You're Not Broken—You're Frozen. And Frozen Can Thaw.
There's a particular kind of suffering that doesn't hurt. It's not pain—it's the absence of feeling altogether. Moving through life like you're watching it happen to someone else. Going through the motions but not present. Existing but not quite alive.
This is numbness. Emotional shutdown. Dissociation. And if you live this way, you know the strange paradox: numbness protects you from pain, but it also protects you from joy, connection, meaning, aliveness.
This shutdown response is often inherited. Someone in your lineage learned to numb out to survive something unbearable—and that coping mechanism got encoded and passed down.
In this episode, we explore inherited numbness and how to safely thaw:
✨ How numbness develops: When fighting won't work and fleeing isn't possible, you freeze. Your great-grandfather at war—if he felt the full weight of trauma, he'd break. So he goes numb. That numbness keeps him alive but never turns off.
✨ How it shows up: Emotional flatness (can't access feelings), disconnection from the body (live in your head), inability to access needs (don't know what you want), difficulty with intimacy (can't be vulnerable), addictive behaviors (seeking sensation because you're already numb), chronic fatigue, living on autopilot.
✨ What it costs: You can't selectively numb—if you shut down pain, you shut down joy too. It costs you connection (people sense you're not present), aliveness (you're existing, not living), your body's wisdom, and yourself (you lose touch with who you are).
✨ Seven steps to thaw: (1) Understand thawing is gradual, not instant (2) Start with body sensations—temperature, texture, movement (3) Practice pendulation—feel briefly, then regulate (4) Work with small emotions first (5) Create actual safety (6) Be patient—it's not linear (7) Get support—you can't thaw alone
Numbness developed because feeling wasn't safe. For thawing to happen, you need to create actual safety—then your nervous system can begin to trust.
You can't go from numb to fully feeling overnight. Thawing happens in layers. You feel a little, then regulate. Then feel a little more. You're teaching your nervous system: I can feel and then come back. It's not all or nothing.
Your ancestors had to numb out to survive. But you don't. When you choose to feel—slowly, safely, with support—you're proving it's finally safe. That feeling won't destroy you. That aliveness is possible.
Next episode: Scarcity—the inherited belief that there's never enough and how to cultivate abundance without guilt.