may be to run after him and prove that he is still good, still wanted, still safe with her. There may be moments when that is humane. A relationship without reassurance becomes a courtroom. 

But if she rescues him from every feeling of consequence, he never has to learn what his avoidance does to the woman who loves him. He only learns that if he collapses, withdraws, or becomes injured enough, she will leave her own wound and come tend to his.

Loving him with dignity means allowing reality to remain in the room. 
  • If he has hurt her, she does not need to decorate the injury so he can tolerate looking at it. 
  • If he has withdrawn, she does not need to fill the silence with explanations that make him feel less responsible for leaving her there. 
  • If he has mistaken her pain for control, she does not need to plead her innocence like a child before an unfair parent. 
She can speak plainly, with warmth if warmth is still true, and then let the truth stand without chasing him around the room with softer versions of it.

This kind of love also asks a woman to respect her own limits before resentment turns her into someone she does not recognize. 
  • A boundary does not always have to arrive as an announcement. Sometimes it begins quietly, in the places where she stops offering herself as if nothing happened. 
  • Her tenderness may become less automatic. 
  • Her repair may become slower. 
  • She may stop translating his behavior into harmlessness just to keep the bond intact. 
  • She does not have to make a scene for the change to be real. 
Something in her has registered what happened, and she cannot offer herself in exactly the same way.

The man may feel this as punishment, especially if his earliest history taught him that a woman’s withdrawal was meant to control him. That does not make her boundary false. 

One of the hardest tasks for both people is to separate consequence from revenge. 
  • If a woman becomes quieter after being hurt, she may be protecting the place that was touched. 
  • If warmth changes after he disowns the emotional reality between them, her body may be telling the truth before the relationship has found words for it. 
A man who wants to love her has to learn to stay present long enough to ask what happened, rather than immediately making her changed access into proof that she is cruel.

Dignity is not in translating his fear forever, and it is not in pretending her love has disappeared if it has not. The harder path is more precise. 
She can stay near enough to see him without letting his wound govern her. 
She can be tender without using tenderness to pay for being misread. 
And if she stays, the terms cannot be set by the old mother inside him. 
The present woman has to remain alive in the room.

To love him with dignity is to hold two truths without letting one devour the other. 
He may be wounded in places that deserve mercy. She is still real. His fear may have a history. Her pain has a present. Love may be strong enough to keep her near him, but it cannot ask her to become smaller than the woman who entered it.



What repair requires from him
A mother-wounded man still became a man. 
His body grew, his desire grew, and so did his power to affect another person. 
The boy in him may still ache. He may still hide, panic, or mistake love for danger. 
But that boy cannot be allowed to excuse the adult forever. 
At some point, the work belongs to him. 
The woman beside him cannot be asked to recognize the wound, protect it, translate it, soften herself around it, and then carry the injury caused by his refusal to face it.
Repair begins when he stops treating his history as something the woman must endlessly accommodate while he stays the same. A painful mother can explain why closeness feels threatening, why disappointment burns like shame, why a woman’s need may wake dread instead of tenderness. Explanation matters. It can give shape to the injury and open real grief. But seeing what his mother did is only the beginning. 
The harder part is seeing what he now does with that wound when a woman loves him.

Many men stop at the origin of the wound and confuse that recognition with change
They can say, accurately, that their mother controlled them, ignored them, used them emotionally, or failed to see them. But insight becomes another hiding place when it never reaches behavior. 
The question cannot remain only what happened to him. 
It has to become what moves through him now when a woman comes close enough to touch the same old place.

A man who wants repair has to become more accurate. 
  1. He has to notice when the woman in front of him has become blurred with the woman behind him. 
  2. He has to catch the moment when hurt begins to sound like attack before any attack has happened. 
  3. He has to learn that clarity is not control, disappointment is not humiliation, and emotional consequence is not captivity. 

He will not catch it perfectly at first. 
No one repairs a childhood template in one heroic decision. But he has to become willing to doubt his first alarm.

This is where masculinity is often misunderstood. 
A defended man can experience self-examination as defeat. 
Admitting fear can feel like becoming small. Saying, “I reacted from somewhere old,” can feel like surrendering authority. 
Apologizing without collapsing into shame may feel almost impossible when shame has always needed armor. 
But adult masculinity is not weakened by this kind of truth. It becomes more solid. 
A man is not less of a man because he can stand inside his own reaction and name it without making the woman pay for it.

Repair also asks him to remember that the woman has a history too. 
She did not arrive as an empty vessel for his wound. Her body has its own memory, its own thresholds, its own places where trust can be injured. His withdrawal may touch something abandoned in her. His silence may wake old shame. His inconsistency may reach a part of her that has already survived being made uncertain. If he wants his wound understood, he has to make room for hers as well. Love cannot become a courtroom where only his childhood is allowed as evidence.

At that point, the burden changes. 
It cannot remain on the woman to keep making room for his fear. 
He has to become willing to see what that fear does once it leaves his body and enters hers
She can understand why he withdraws and still be lonely because he withdrew. She can recognize his shame and still be harmed by the shame he gives back to her. 
Compassion for the boy in him cannot keep erasing what the adult man is doing.

The work is concrete. 
  1. He has to come back to conversations instead of disappearing into injury. 
  2. He has to ask what happened in her after he withdrew, dismissed, denied, or became unreachable. 
  3. He has to hear the answer without immediately defending against it. 
  4. He has to repair where the injury happened, not around it with usefulness or charm. 
A kind gesture may soften the room, but it cannot replace the adult sentence: 
I see what I did. I see what I made you carry. I am trying to change the pattern, not only feel sorry after it repeats.

And if something real has formed between him and a woman, he has to decide who he wants to be in the presence of that truth. A grown man does not only feel, want, fear, and then retreat into the old injury. He becomes honest with himself first, and then honest with the woman beside him. He names what is happening. He names his fear. He names the bond if a bond has formed. He does not leave her alone inside a reality both of them have helped create. If he wants to move closer, his words and actions have to move closer too

If he does not, then he has to stop feeding intimacy while pretending there is nothing to answer for. Otherwise the wound has not made him deeper. It has only given the boy in him a better place to hide. A man sees the wound, names reality, and accepts consequence. A boy hides inside the wound and keeps hurting himself and the woman who has come close enough to matter.

There is grief in this work for him. 
Real repair means giving up the innocence of the wounded boy as a permanent identity. 
It means admitting that the wound was not his fault, while the repetition has become his responsibility. 
That distinction hurts, but it also frees him. 
Without it, he remains loyal to the past, still answering his mother through every woman who comes close. 
With it, he can begin to love as a man who can be affected without being ruled.
The woman is not responsible for growing him up. 
She may love him while he grows, but love cannot do the growing for him. 
She may offer patience, tenderness, language, even faith in the man beneath the defenses. 
Still, the movement from boyhood into adult love has to happen inside him. 
Otherwise, the relationship becomes another childhood room: his wound at the center, her reality arranged around it, and no one truly free.



Clinical vignette: when love feels like being owned
I recently met a man who came in convinced he had obsessive compulsive disorder. 
He had been reading about it, diagnosing himself, trying to understand why one thought kept circling back no matter how many times he argued with it. 
His girlfriend wanted to move in together, and the idea made him feel trapped.

He did not sound like a man trying to escape a woman he disliked. He loved her. He liked being with her. He liked the life they had started to build in small ways, the weekends, the ease between them, the private habits that appear before people officially call something a shared life. That was part of the problem. If he had been indifferent, the decision would have been easier.

When she brought up moving in, she was not threatening him. She was trying to understand where the relationship was going. He knew that, at least intellectually. But his body did not receive it that way. The question went straight into alarm. He began thinking about space, freedom, timing, whether he was losing himself, whether one decision would pull his whole life into someone else’s hands. He called it rumination, and clinically that was not irrelevant. But the rumination was also carrying something older than the apartment question.

His mother had not been cruel in any obvious way. 
She was anxious and devoted, the kind of mother whose worry entered everything and called itself love. Privacy hurt her. Distance wounded her. His choices were never fully his because they seemed to pass through her emotional state before they could belong to him. 
If he pulled away, she suffered. 
If he stayed close, he lost himself. 
So he grew up protecting a private inner room where no one could reach him.

Years later, his girlfriend touched that same room without meaning to. 
She was asking to share a life, but his body heard possession. Her sadness felt like pressure. Her wish to be considered felt like the beginning of being taken over. 
He loved her, and still he reacted as if she were about to confiscate him.

That was the displacement. The woman in front of him was not asking to become his mother. She was asking to be taken seriously as the woman he had already brought close. 
But inside him, sharing and being swallowed had become too close together. Commitment was not only commitment. It carried the old fear of a woman’s love arriving with invisible ownership.

The work was not to push him into a decision before he was ready, and it was not to turn his fear into a sacred truth that his girlfriend had to organize her life around. 
The work was to separate the two women inside his body. 
His girlfriend’s wish for a future was not his mother’s intrusion. Her sadness was not a claim of ownership. Her need to know where she stood was not an attempt to erase him.

There was a frightened boy in him, and that boy deserved to be understood. 
He did not get to run the whole adult life. 
The woman beside him had her own body, her own history, her own suffering while love remained permanently undecided. 
If he wanted compassion for his fear, he had to become willing to see what that fear was costing her.

Adult love begins when a man can pause before obeying the old alarm. 

This may feel like losing myself, but is she actually taking me from myself? 
This may feel like ownership, but is it only someone asking to build a life with me? 

The fear may be real and still be answering the wrong woman.



The wound is real, but so is the woman
A mother wound can explain a great deal in a man. It can explain why love feels dangerous when it becomes real, why tenderness turns into pressure, why a woman’s disappointment sounds older than her voice, why freedom begins to matter most when intimacy asks for truth. Explanation has value because it gives the man a way to understand the shadow he has been obeying.

But a shadow is still a shadow. It is not the whole room. 
The mother may have been controlling. She may have been anxious, cold, hungry, intrusive, narcissistic, fragile, or impossible to satisfy. Whatever name he gives her, his life is no longer only the life that happened around her. There is a present tense now. 
There is a woman in front of him who did not raise him, did not wound him first, did not write the old law, and cannot keep paying for it without losing herself.

And if he wants her, the present tense asks for more than longing. It asks him to stop letting fear name the relationship for him.

For the man, the task is to stop letting the first woman decide the meaning of every woman after her. 
He does not have to hate his mother to become free of her. 
He does have to stop confusing loyalty to his wound with loyalty to himself. 
The future will not arrive while he keeps defending against the past and calling that defense wisdom.

For the woman, the task is just as serious. 
She can see the wound without becoming its servant. She can love the man without accepting the boy as the final authority. She can stay near him only as long as she remains present to herself. No love is deep enough to justify becoming invisible inside it.


This is the grief and the possibility between men and women. 
So much can be lost because two adults keep meeting through people who are no longer in the room. 
A mother’s shadow can stand between them for years, speaking in his fear, shaping her caution, turning love into defense. 

At some point, if anything living is going to survive, both people have to turn toward the present and ask the only question that matters.

Who is actually here?




Vera Hart 



sábado, 18 de julho de 2026

Freedom

 

 Tommy Ingberg


 


At the city gate and by your fireside I have seen you prostrate yourself and worship your own freedom,
Even as slaves humble themselves before a tyrant and praise him though he slays them.
Ay, in the grove of the temple and in the shadow of the citadel I have seen the freest among you wear their freedom as a yoke and a handcuff.
And my heart bled within me; for you can only be free when even the desire of seeking freedom becomes a harness to you, and when you cease to speak of freedom as a goal and a fulfilment.

You shall be free indeed when your days are not without a care nor your nights without a want and a grief,
But rather when these things girdle your life and yet you rise above them naked and unbound.

And how shall you rise beyond your days and nights unless you break the chains which you at the dawn of your understanding have fastened around your noon hour?
In truth that which you call freedom is the strongest of these chains, though its links glitter in the sun and dazzle your eyes.

And what is it but fragments of your own self you would discard that you may become free?
If it is an unjust law you would abolish, that law was written with your own hand upon your own forehead.
You cannot erase it by burning your law books nor by washing the foreheads of your judges, though you pour the sea upon them.
And if it is a despot you would dethrone, see first that his throne erected within you is destroyed.
For how can a tyrant rule the free and the proud, but for a tyranny in their own freedom and a shame in their own pride?
And if it is a care you would cast off, that care has been chosen by you rather than imposed upon you.
And if it is a fear you would dispel, the seat of that fear is in your heart and not in the hand of the feared.

Verily all things move within your being in constant half embrace, the desired and the dreaded, the repugnant and the cherished, the pursued and that which you would escape.
These things move within you as lights and shadows in pairs that cling.
And when the shadow fades and is no more, the light that lingers becomes a shadow to another light.
And thus your freedom when it loses its fetters becomes itself the fetter of a greater freedom.




Khalil Gibran



 

The Slave Who Was Never Owned


Caitlyn Grabenstein






 On Epictetus, 
prohairesis, 
and the burden of choice

 


The year is somewhere around 108 AD. 

The place is Nicopolis, a windswept Greek town on the western coast of the empire, hard against the Ionian Sea. Inside a modest lecture hall, a lame, aging man limps between rows of young Roman aristocrats — sons of senators, future consuls, heirs of provinces. They have crossed water and mountain to hear him. Their host was born a slave in Phrygia. His name is Epictetus, and his leg was broken, according to legend, by a master who wanted to see if he could make him flinch.

He never flinched. Not then. Not now.

Domitian had expelled the philosophers from Rome fifteen years earlier, and Epictetus had drifted here, to the edges. He owns almost nothing — a mat, a lamp, a few borrowed books. Yet the young men who sit before him have come precisely because he possesses something they, with their villas and their inheritances, do not. He is free in a way that Rome, for all its marble, is not. He looks at them and begins the lesson that will scandalize them.

"Some things," he says, "are up to us. Most things are not."



The Bro-Stoic Distortion

Twenty centuries later, Epictetus is enjoying a second life — this time on gym playlists, in ice baths, and stitched onto black-and-white tiles beside a photograph of a jawline. 
Contemporary Stoicism has been reduced, in its loudest form, to a productivity aesthetic: swallow the discomfort, suppress the feeling, get the reps in, dominate the day.

This is a caricature of a caricature. 
The Stoics did not preach emotional numbness; they distinguished carefully between pathē, the destructive passions born of false judgment, and eupatheia, the well-ordered feelings of the wise. 

Nor did they promise mastery over the world. 
They promised something harder and stranger: mastery over the only thing that was ever actually yours. And that thing was not your body, not your morning routine, and certainly not your enemies. 

To understand what Epictetus offered — and demanded — we must retrieve a word that translation has quietly buried.



Prohairesis: The Faculty That Is You

The word is prohairesis (προαίρεσις). Aristotle had used it in the Nicomachean Ethics to describe deliberate choice, the reasoned selection between possibilities. 

But it was Epictetus who elevated it into the axis of an entire moral universe. 
In the Discourses, prohairesis appears again and again — sometimes rendered as "will," sometimes as "moral purpose," sometimes as "choice." 
Every translation is a compromise, and every compromise loses something.

Literally, the word means pro-hairesis: a "fore-choosing," a taking-before. 
It denotes the capacity, prior to any action, to assent to or refuse an impression, to judge a situation as good or bad, and to commit oneself accordingly. 

It is not desire. It is not impulse. 
It is the interior court in which every impression is tried before it becomes a decision. When a slight arrives at your door, prohairesis is what decides whether it enters as an insult or is turned away as noise.

For Epictetus, this faculty is the only thing that is genuinely, wholly yours — the only thing that falls within what he called ta eph' hēmin, "the things up to us." 

Your body can be chained. Your possessions can be seized. Your reputation can be devoured overnight by rumor. Your children can die before you. 
Your prohairesis, alone, cannot be touched by any external force. 
No emperor, no illness, no exile can enter it without your consent.

Which is precisely why it is so terrifying.

If your prohairesis is untouchable, then every judgment issuing from it is, without exception, yours. Every resentment, every self-deception, every act of cowardice or courage — yours. 

There is no outside to blame. 
The slave-master could break the leg, but he could not enter the room where Epictetus decided what the broken leg meant. And that room, Epictetus insisted, is the whole of a human being. Everything else is a corpse in transit.



The Weight of an Untouched Room

This is where modern readers, expecting a self-help balm, meet something closer to a summons. Stoicism does not comfort you by telling you that most things are beyond your control. 
It disturbs you by telling you that one thing is not.

Consider the reframe.

Your job is not yours. 
It can be lost to a market shift, a change in leadership, an injury, a war. Your response to its loss — the character it reveals — is yours entirely, and no economic climate will absolve you of it.

Your relationships are not yours. 
Other people are their own prohairesis, and they will make choices you cannot dictate. But your capacity to love without possession, to speak honestly without cruelty, to keep faith when it is inconvenient — that is yours, and it cannot be excused by anyone else's behavior.

Your death is not yours. 
The manner and hour are hidden. But the posture in which you meet it — whether you go bitterly, whether you go with dignity, whether you go having become someone worth mourning — is a matter of the interior court, and the verdict is written in your own hand.


This is why Stoicism, properly understood, is not comfortable. 

  • Freedom of the prohairesis is not the absence of chains; it is the acceptance that your inner life is a workshop for which you alone are the craftsman, and that at the end of your days there will be no jury but yourself. 
  • Virtue, in the Stoic vocabulary, is not sainthood or moral pageantry. It is the honest use of this faculty — the courage to see clearly, the justice to treat rightly, the temperance to want well, the wisdom to tell the difference. 
  • Character is what accumulates when prohairesis is exercised, quietly, over years.

The Roman aristocrats who traveled to Nicopolis understood, dimly at first, what the lame ex-slave was offering. He was not selling them peace. He was showing them the room inside themselves that could not be plundered — and warning them that they, and no one else, would furnish it. 

To be truly free, in the Stoic sense, is to accept that no one is coming to arrange the furniture for you. Not the emperor. Not fortune. Not even the gods. 
The room is silent, and it is yours, and it is waiting.



A Quote to Ponder

"Where, then, is the good? In prohairesis. Where is the evil? In prohairesis. Where is that which is neither good nor evil? In the things which are outside of the prohairesis."

Epictetus, Discourses II.16




in, Stoic Philosophy



quinta-feira, 16 de julho de 2026

Signs of Unresolved Trauma


Freepik/Magnific






When people hear the word trauma, they often think of extreme events—combat, natural disasters, or violence. And while those experiences can absolutely be traumatic, trauma is ultimately less about the event itself and more about the impact it has on the nervous system.

Trauma happens when something overwhelms your ability to cope. 
It can result from sudden shocks or from slow-building stress over timelike emotional neglect, chronic invalidation, or growing up in an environment that didn’t feel safe. 
And for many people, the effects of trauma don’t go away just because the event is in the past.

Unresolved trauma doesn’t always look like flashbacks or panic attacks. Sometimes, it shows up in subtle, quiet ways that shape how you think, feel, and relate to the world.


What Is Unresolved Trauma?
When trauma is unresolved, it means the body and mind haven’t fully integrated or processed what happened. You may not even remember the event clearly—or think of it as “that bad”—but your nervous system still responds as if the danger is ongoing.

Therapists often talk about something called the Window of Tolerancethe emotional bandwidth where we can process experience without becoming overwhelmed. Unresolved trauma can push you outside this window—into hyperarousal (anxiety, anger, hypervigilance) or hypoarousal (numbness, shutdown, fatigue). The trauma may be in the past, but your body and mind may still be bracing for impact.

You might think: 
“I know this person cares about me, but I keep waiting for them to leave.”
 “I’m safe now, but I still feel like I’m walking on eggshells.”


Common Signs of Unresolved Trauma
Not everyone experiences trauma the same way. 
But here are some signs that past experiences may still be affecting you:

1. Emotional Reactivity or Numbness

You might find yourself overreacting to small stressors—or not reacting at all. Trauma can push your system into states of high alert or total shutdown. For example, someone might freeze or go blank during a difficult conversation—not because they don’t care, but because their nervous system perceives danger.

2. Chronic Anxiety or Hypervigilance

Even when things seem fine, your body may stay on high alert. You might constantly scan for danger, anticipate worst-case scenarios, or find it difficult to relax, especially in relationships.

3. People-Pleasing and Avoiding Conflict

If you grew up in an emotionally unsafe environment, you may have learned to keep the peace at all costs. People-pleasing becomes a way to avoid rejection or emotional backlash—but it often comes at the expense of your own needs and boundaries.

4. Difficulty Trusting Others—or Yourself

You may question others’ motives, constantly seek reassurance, or doubt your own decisions—even when there’s no clear reason for the mistrust. Trauma often disrupts your internal sense of safety and clarity.

5. Feeling Stuck or Shut Down

Unresolved trauma often shows up as a sense of immobility—like part of you is frozen in place. This can feel like chronic procrastination, lack of motivation, or a deep disconnection from what you want.

6. Disconnection from Your Body or Emotions

Many people with trauma feel detached from their physical or emotional experiences. You might not notice when you're overwhelmed until you crash, or struggle to put feelings into words. This disconnection is protective—but can make healing feel out of reach.

7. Physical or Cognitive Symptoms

Trauma often affects the body as much as the mind. You might notice:
  • Chronic fatigue or muscle tension
  • Digestive issues
  • Frequent headaches
  • Difficulty concentrating or remembering things

These symptoms can be misdiagnosed or dismissed—but they often reflect a nervous system under strain.


How Trauma Affects Daily Life
Unresolved trauma doesn’t stay neatly tucked away. 
It can ripple out into nearly every area of life:

Relationships: Trouble with trust, fear of vulnerability, or poor boundaries

Work: Perfectionism, fear of failure, or shutting down under pressure

Health: Ongoing physical symptoms that don’t resolve with typical treatments

Sometimes people live for years—decades even—managing these symptoms without realizing they’re connected to earlier experiences.



How Therapy Can Help
You don’t have to untangle this alone. Therapy can offer a safe space to begin making sense of what you’ve carried—and to stop blaming yourself for the ways you’ve adapted.

A trauma-informed therapist can help you:

Understand your symptoms as survival responses, not personal failures 
 
Rebuild a sense of safety and connection, both internally and in relationships

Begin to process difficult emotions and memories without becoming overwhelmed

Learn tools for regulating your nervous system and feeling more at home in your body



Different therapeutic approaches can support this work:

  • EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) helps reprocess trauma so it feels less emotionally charged
  • Somatic therapies focus on how trauma lives in the body and teach ways to release stored tension or freeze responses
  • Trauma-informed CBT can help shift unhelpful thought patterns linked to fear or shame
  • AEDP (Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy) may help when trauma is rooted in attachment wounds or early emotional experiences. It focuses on restoring emotional processing through a strong therapeutic relationship
  • IFS (Internal Family Systems) helps you connect with the different “parts” of yourself—like the inner critic, the people-pleaser, or the protector—and relate to them with compassion rather than conflict

There’s no one-size-fits-all path. 
And while there are many ways to approach trauma treatment, it’s not your job to figure it all out alone. With the right support, a skilled therapist can help you make sense of what you’re carrying and find the approaches that fit you.



Brian Jacobs