28. Why Emotional Detachment Makes You Stronger for Family Court After Narcissistic Abuse - Trauma Recovery - (Autism & ASD) | Season Finale | Emotional Detachment for Family Court, Season 2 Finale
APR 20, 202636 MIN
28. Why Emotional Detachment Makes You Stronger for Family Court After Narcissistic Abuse - Trauma Recovery - (Autism & ASD) | Season Finale | Emotional Detachment for Family Court, Season 2 Finale
APR 20, 202636 MIN
Description
<p><strong>You don't win in court by being right, nor by feeling strongly about things. You increase your odds of protecting the kids from harm by becoming regulated, consistent, strategic, coachable, and impossible to trigger and bait. </strong></p><p><strong>This is the Season Finale for Season 2.</strong></p><p>In the context of legal abuse and post-separation abuse at the hands of a coparent that displays narcissistic patterns of behavior, family court and custody battles require a particular strategy. </p><p>While several well-known influencers in the "divorcing a narcissist" space give amazing advice, and I recommend two in particular here, there is a gap between the time you come out of the abusive relationship, and the time you are able to receive the amazing legal advice and mindset coaching that they suggest. </p><p>You cannot hear what they recommend, if you're still highly emotional, easily triggered, traumatized, if you've been sending emails that can be used against you, etc. </p><p><br /></p><p>This season has taken you through a complete journey of <strong>trauma recovery</strong>:</p><ul><li>the trauma bond</li><li>PTSD and CPTSD</li><li>EMDR and nervous system regulation</li><li>forgiveness without reconciliation</li><li>codependency & its ties to autism</li><li>fellowship and mentorship with the STAR Network</li><li>gratitude</li><li>surrender</li><li>grief</li></ul><p>This entire process was designed to lead you to one place: <strong>emotional detachment.</strong></p><p>And not as a concept — but as an <strong>advantage</strong> in high-conflict situations.</p><p>• Why emotional detachment is about what you can control<br />• Why being “right” is not enough in family court<br />• How trauma responses can undermine your credibility without you realizing it<br />• Why legal strategies only work when your nervous system is regulated<br />• The gap between legal advice and emotional readiness<br />• How emotional detachment changes your communication, documentation, and presence<br />• Why family courts and judges respond to consistency, stability, and behavior — not your internal experience<br />• The shift from reacting to acting strategically<br />• How detachment can protect your energy, your child, and your long-term outcomes</p><p>For a <strong>survivor of narcissistic abuse</strong>, especially an autistic woman navigating trauma recovery, this work is not optional.</p><p>Without emotional detachment:</p><ul><li>you remain reactive</li><li>you remain entangled</li><li>you risk creating evidence that can be used against you</li></ul><p>With emotional detachment:</p><ul><li>you become calm</li><li>you become consistent</li><li>you become credible</li></ul><p>And that changes everything.</p><p><strong>This is the difference between knowing what to do, and being able to do it under pressure.</strong></p><p>Many resources exist to help you navigate family court.</p><p>But most of them assume that <strong>you are already regulated, grounded, and emotionally detached.</strong></p><p>This season was about getting you there.</p><p>So that when you receive legal advice, you can:</p><ul><li>apply it</li><li>sustain it</li><li>and execute it without self-sabotage</li></ul><p>As we close Season 2, remember:</p><p>Emotional detachment is not about becoming passive, or surrendering, quite the opposite. </p><p>It is about: <strong>being in control of what you can control — your mindset and how you show up — no matter what is happening around you.</strong></p><p>This is where your power is.</p><p>👉 Follow the show for future seasons on trauma recovery, autism and high-conflict co-parenting<br />👉 Leave a review if this season helped you — it helps reach more survivors</p><p>Disclaimer: This podcast shares lived experience related to narcissistic abuse recovery, trauma recovery, autism and ASD. It is not a substitute for professional medical, legal, or mental health advice.</p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p>