What appears to be a person's 'breakdown' or 'snap' is often the result of sustained emotional pressure, manipulation, and nervous system overload over time, not a personality flaw or reactive abuse; the term 'reactive abuse' is misleading because it labels the victim's defensive reaction as abuse, when in reality it is coerced defensive aggression—a biological survival response to intentional, targeted pressure designed to push someone to their limit.
Deep Dive
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Deep Dive
You Didnt "Snap" - You were SET UP!Added:
You said something you wish you could take back.
Maybe you yelled. Maybe you slammed something.
Maybe you called him something you never thought you would because you don't name call.
And now you're lying there [music] replaying it over and over wondering what's wrong with me.
But I want you to go back to that moment for a second.
Right after you lost it, do you remember his face?
There was something there for sure.
Maybe just for a second, a smirk, a flicker of something that looked like satisfaction.
And then it disappeared.
And suddenly he's the victim and you're the one who can't sleep.
that moment that was not random because what you've been calling a breakdown was actually a setup.
And if you're here right now, you know exactly what I'm talking about.
Let's talk about the label that keeps you stuck.
There's a term that gets used a lot, reactive abuse.
And I understand why people use it because it's trying to describe something real.
Something almost every woman in these dynamics has experienced. [music] But there's a problem with it, a big one. The word abuse is attached [music] to your reaction.
So the second you say I was reactively abusive, you've already taken on the role of the abuser, you've already done the work for him.
So let's replace it because the truth is a lot more accurate.
What you experienced is coerced defensive aggression.
Let that land.
You were coerced, pushed, pressured, worn down over time.
You were being defensive, not controlling, not manipulating, protecting yourself.
And the aggression, that's what a nervous system does when it hits its absolute limit.
And the threat doesn't stop.
That's not a personality flaw.
That's biology.
That's survival.
Now, let me make this really real for you.
I've done deep nervous system work.
I've sat through vipassana meditation, 10 days of silence, no phone, no distraction, just observing your mind.
You literally train yourself not to react, to sit with discomfort, to breathe through it, to simply observe, to not lose control.
And yet, I still got pushed out of character over and over again because this wasn't about regulation.
This wasn't about just calm down.
This was pressure, consistent, intentional, targeted pressure designed to find the exact place where you would finally break.
You don't meditate your way out of that because that's not inner chaos.
That's literally a war you have zero control over.
And then after you break That's when you hear it.
You have mental problems.
Let's be very clear about what that actually is.
That's not concern. That's not confusion.
That's documentation.
He's labeling the reaction that he created.
So later he has a story ready.
A story where he's patient and you're unstable.
And when you call it reactive abuse, you're helping him tell that story.
But when you call it what it is, coerced defensive aggression, you put the responsibility back where it belongs.
Let's talk about the setup, how it actually happens.
This doesn't start with [music] chaos.
It starts with structure.
You're isolated. Maybe you moved. Maybe your people aren't around.
Maybe the only consistent person in your day-to-day life is him.
And then your cats and of course his ex living across the property that he has painted as the devil.
None of it's an accident because once you don't have people around who knew you before this, there's no one to reality check what's happening.
There's just his version.
So then comes the training phase.
At first, he's super consistent.
If he says seven, he's there at 7. He's [music] punctual.
If he makes a plan, it happens the way he planned it. So you trust it. Of course you do. [music] It was real long enough for you to build your reality around it.
And then of course it starts to shift slowly, subtly.
Now all of a sudden he's late.
Now his story changes.
Now somehow you're the one who misunderstood.
Now somehow you're the problem every time.
And your nervous system, it adapts.
It starts scanning, reading, anticipating, trying to crack the code.
If I just figure out what version of him I'm getting today, I can stay safe.
But there [music] is no code.
That's the part that breaks you. The unpredictability is the system.
So when you finally snap, it's not about that moment.
It's about [music] everything you swallowed before it. Every eye roll, every dismissal, every subtle jab that was too small to explain, but too heavy to carry.
You held all of it until you couldn't.
And that's when the smirk shows up. That flash, that moment where something in him goes, "There it is."
Because your reaction rewrites everything.
Now it's not about what he's been doing for months, how he's setting you up. Now it's about what you just did.
He got the story.
So, please put your hand on your chest with me for a second here.
Let's just do it long enough to breathe.
Exhale it all out. [sighs] That feeling you have right now, that recognition, that's your body going, "Yeah, that happened.
You're safe right now.
Let that land." And let's take another deep breath together. in and just let it all out. [sighs] All right. Now, let's talk about why you started recording.
So, at some point, you pulled out your phone and maybe a part of you feels guilty about that, like it belongs in the same category as everything else, like it's more [music] proof that you were wrong.
But it's not.
You didn't record him to control him.
You recorded him because your reality was being rewritten in real time. And you [music] knew it.
You needed something that couldn't gaslight you. Something to show you proof.
Because here's what gaslighting actually does.
Over time, it makes you stop trusting your own memory. You know what happened.
You felt it. You heard it. And then the next day, it's like it never existed.
And your brain starts to split.
Did that happen?
Am I overreacting?
[music] Did I imagine that? Do that enough times and you stop trusting yourself.
at a core level.
So you recorded it not for anyone else, [music] not to use against him, but so you could come back to the the next day and go, "No, that did happen.
That's not manipulation.
That's reality anchoring. [music] That's survival."
And there's a huge difference between that and someone recording you.
One is [music] to control the narrative.
The other is to stay connected to the truth.
You didn't lose your mind. You are trying to hold on to it.
All right. Let's finally talk about coming back to yourself after whatever situation that was just created.
You're now the one apologizing for the reaction he built.
You say [music] sorry for finally reaching your limit.
And that's the final layer of the trap because now you're carrying shame of something that was purposely engineered.
So instead of replaying just the moment you snapped, I want you to zoom out tonight, not tomorrow, tonight. [music] Take a piece of paper and write down what happened, not the polished version, the real one.
Then go back 24 hours or more if needed and write everything [music] down.
The small things, the looks, the tone, the dismissals, the silent treatment, the things you swallowed, all of it.
Then read it back and ask yourself one question.
Does this look like the reaction of someone trying to harm someone else or simply of someone who held on as long as they possibly could to not react until they were pushed over the edge?
Because that answer, that's where your clarity starts.
And when the shame comes back, because it will, I want you to come back to this.
Remember, I was coerced. I [music] was defending myself. I am safe. Now feel your feet. Be grounded.
Let's take another slow breath together.
[music] Inhale as long as you can.
and exhale slower, even longer on.
Let your shoulders drop.
You didn't snap.
You broke under pressure by something designed to break you.
by someone who studied you long enough to know exactly how to make you break.
So, here's what I want you to do tonight. Not a pause, not a question, [music] an action.
Go to your mirror and write this. I am aware.
See it and read [music] it daily with intention.
And if this gave you words for something you've never been able to explain, save it or send it to a friend, a woman who's [music] still blaming herself for something she didn't create.
Be kind to yourself, be strong for yourself, and be true to yourself. And be sure to come back for more.
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