False Self, True Self

False Self, True Self 6 Core Wound Beliefs and How They Play Out In Your Life

False Self, True Self
6 Core Wound Beliefs and How They Play Out In Your Life

True self. False self. Hummmmm….how much time do you spend being in your authentic, true self? What about in your false self? 

Relationships are one of the biggest learning tools we have. If we allow it, we can see the honest reflection of ourselves in another person. When in relationship with others (the kind of relationship where you have a deeper connection), can you be your true, authentic self? 

Your true self is when a person is living by and expressing their real feelings and deepest desires. Your false self is when a person has repressed their feelings, changed their behavior or pushed aside their needs in order to be liked or in order to survive. It is a persona that people create early in life as a protection mechanism from re-experiencing developmental trauma or childhood relational trauma (9 Symptoms of Relational Trauma article). The created protection mechanism is known as a ‘core wound.’ 

The core wound was initiated at a point when you first felt separated from love or you felt you were not loved; any instance that our young brains interpreted actions to mean that we are separate from love. Whatever the action was, we formed a negative belief about ourselves. We then internalized this negative belief and have overcompensated with an opposite action in our behaviors to deny the belief. It is quite interesting to witness our behaviors and how these core wounds play out in our daily life. No relationship is ever a waste of your time yet when you look back at some of your relationships, you may realize that you were in them for all the wrong reasons. If you were in them for the wrong reasons, it is more likely than not that you were operating from your false self a lot of the time, which inevitably manifests as resentment and anger, amongst other strong, negative emotions. 

Core wounds often go unnoticed - and for some people for an entire lifetime- because they were formed when we were babies. Core wounding is an idea of an actual physical, somatic response in the body that occurs between the ages of 6 months to 1 year old. The initial separation from love created a shock to the nervous system in our pre-verbal selves. It is not until later in a person’s  ‘verbal’ developmental years that the brain makes up ‘the story’ of ‘why’ we are not lovable or worthy of love. And then, the belief is internalized. 

The core wound and the negative belief that people have about themselves creates emotional pain in which this separation from love becomes the ‘standard’ emotional feeling state. However, it is registered in the body and is relegated into the unconscious part of our mind. When this happens, we begin living from what I call the habitual emotional body. For some people, they never investigate possibilities of feeling differently. Your core wound takes the driver’s seat by affecting nearly most everything you do. Learning about your core wounds and unraveling how they unconsciously lead your life can be a lifelong process and one that assists you in your spiritual development, and in having conscious relationships. Discovering your core pain beliefs, and dismantling the unconscious hold they have on nearly every aspect of your behavior, can be a lifelong task and one that is essential for your transformation, if you chose it. 

It is painful to acknowledge these negative beliefs that we have about ourselves so we tend to deny them. This denial causes us to live out a set of compensative, opposite behaviors and to live your false self. This is the personality that we present to the world.

The core wound, the belief we made it mean about ourselves, and how we express our presenting, false self to the world is different for each one of us. 

Here is a list of core wounds and the corresponding opposite behavior- false self- that we live in the world. 


6 Core Wound Beliefs and How They Play Out In Your Life

1. Core wound belief: I am not lovable. Nobody will love me. 

Behavior: I need to prove that I am lovable. I will be overly loving and accepting  of things. This ultimately causes a lot of anger and resentment. With this, a person tries to appear loving but actually can’t receive it.

2. Core wound belief: I am alone. I am abandoned.

Behavior: I need to be around people. I need to connect with people. You find it hard to be by yourself and tend to be an over-connector. You feel that if you can connect with people you will be healed.

3. Core wound belief: I am not enough. I have no worth. 

Behavior: I need to prove that I am not worthless and that I am enough. You tend to be a care-taker and an over-giver to prove that you are of value. There is a need for compliments and acknowledgment from yourself and others and you are overly independent. 

4. Core wound belief: I am invisible. I do not exist.

Behavior: I need to do things to prove that I am something. You tend to be an overachiever to prove that you do exist. 


5. Core wound belief: I am powerless. There is nothing I can do. I get screwed over all the time. 

Behavior: I need to prove that I am powerful. You try to be big in your ways and appear more powerful than you actually are. 


6. Core wound belief: I am imperfect. The negative belief that you have about yourself is there is something wrong with me.

Behavior: I need to prove that I am not imperfect. You tend to be a perfectionist and are a bit controlling of self and others. You believe that if you could just get it right, oh so perfect you will be healed. 


Everybody in some form or another is lives from their false self and pretends that they do not feel lack of love. This lack of love feeling is our biggest collective wound. Unfortunately, we live in a world that seems to perpetuate fear. It is rare that we meet someone who is their true, authentic self. The goal is to try and be in that authentic, true self space more and more lessening the time that we are not living, opening and surrendering to love and freedom within; learning to unravel and work with your core wound can make that possible. Deep emotional healing is possible- no need to rush. Break free from your false self, break free from your limiting beliefs, enjoy the journey to your authentic, true self and be prepared to open to difficult emotions. It is so worth it!

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    'Be the Love and the Lover You are Seeking’

    The Pain Body

    ‘The Pain Body’

    ‘The Pain Body’

    Understanding ‘The Pain Body’

    We all have core wounds that have developed since we were babies. At the root of these core wounds, is the belief that we are separate from love. These core wounds cause a lot of emotional pain and create long held patterns in the body that are associated with it. We hold emotional pain and these core wounds in our body- this is ‘the pain body.’ 

    The concept of pain body was developed by Eckhart Tolle, a spiritual teacher and author from his book the New Earth (great book!). The pain body is the residual effects of emotions stored in the body that have NOT been FULLY processed, accepted or released. It is an accumulation of ALL the emotional pain you have experienced over your life time and it leaves an energetic imprint in you. The pain body is an energy that is trapped in the body.

    Everything is energy. We know this as fact, and the pain body takes on an energy of its own. It comes alive when we experience negative emotions or when one of our core wounds is triggered. The pain body needs more negative emotion for its survival. You may experience the pain body as anger, rage, sadness, anxiety, or some other difficult or negative emotion. 

    Everybody has experienced strong negative emotions and the effects they have on the pain body, however, they may not be aware of it. Have you ever wondered why when you experience a difficult or negative emotion you lash out, go silent, or maybe even overreact? This is the pain body having its way with you. 

    As a child, my parents didn’t model a healthy way to deal with emotions effectively so I learned to bury my difficult emotions and felt unable to ask for help or what I needed. I know now that it was not my parents’ fault as they did the best that they could do with the tools that they had at the time. Most children are in a similar boat: burying their pain deep inside, feeling invisible, ashamed, angry, alone, and unable to ask for what they need. When we experience events that are emotionally overwhelming, ones that we are unable to process or accept, and if were not able to express them through our body and mind, we hide them deep inside ourselves where others can’t see them. We try to hide the pain from ourselves too. When we do this, we build heart walls. We maneuver in the world with our masks on, and life goes on, for better or worse, with the emotional pain accumulating in the pain body. 

    Everybody’s pain body is unique to them and is activated differently depending on the core wound or relational trauma they were subjected to (see RELATIONAL TRAUMA). The pain body can be passed on from your parents, ancestors or societally as our collective wounds. Some people live solely through their pain body, such as unhappy people, while for others it is activated when they experience an emotion that resonates with past difficult emotions that were similar. When the pain body is activated it takes over. You may experience the feeling as heat in the body or some other feeling, and it forces you to act out in ways that may surprise your best friend or even your partner. What is important about the pain body is how you deal with it.  

    Behaviors Associated with the Pain Body
    The pain body has a direct effect on your behaviors. If you find that you are easily emotionally triggered or you tend to overreact, you are being hijacked by the pain body. Other behaviors that demonstrate that you are operating from the pain body are: you might withdraw from someone, go silent, withhold your love, or lash out. Have you ever wondered how it is that you sabotage your relationships? It’s because the pain body takes over.  

    How To Deal with the Pain Body
    There are several ways to work with the pain body. One way is to fully process unresolved feelings and emotions through the body and mind. Working with a therapist and somatic or embodiment coach can assist you. Another way to work with the pain body is through awareness. It is necessary for you to notice when the feeling, it is different for everybody, arises, and just allow the feeling ‘to be’ completely. You want to feel the power the pain body is experiencing. Where do you feel it? Notice how it affects your thoughts. Notice without judgement. Accept it. This will help you to regain your own consciousness. I mentioned that the pain body needs more negative emotion for it to exist. It is necessary for you to break identification with it so it loses its power over you. It will then subside and weaken. Your body is the place that this particular emotion or thought is playing out in. Allow yourself to observe, feel and know that you are not your emotions.  

     Benefits of The Pain Body
    Your pain body forces you to wake up to your life and what is happening. It can be one of your greatest teachers and can help you to cleanse and purify yourself. It allows you to recognize how you sabotage your relationships. By paying attention to the pain body, it can bring you into a deeper state of awareness, consciousness and closer in touch with what and who you really are.

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      Jennevieve Ybarra
      jennevieveybarra.com
      Embodied Relationships & Dance
      'Be the Love and the Lover You are Seeking’

      15 Self-Love Habits and Tips That Every Woman Should Embrace

      15 Self-Love Habits and Tips That Every Woman Should Embrace

      15 Self-Love Habits and Tips That Every Woman Should Embrace

      15 Self-Love Habits and Tips That Every Woman Should Embrace

      Let me ask you this very important question: “If you loved yourself, would you continue to do something that you did not want to do?” 

      Self-love is the key to unlocking your greatness! And, the lack of it is at the root of many relational challenges.  How many times have you heard, “If you can’t love yourself, how do you expect anybody else to love you?” There might be a portion of the population who are self-loathing, however, truth is, people are not running around thinking to themselves, “I don’t love myself.” The lack of self-love shows up in ways that are expressed in our existence and in our lifestyle. You may wonder, what does self-love really mean anyways?

       Self-love is full acceptance and appreciation of self and the fuel that allows us to reach our fullest potential and happiness. It grows through actions that feed the physical, psychological, and spiritual aspects of self. Self-love influences every aspect of your life including whom you date, how your partners and friends treat you, how your colleagues and friends view you, and how you treat others. It can be an existential concept and in the end, it can be the very thing that changes your life, as it is extremely beneficial to your mental and physical health. Receive a Self-Love Breakthrough Workbook here: SELF-LOVE BREAKTHROUGH

       15 Essential Tips and Habits to Self-Love

      1.   Cultivate Body Appreciation - Know that your value does not lie in how your body looks. As women, we are so caught up in body image. It is something that has been ingrained in us through years of social learning and the patriarchy. Know that you are amazing not because of your body but because you are uniquely you.

      2.   Don’t Compare Yourself to Others - Sinead O’Conner’s song, “Nothing Compares To You” has a lot of validity. You are amazing just as you are. When you compare yourself to others it creates envy, low self-confidence, it can lead to depression and does not help you accomplish your goals.

      3.   Eliminate Negative Thinking - Don’t let your thoughts hold you captive. Refuse to be a victim to your thoughts. Get out of your head and into your body, and then do some somatic therapy to learn how to release your pain body, which creates the negative thinking in the first place. Learn to reframe your negative thinking.

      4.    Feel Your Feelings Fully - Feel your happiness. Feel your joy. Dive deep into your sorrow. Relish in your sadness, AND know that you are not your feelings. Often times, we avoid feeling our feelings. Your feelings are there to help you understand yourself more.

      5.   Live With Integrity - Keep the promises that you make to yourself. Having integrity is being in alignment between your words, actions and beliefs. If you say that you are going to do something and repeatedly do not follow through on it, you show lack of discipline, your reputation suffers, and you begin to lose self trust as well as the trust of others.

      6.   Prioritize Yourself As #1 - Put yourself first. Do you say, “yes,” when you mean “no?” Often as women we take care of everybody’s need first. Putting yourself first actually means that everybody else gets ‘more’ of you. Yes, this means saying no and doing what fills your self-love cup.

      7.   Practice Radical Self-Care (like your life depends on it because it does!)- This is all about pleasure. The pleasure revolution is on. When we experience pleasure- what ever YOU experience as pleasurable- a walk in nature, sex, eating chocolate, taking a bath with essential oils- the body releases dopamine, which is the feel good hormone. When you do something that is pleasurable, the body releases dopamine and it makes us feel better.

      8.   Develop Self-Awareness and Know Your Fears - Know your fears and what your triggers (strong emotional responses) are. In knowing our fears, we can begin to move through them. Fear is what keeps us from moving forward in doing what we want to do. Processing your fears can actually eliminate stuckness and anxiety in your life.  When we know what our triggers are, we can learn to better manage our emotions.

      9.   Self-Exploration & Spirituality/Self Growth- Cultivate your unique style, know what turns you on, and know yourself so well that you are beaming with confidence. Allow yourself to step out of your comfort zone. That is where the real growth is. Take a class, workshop or do a retreat in an area that inspires or challenges you. Explore your spirituality. Whether you are religious or not, having faith or believing in something opens your soul.

      10.   Self-Kindness - Pay attention to how you treat and speak to yourself. Be kind to yourself and know that nobody is perfect. Allow your self to make mistakes, and forgive yourself for making them. Accept your humanness. Our mistakes are golden as they are our best teachers.  

      11.   Self-Respect - Honor your worth, take pride in your gifts and abilities and express yourself with grace, honor and dignity. Without self-respect, we are prone to being used, abused and mistreated by other people.

       12.   Trust Yourself - You know yourself better than anyone else. Trust yourself to make decisions that honor what is best for you. Develop your intuition.

      13.   Spend Time With Your Womb - Develop a weekly practice of spending time with your womb, the most feminine aspect of you as woman. This part of our body goes unnoticed for a majority of women. Connect with her and listen to her on the daily.

      14. Allow Yourself to Take Up Space - As woman we have been told that we are too much. Allow yourself to big and bold. Use your voice, let yourself be heard and express yourself.

      15. Cultivate a Self-Love Ritual - While you are in the shower, take a moment to love up every inch of you. Or, create your own ritual : )

      There are a lot of us who struggle with having self-love. Even some of the most successful people struggle with it. We tell ourselves that we are not worthy of own love until we loose 10 pounds, find a perfect partner, get the job or raise we wanted etc. You already deserve your own love, just as you are. Self-love begins with accepting where you are at in this moment, and then you can begin to build upon it. Self-love is something that we work on for our entire lives. There is not a quick recipe for it. It develops over time. You got this. Are you ready to unlock your greatness? Begin by practicing a couple of these principles of self-love and witness what begins to happen in your life. 

      ** Receive a free ‘Self-Love Breakthrough’ Workbook below. Learn where you are on your self-love journey, what’s important, and the habits to build to increase self-love.

      'Self-Love Breakthrough' Workbook

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        Curious about embodiment…..What Is Embodiment Anyways? Read here: EMBODIMENT


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        Jennevieve Ybarra
        jennevieveybarra.com
        Embodied Relationships & Dance
        'Be the Love and the Lover You are Seeking’


        What is Embodiment? Five Keys To Embodiment And Why it’s Important for Our Culture.

        What is Embodiment? Five Keys To Embodiment And Why it’s Important for Our Culture.

        What does embodiment mean? Are you dedicated to learning about yourself, your body, your core wounds and shadow side so you can be a better person, feel more connected to self and others and love boldly and courageously? If you answered YES, then read on. If you answered no, may this article shed some light on the magnificence of embodiment.

        Embodiment is ‘erotic intelligence.’ Embodiment is ultimately a way to heal yourself and the collective; in addition, it is a tool to be used as a path toward self-actualization.