Learn to navigate the biological addiction of trauma bonds and reclaim your strength, even when shared spaces and lingering messages make moving on feel impossible.

You’re not just missing a person; you’re craving the neurochemical relief from the withdrawal he caused. Once you understand that this is biology and not a character flaw, you can move from asking 'Why wasn't I enough?' to 'How dare he treat someone as valuable as me as an option?'
advice for healing from a trauma bond, a three-year, toxic relationship that begin as an affair and in a divorce and culminated with him still not choosing me after the divorce dating someone else . We have very close mutual friends and do the same martial arts sport and lift weights together so it’s difficult for me to cut him out of my life completely. He keeps lingering sending me inappropriate messages calling me flirting with me. I I need to feel powerful.


This struggle is rooted in biology rather than a lack of willpower. The cycle of a trauma bond creates a neurological state similar to drug addiction, where the brain is flooded with dopamine during "highs" and cortisol during "lows." This is driven by intermittent reinforcement—the "slot machine effect"—where unpredictable rewards like a flirty text or a moment of kindness become more addictive than the steady affection of a stable partner. You aren't missing the person; your body is experiencing a physiological withdrawal from the neurochemical relief they once provided.
The Grey Rock method is a communication strategy used when you cannot go completely "No Contact" due to shared spaces like a gym, workplace, or social circle. The goal is to make yourself as uninteresting and unreactive as a grey rock so the manipulator no longer gets an emotional "hit" from you. You remain polite but transactional, offering short, boring responses and refusing to engage with bait, flirtation, or personal questions. This neutralizes the environment and protects your energy by signaling that you are no longer a source of emotional supply.
You must implement an "information diet" by setting clear, non-negotiable boundaries with your social circle. Explicitly tell your friends that for your mental health, you cannot hear updates about your ex and you request that they do not share your business with him. If friends push back or claim he "misses you," you must remain firm, even if it means taking a temporary break from certain group activities. A true supportive network will prioritize your healing over gossip.
This is a manipulation tactic called triangulation. By dating someone new while keeping you on the "back burner," the individual creates a love triangle where they remain the center of attention, making multiple people vie for their validation. The lingering messages are a form of "hoovering"—an attempt to suck you back into the cycle to prove they still have power over your emotions. It is a reflection of their need for varied "supply" and control, not a reflection of your worth or a sign that they have changed.
While the ego is often viewed negatively, in the context of recovery, it can serve as a vital protective shield. Instead of letting a wounded ego ask, "Why wasn't I enough?" you can shift it toward healthy indignation: "How dare he treat someone as valuable as me as an option?" Embracing your pride and your identity as a strong, capable person—such as an athlete or a professional—helps you stop explaining yourself to the manipulator. This shift moves you from a state of seeking their approval to realizing they are no longer qualified to be in your life.
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