What’s love addiction? Well, if you find yourself loving someone with such an intensity that at the end of the day you’re left feeling in pain and emotionally drained. Or if you feel a profound need to receive love, acceptance and approval from others, and when you don’t think you are getting it, you feel as if you have little worth… among other things, that’s love addiction.
From the time we are born, especially from the ages zero through five, we’re pretty unconscious. We begin developing consciousness in our pre-frontal cortex at about the age of six. Anything we see during this time, or experience – especially with our parents – goes into the back of our brain, our limbic area, where they are stored as memories. That’s our unconscious.
About 80% of what we do in our adult life is ruled by our unconscious mind; by our thoughts, feelings, and perceptions of our parents, our culture, our generation and even ourselves. What happens when we have a love addiction is that we are operating from about 80% of our unconscious mind.
And here’s the thing: Regular therapy is not going to fix what is going on in our unconscious mind. What we really need is to get at the root of the problem, and learn how to deal with the deep issues in our unconscious through structured, unconscious work that allows us to reprogram our brains.
Regular talk therapy, on the other hand, works with about 20% of your conscious brain, and it really only focuses on what you’re currently feeling and thinking and how to change those thoughts and those feelings now.
But what a person truly needs, especially with relationship maturity, co-dependency issues, or love addiction, is a strong structure that allows them to work through the issue from the beginning, to a middle and all the way to the end… all of the time, targeting the unconscious mind.
A great example of how love addiction treatment works is a client who I’ll call Matt. Matt walks around constantly feeling inadequate at his job. He also feels like other people don’t like him. No matter what he does, he doesn’t feel like he’s doing a good job and he doesn’t feel like it’s ever enough.
The same thing happens to Matt in his relationship. He often times feels that he is less than the person he’s with. He is hyper-vigilant about what people think of him and he is constantly trying to get approval from other people through people pleasing, which means he doesn’t really know how to set healthy boundaries.
When Matt came to me he had already been to four or five regular therapists and he just could not get rid of that feeling.
In our therapy, through the guided structure, we were able to discover that Matt had had a very, very critical father that, no matter what he did, it wasn’t enough. Even to the point where his dad, after his baseball games, would show him what he did wrong. He’d videotape him and show him every single thing Matt did that was wrong. So no matter what he did in his adult relationships, he never felt like he was doing anything right.
We needed to go back to the original trauma and see where that was coming from, giving him a specific, unconscious direction for his unconscious mind to reprogram his brain into understanding that mistakes happen and that you can’t be perfect. And that if you make mistakes it does not mean you’re less than other people.
With love addiction treatment, Matt is now able – whenever he starts to regress into that little boy – in that moment, to get himself out of the trance that keeps him thinking, and feeling, that he’s not good enough. Even though his current experiences might not be with his father, his unconscious makes him experience the other person as if he or she were his dad.
What happened was, we first needed to build up his functional adult skills, then providing him with some emotional maturity within a specific structure: a beginning, middle, and an end. Regular talk therapy would not have done that for Matt – it would not have worked. Matt needed a specific structure to target that unconscious trauma.
Regular therapy had only helped Matt be able to feel good for a moment. This provided him with the tools to get out of the recurring sense that he was not good enough. And to get out of those unconscious states of codependency.
Love addiction treatment can do the same for you!
If you’re suffering, there is hope. Your first step is to take our quiz. I’m going to ask you some personal questions to help you take the first step toward your future. You can count on my discretion. Trust that I will keep these answers completely confidential, and I will only use them to formulate your quiz results.
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