Daily Lotus Reflections
Abandonment is one of the deepest and most misunderstood wounds a human being can carry.
It is not just the loss of a person.
It is the loss of safety.
The loss of connection.
The loss of belonging.
And for many trauma survivors, the loss of a sense of self.
Abandonment is not only what happened to us in the past.
It is what our body remembers in the present.
It is the leftover imprint of being emotionally, physically, or spiritually left behind.
This wound creates patterns that live in our nervous system.
And when something in the present echoes the past—even subtly—we are thrust into fear, panic, insecurity, and confusion.
This is why abandonment recovery is not a mental process.
It is an emotional, somatic, and spiritual one.
Understanding Susan Anderson’s Abandonment Recovery
Susan Anderson describes abandonment patterns through two main survival responses:
1. Abandoholism
This is the compulsion to attach quickly or intensely.
You may cling to people, relationships, or situations because losing connection feels unbearable.
The fear of being left can feel stronger than your sense of self.
You may:
- over-invest emotionally
- ignore red flags
- give too much
- try to prove your worth
- feel terrified of losing someone even when the relationship is unhealthy
Abandoholism is not neediness.
It is the body’s attempt to prevent reliving the original wound.
2. Abandophobia
This is the opposite pattern—fear of intimacy and closeness.
You may hold people at a distance, avoid commitment, or withdraw when things become too vulnerable.
You may:
- fear relying on anyone
- leave before you can be left
- become overwhelmed by closeness
- feel trapped by emotional needs
- disconnect to avoid attachment
Abandophobia is not coldness.
It is fear disguised as independence.
Both patterns are rooted in the same wound:
“I cannot survive being left again.”
And both patterns deserve compassion, not shame.
How Abandonment Wounds Distort the Four Agreements by don Miguel Ruiz
Healing abandonment requires re-learning trust, safety, and self-worth.
The Four Agreements by don Miguel Ruiz become powerful lenses for understanding how abandonment distorts our thinking, and how to use these principles to heal.
1. Be Impeccable with Your Word
Unhealed abandonment turns this agreement into self-blame.
You may internalize:
“I must keep the peace.”
“I must not upset anyone.”
“I must say the right thing or they will leave.”
Abandonment makes your words a survival tool.
Healing means:
- speaking truth without fear of rejection
- honoring your voice, needs, and boundaries
- not abandoning yourself to avoid abandonment from others
Your word becomes an act of self-loyalty.
2. Don’t Take Anything Personally
Abandonment makes everything feel personal.
A delayed reply
A shift in tone
A moment of silence
A change in behavior
The body interprets these as:
“I’m losing them.”
“I did something wrong.”
“I’m being replaced.”
“I’m not enough.”
Healing means separating:
what is happening now
from what happened then.
Not taking things personally becomes:
“I will not let my past dictate the meaning of this moment.”
3. Don’t Make Assumptions
When you carry abandonment trauma, your mind becomes a storyteller.
But the story is always written in fear.
You may assume:
- you’re being rejected
- someone is pulling away
- something “bad” is about to happen
- you are not wanted
- you did something wrong
These assumptions are not reality.
They are emotional flashbacks.
Healing means slowing the story down long enough to ask:
“What is the truth right now?”
“What evidence do I actually have?”
“What am I afraid of losing?”
This is how you stop fear from controlling your narrative.
4. Always Do Your Best
Abandonment makes you strive for perfection in relationships.
Your “best” becomes:
over-performing
over-giving
over-apologizing
over-explaining
over-functioning
Trying to earn safety.
Trying to earn love.
Trying to earn belonging.
Healing means:
My best changes depending on how safe and regulated I feel.
My best does not require abandoning my own needs.
Your “best” becomes self-honoring, not self-sacrificing.

The Triggered Body: When Abandonment is Activated
When abandonment is triggered, your survival responses awaken:
Freeze
You shut down emotionally.
You feel numb, disconnected, unable to process.
The world feels far away.
Freeze says, “This hurts too much. I cannot move.”
Flight
You pull away or detach before being left.
You run from connection to prevent the pain.
Flight says, “If I leave first, I won’t be abandoned.”
Fight
You become reactive or defensive.
You might argue, plead, or panic.
Fight says, “I must fight to keep myself safe.”
Fawn
You try to fix the rupture immediately.
You apologize, over-give, or minimize your needs.
Fawn says, “If I can make myself indispensable, you won’t leave.”
Each response is a trauma memory, not a weakness.
Practices for Abandonment Recovery
Somatic Practice: Reclaiming Safety
- Sit or stand with your feet grounded
- Place one hand on your heart, one on your belly
- Breathe slowly
- Say:
“This feeling is from the past.
I am safe in this moment.” - Wait for sensation to return to your body
This grounds the inner child who fears being left again.
Meditation: The Inner Child and the Adult Self
Close your eyes.
Visualize two versions of you:
- the wounded child who fears abandonment
- the adult self who knows they are safe
Let the adult self speak to the child:
“I am here. You are not alone. I will not abandon you.”
This builds internal trust.
Mantra for Abandonment Healing
“I do not abandon myself.
I stay with my truth, my body, and my needs.
I am safe to receive connection.
I am safe to release fear.”
Repeat this mantra during triggers.
Journal Prompts
- What moment triggered my abandonment wound today?
- What story did my mind tell me about this moment?
- What part of this story belongs to my past?
- What is the truth about this moment right now?
- What does my inner child fear is happening?
- What does my adult self know is true?
- What support do I need from myself in this moment?
This clarifies what is fear and what is reality.
Mud to Bloom Mini-Course
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Closing Reflection
Abandonment recovery is not about never feeling afraid again.
It is about learning to stay with yourself when fear rises.
It is the slow unraveling of old grief.
It is rebuilding trust in your own worthiness.
It is learning that love does not need to be earned.
It is understanding that connection is not something you must chase.
It is remembering that the person who matters most—the person who cannot abandon you—is you.
Each time you stay with yourself during a trigger,
each time you honor your needs,
each time you slow down instead of assuming the worst,
you become the safe, steady presence you always needed.
This is how you bloom from the mud of abandonment.


