Why Your Nervous System Still Feels on Edge After Narcissistic Abuse

Why Your Nervous System Still Feels on Edge After Narcissistic Abuse

Sue Leppan Transformation Facilitator & Life Coach

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Why Your Nervous System Still Feels on Edge After Narcissistic Abuse

Leaving a narcissistic abusive relationship often brings a moment where people say to you, “At least the worst is over.”

And in many ways, they are right.

You are no longer living inside the daily manipulation, the criticism, the unpredictability, the emotional control.

But something important is often overlooked.

Your nervous system does not immediately recognise that the danger has passed.

Through months or years of navigating that relationship, your nervous system became your early warning system. It learned to scan constantly for danger. It remembers the tone of voice, the footsteps, the change in atmosphere in a room. Long before your conscious mind understands what is happening, your body reacts.

This is not weakness.

This is biology and survival intelligence.

Your brain and nervous system were doing exactly what they are designed to do: protect you.

But when the relationship ends, the body can remain in a state of hyper-vigilance. A sound, a smell, a word, or even a facial expression can trigger the same survival response that once kept you safe.

And the world continues as normal, unaware that your body is still carrying the memory of danger.

That is why healing from narcissistic abuse cannot only happen in the mind.

Understanding the relationship is powerful.

Insight is important.

But we are whole beings.

Our mind, emotions, nervous system and body must all be invited into the healing process.

Neuroscience shows us that the nervous system can learn safety again.

Psychology reminds us that trauma stored in the body can be released.

And when we shift our awareness and energy inward, something powerful happens: the body begins to recognise that the present moment is no longer the past.

For many survivors, the idea of feeling completely safe again can even feel unfamiliar… or frightening.

When survival has been your normal for so long, freedom can feel like unknown territory.

But freedom is possible.

When the nervous system learns safety again, something beautiful happens:

Your body relaxes.

Your mind becomes clear.

Your energy returns.

And life slowly opens in ways you may have forgotten were possible.

You were never meant to live in survival.

You were meant to live in peace, safety and freedom.

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Leaving a relationship with narcissistic abuse does not mean that your nervous system has let go of survival vigilance.

Why Your Nervous System Still Feels on Edge After Narcissistic Abuse

Sue Leppan Transformation Facilitator & Life Coach

Sue Leppan is a life, transformation and holistic wellness coach based in Sandbaai, Hermanus. Providing therapy for a range of challenges, Sue specialises in targeting and dealing with emotional trauma, self-doubt, depression, stagnation and self-centring. Whether you need help with personal issues ...

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