Relational Trauma & RecoveryEmotional Regulation & Nervous SystemDriven Women & PerfectionismRelationship Mastery & CommunicationLife Transitions & Major DecisionsFamily Dynamics & BoundariesMental Health & WellnessPersonal Growth & Self-Discovery

Join 20,000+ people on Annie’s newsletter working to finally feel as good as their resume looks

Browse By Category

Remember, it was always an attempt to help yourself…

Misty seascape morning fog ocean
Misty seascape morning fog ocean

Remember, it was always an attempt to help yourself…

Remember, it was always an attempt to help yourself… — Annie Wright trauma therapy

Remember, it was always an attempt to help yourself…

What worked well at one point stops working so well anymore.

But still, she keeps doing it because she doesn’t know what else to do instead and it’s taken the form of a compulsion for her, an addictive behavior.

It’s a vicious cycle.

You can apply this hypothetical to any of the above points in the intro or to whatever habit/behavior of your own in the present or in your past that you feel embarrassed about: food additions, bad romantic choices, financial irresponsibility, compromising your boundaries, compromising your relationships, even, perhaps, compromising your life.

What’s important here is not that you personally identify with having had a history of binging and purging yourself but rather to recognize that the root of almost any addictive/compulsive/self-destructive behaviors are attempts to take care of ourselves in whatever way we thought was possible or that we had access to.

Remember: what seems harmful now was once an adaptation.

A strategic and probably effective adaptation!) – to challenging circumstances at some point earlier.

When we can hold this lens of compassion for the parts of our past (or the behaviors we presently hold!) that we have shame and regret around, we can, believe it or not, allow for the possibility of change to occur.

According to the paradoxical theory of change, a contribution to the field of psychology by Fritz Perls, the paradoxical theory of change states that the more you try to be something you’re not, the more you’ll stay right where you are.

So in our attempts to move forward, to grow, and to create something different for ourselves we are ironically called upon to accept and even have compassion for the self-destructive (and other-destructive) behaviors and habits that we may have had in the past.

Because of this, I invite you to reframe how you have thought about those shameful, painful habits and actions of yours in the past, not only because it will likely feel better for you to have more grace and compassion for yourself, but also because you won’t grow as much or as well unless you can actually accept those parts of you.

“The longing for sweets is really a yearning for love or “sweetness.” ― Marion Woodman, Ph.D.

Freedom: Cultivating Choice Around Our Self-Destructive Habits.

“aw-pull-quote”— Gabor Maté, MD, The Myth of Normal

“It is impossible to understand addiction without asking what relief the addict finds, or hopes to find, in the drug or the addictive behavior.” ― Gabor Maté, M.D.

When we can recognize that every behavior and habit of ours that we had or currently have was actually an attempt that was designed to support ourselves but also recognize that it was a maladaptive attempt – meaning an attempt that is dysfunctional and actually doesn’t produce the outcomes that you actually want – we can then address the question of what else is possible instead.

That same young woman, trapped in the vicious cycle of bulimia to cope with her chaotic and abusive family – is now grown.

She’s an adult with distance from them and more agency in the world, and while she still binges and purges, she has more options and resources than she likely did back then.

We can begin to explore what more adaptive, supportive choices might look like for her. When she feels the relentless despair and anxiety at night that’s so lifelong familiar to her.

We can book her therapy for times in the evening.

We can build social gatherings and opportunities into her calendar. To help her decrease her sense of isolation and to connect with others.

We can work in our counseling sessions to help her expand her abilities. To tolerate those challenging feelings.

We can remove the trigger foods from her house.

We can practice something different. Because circumstances and her capacities are now different.

We can create choice for how she responds to challenging feelings when before there felt like there was no choice, there was only a default option.

And this – cultivating choice – is what the work of therapy is all about to me.

When we are acting compulsively – and I don’t just mean in actions such as daily bulimia, but I also mean with repeated, compulsive thoughts and beliefs – “I married the wrong guy.” “I’ll never make enough money.” “I’m too fat to find love.” etc, we aren’t that free.

Again, we come by those thoughts/habits/behaviors honestly, but if they are the only ways we imagine we can respond to a situation or view ourselves, we’re not that choiceful.

Doing the emotional work to expand your abilities to choose different behaviors/thoughts/beliefs will allow you to be responsive to life, rather than reactive.

It will help us cultivate more adaptive behaviors and habits for you versus perpetuating maladaptive ones.

This work can take some time – remember, it took a while to form the other habit/behaviors – but it is worth it.

And through this process of cultivating different choices and taking steps to tolerate more emotional discomfort, it’s critical we recall, again and again, that those former habits, the ones we’d prefer no one ever knew about, were always attempts to take care of ourselves.

I actually do think we’re naturally driven to feel good and to try and take care of ourselves, it’s just that sometimes we do so in ways that aren’t quite that effective.

But that’s okay! It simply says you’re driven to take care of yourself and now we just have to find other ways you can do this.

“For me, vulnerability led to anxiety, which led to shame, which led to disconnection, which led to Bud Light.” – Brené Brown, Ph.D.

Inquiries To Reflect On Your Own Self-Destructive Habits:

“When clients self-harm, for example, these days, we understand their actions to be instinctive, rather than thought out—an effort to regulate or relieve, rather than punish.” ― Janina Fisher, Ph.D.

“Self-compassion is key because when we’re able to be gentle with ourselves in the midst of shame, we’re more likely to reach out, connect, and experience empathy.” – Brené Brown, Ph.D.

From Survival Strategy to Conscious Choice: Transforming Maladaptive Patterns

When you sit across from your therapist, ashamed about the wine bottle you empty nightly or the credit cards you’ve maxed out, they see something different than moral failure. They recognize these behaviors as brilliant survival strategies that became outdated software still running in your adult life.

Your therapist helps you understand that what are the tools in your emotional first aid kit began developing long before you had conscious choice. That eating disorder wasn’t rebellion—it was the only way a powerless child could feel control. The toxic relationships weren’t stupidity—they were attempts to find love using the only template you knew.

Together, you explore what each behavior provided: did binging numb unbearable loneliness? Did shopping create momentary feelings of abundance when life felt scarce? Did staying with harmful partners at least mean not being alone? Understanding the function helps identify what needs must be met differently.

Your therapist introduces the paradoxical theory of change—how fighting against these parts of yourself actually keeps them stuck. Instead of shame-based willpower attempts, you practice radical self-compassion, recognizing that younger you did the absolute best with extremely limited resources.

The work involves expanding your window of tolerance for difficult emotions that these behaviors helped you avoid. Your therapist helps you slowly build capacity to sit with anxiety without wine, to feel loneliness without Netflix numbing, to experience vulnerability without destructive relationships.

Most importantly, you develop choice where there was only compulsion. Instead of defaulting to familiar patterns, you practice pausing, recognizing the urge, and choosing from an expanded menu of responses. Not perfectly, not always, but increasingly—transforming survival into conscious living.

Wrapping This Up…

I’d love to hear from you in the comments here on the blog:

Does this reframe – that any self-destructive behavior and habit you’ve had/have was always, at some level, an attempt to support yourself – feel helpful to bear in mind? Can you understand how, when you accept this part of you and this part of your past, it will actually allow for change to take place in your life? What comes up for you as I share this with you?

Leave me a message in the comments below. I’d love to hear from you.

Here’s to healing relational trauma and creating thriving lives on solid foundations.

Warmly,

Annie

Additional Resources:

RESOURCES & REFERENCES

  1. !important;text-decoration:none!important;">Additional Resources:
I know what I’m doing when I do it. I watch myself do it. And I still do it. Why can’t I stop self-sabotaging even after all the work I’ve done?

Self-sabotage often happens because your mind is trying to protect you from perceived threats or pain, even if it hurts your progress. It’s important to recognize these patterns as attempts to help yourself, and gently work through the underlying fears or trauma with compassion.

I can extend grace to everyone else when they make mistakes. Myself? Not even close. How do I learn to treat myself the way I treat the people I love?

Remember that making mistakes is a natural part of growth, and harsh self-criticism often comes from internalized trauma or high expectations. Practicing self-compassion and reframing your inner dialogue can help you be kinder to yourself over time.

Is it normal to feel overwhelmed even when things seem to be going well?

Yes, many driven, ambitious women feel overwhelmed despite external success because internal stress or unresolved trauma can create emotional tension. A trauma-informed approach can help you understand these feelings and develop healthier coping strategies.

How can therapy help me understand my coping mechanisms?

Therapy provides a safe space to explore your behaviors and uncover the reasons behind them, especially how they relate to past trauma or survival strategies. This insight allows you to replace unhelpful coping mechanisms with healthier, more supportive ones.

Why do I struggle to ask for help even when I know I need it?

Struggling to ask for help often stems from past experiences where vulnerability felt unsafe or unsupported. Understanding this pattern through therapy can empower you to build trust and learn to reach out in ways that feel secure and nurturing.

Further Reading on Relational Trauma

Explore Annie’s clinical writing on relational trauma recovery.

WAYS TO WORK WITH ANNIE

INDIVIDUAL THERAPY

Trauma-informed therapy for driven women healing relational trauma.

Licensed in California and Florida. Work one-on-one with Annie to repair the psychological foundations beneath your impressive life.

Learn More

EXECUTIVE COACHING

Trauma-informed coaching for ambitious women navigating leadership and burnout.

For driven women whose professional success has outpaced their internal foundation. Coaching that goes beyond strategy.

Learn More

FIXING THE FOUNDATIONS

Annie’s signature course for relational trauma recovery.

A structured, self-paced program for women ready to do the deeper work of healing the patterns beneath their success.

Join Waitlist

STRONG & STABLE

The Sunday conversation you wished you’d had years earlier.

Weekly essays, practice guides, and workbooks for driven women whose lives look great on paper — and feel heavy behind the scenes. Free to start. 20,000+ subscribers.

Subscribe Free

Annie Wright, LMFT

About the Author

Annie Wright, LMFT

LMFT #95719  ·  Relational Trauma Specialist  ·  W.W. Norton Author

Helping ambitious women finally feel as good as their résumé looks.

As a licensed psychotherapist (LMFT #95719), trauma-informed executive coach, and relational trauma specialist with over 15,000 clinical hours, she guides ambitious women — including Silicon Valley leaders, physicians, and entrepreneurs — in repairing the psychological foundations beneath their impressive lives. Annie is the founder and former CEO of Evergreen Counseling, a multimillion-dollar trauma-informed therapy center she built, scaled, and successfully exited. A regular contributor to Psychology Today, her expert commentary has appeared in Forbes, Business Insider, Inc., NBC, and The Information. She is currently writing her first book with W.W. Norton.

Work With Annie

Both/And: These Habits Were Helping You and They Are Now Hurting You

I want to sit with the both/and of self-destructive habits for a moment, because I think it’s the most clinically important thing I can offer on this topic.

The habit was helping. And the habit is now hurting. Both are true. Neither cancels out the other.

This framing matters because most of us approach our self-destructive habits from one of two inadequate positions. Either we minimize them (“everyone drinks too much sometimes, it’s fine”) or we catastrophize them (“I am fundamentally broken for doing this”). Neither position allows for actual change. Minimizing removes the urgency. Catastrophizing removes the self-compassion that change requires.

The both/and position holds something more accurate: this behavior served a real function, it was a legitimate response to a real need, and it is also costing you more than it’s giving you now. You deserve to understand why you have it, and you deserve support in finding something that works better.

Elena had been a smoker since she was sixteen — the age when her parents’ marriage dissolved in a way that nobody in the family was allowed to talk about. She knew, intellectually, that smoking was bad for her. She’d quit several times. What she hadn’t done was connect the smoking to the function it served: a reliable, solitary ritual that belonged entirely to her. Something she could do alone, in a moment of pressure, that sent a clear signal to herself and others that she needed a pause.

When we explored what the cigarette was doing rather than just the fact that it was “bad,” she could start to grieve the loss of it while also looking for better alternatives. The grief was important. You can’t fully commit to changing something you haven’t been allowed to appreciate. The smoking had kept her company through some of the loneliest years of her life. It deserved acknowledgment before she walked away.

The Systemic Lens: Self-Destructive Habits Don’t Develop in a Vacuum

One of the things I notice in wellness spaces — and in some therapy spaces — is how quickly conversations about self-destructive habits become purely individual. What are you doing? Why are you doing it? What do you need to change?

These are valid questions. But they miss something important about the context in which coping behaviors develop and persist.

The driven, ambitious women I work with developed many of their self-destructive habits in response to real environmental conditions. Working in cultures that rewarded overperformance and punished rest. Growing up in homes where emotional needs were treated as weakness or inconvenience. Navigating professional and social environments where the cost of appearing vulnerable was very, very high. These aren’t background factors. They’re the soil from which the coping strategies grew.

Gabor Maté, MD, physician, addiction expert, and author of In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts, has written extensively about how addiction and self-destructive habits are rarely about personal weakness or poor choices. They’re about pain — specifically, about the attempt to manage pain that has nowhere else to go. And that pain, Maté argues, is almost always shaped by the relational and social environments that produced it.

This doesn’t absolve anyone of responsibility for their behavior. But it does reframe the work. If you’re trying to stop a self-destructive habit without also addressing the conditions — internal and external — that are still generating the need for it, you’re working against yourself. You’re trying to remove the smoke alarm without addressing the fire.

True healing often requires both: the internal work of understanding and processing the underlying need, and the external work of changing what can be changed about the conditions that keep that need so urgent. Sometimes that means changing work environments. Changing relationships. Changing what you say yes to and what you protect yourself from. The habits didn’t develop in isolation. The healing doesn’t have to either.

Medical Disclaimer

Medical Disclaimer

Frequently Asked Questions

These behaviors likely started as effective coping mechanisms during times when you had limited resources or options. They become compulsive because they once worked to provide relief, numbness, or connection, even though they now create more problems than they solve.

The paradoxical theory of change states that trying to be something you're not keeps you stuck. When you accept that these behaviors were attempts at self-care rather than character flaws, you reduce shame and create psychological space for genuine transformation.

No. While these patterns may have deep roots, you now have more resources, options, and capacity than you did as a child. Therapy helps you develop new, more adaptive ways to meet the same emotional needs the destructive behavior was trying to address.

Yes. Whether it's addiction, self-harm, toxic relationships, or compulsive behaviors, each represents an attempt to manage emotional pain, find relief, feel connection, or survive difficult circumstances with whatever tools were available at the time.

Begin by identifying what the behavior gives you (relief, numbness, connection), then explore other ways to meet those needs. This often requires professional support to expand your emotional tolerance and develop new coping strategies while maintaining compassion for yourself.

What's Running Your Life?

The invisible patterns you can’t outwork…

Your LinkedIn profile tells one story. Your 3 AM thoughts tell another. If vacation makes you anxious, if praise feels hollow, if you’re planning your next move before finishing the current one—you’re not alone. And you’re *not* broken.

This quiz reveals the invisible patterns from childhood that keep you running. Why enough is never enough. Why success doesn’t equal satisfaction. Why rest feels like risk.

Five minutes to understand what’s really underneath that exhausting, constant drive.

Related Posts

Ready to explore working together?