By Rebecca Bean | Rebecca’s Coaching Thoughts – Bean’s Dreams Blog
One of the most painful effects of emotional trauma — especially from narcissistic abuse — is the way it fractures our ability to trust ourselves. We second-guess our instincts, silence our inner voice, and feel afraid to make even small decisions. This self-doubt isn’t a personality flaw — it’s a symptom of surviving manipulation, gaslighting, or betrayal. And the good news? Self-trust can be rebuilt.
When someone repeatedly tells you your feelings are wrong, your memories are false, or your needs are “too much,” your inner compass starts to short-circuit. You learn to abandon your own perception in order to stay safe or avoid conflict.
This survival strategy might have helped you cope at the time — but over the long term, it disconnects you from your truth. That disconnection can lead to anxiety, people-pleasing, and chronic self-doubt.
Rebuilding self-trust isn’t about flipping a switch. It’s about building a bridge — one choice, one feeling, one boundary at a time. Here’s what that might look like:
Each of these small acts tells your nervous system: You’re safe with me now.
You will still second-guess yourself. You may make choices you later revise. That’s not failure — that’s feedback. True self-trust doesn’t mean getting everything “right.” It means trusting that, even if things go sideways, you’ll show up for yourself with care and compassion.
When you rebuild trust with yourself, everything changes: