Love and Addiction: When the Heart Gets Entangled By BigmommaJ
Love and addiction can look eerily similar.
Both crave closeness.
Both fear abandonment.
Both convince us that this—this person, this feeling, this escape—is the thing we cannot live without.
But only one truly nourishes us.
From a trauma-informed lens, addiction often disguises itself as love when we’re hurting. It whispers promises of comfort, relief, and belonging—especially to those whose early experiences taught them that connection was conditional or unsafe (Van der Kolk, 2014). For trauma survivors, that promise can feel sacred.
Love—real love—doesn’t require you to disappear to survive.
When Love Becomes a Trigger
For many people, love wasn’t safe growing up. It was inconsistent. Conditional. Sometimes painful. As a result, the nervous system learned chaos instead of calm, intensity instead of intimacy—patterns rooted in insecure attachment (Bowlby, 1988).
That’s where addiction slips in.
Substances.
People.
Toxic relationships.
Patterns we swear we’ll never repeat.
Clinically, this aligns with the self-medication hypothesis, which frames addiction as an attempt to regulate emotional pain—not a pursuit of pleasure (Khantzian, 1997).
We don’t chase the high—we chase relief.
We don’t want numbness—we want peace.
But addiction never gives peace.
It only postpones pain.
The Trauma Bond Between Love and Addiction
Addiction feeds on unmet needs:
The need to feel chosen
The need to feel worthy
The need to feel whole
When love has historically come with abandonment, control, or unpredictability, addiction feels familiar. Trauma bonding research shows that unhealthy relational attachments and substance use activate similar reward pathways in the brain (Dutton & Painter, 1993).
Love says, “You are enough as you are.”
Addiction says, “You are only enough when you use, chase, or escape.”
One builds you.
The other consumes you.
How This Shapes the Work at Rise Above Your Norm
At Rise Above Your Norm, we understand addiction not as a failure—but as a survival response shaped by trauma, attachment wounds, and nervous system dysregulation (Schindler, 2019).
Healing is not just about stopping behaviors.
It’s about restoring safety—internally and relationally.
Trauma-informed care centers on:
Emotional and physical safety
Choice and empowerment
Trust and collaboration
Rebuilding healthy attachment (SAMHSA, 2014)
This is the foundation of the work I believe in—and the work I plan to offer in my future practice.
Learning to Love Without Losing Yourself
Healing means relearning love—starting with yourself.
It’s learning that:
Calm doesn’t mean boring
Boundaries don’t mean rejection
Consistency doesn’t mean control
Research on Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) confirms that early trauma significantly increases vulnerability to addiction and relational struggles later in life (Felitti et al., 1998).
But healing is possible. Secure connection can be learned. Regulation can be restored.
This is the heart of trauma-informed recovery.
Rising Above the Norm
At Rise Above Your Norm, we don’t shame the struggle.
We honor the survival behind it.
Because addiction is not who you are—it’s what helped you cope when you didn’t feel safe.
And learning to love differently is not weakness—it is courage.
If you are untangling love from addiction, know this:
You are not broken.
You are learning.
And you are worthy of a love that doesn’t cost you your life.
BigmommaJ






