Boundaries, Guilt & Gaslighting: A Body-Based Healing Circle
Details
Boundaries, Guilt & Gaslighting
Note: This is an experiential practice. In this session you’ll be gently guided into body-based techniques to feel, acknowledge, and release stored emotions.
Have you ever set a boundary… only to feel overwhelming guilt afterward?
Have you been told you’re “too sensitive,” “selfish,” or “difficult” when trying to stand up for yourself?
Do you sometimes second-guess your own feelings or memories — wondering if you’re the problem?
You’re not alone. And you’re not crazy.
These are the aftershocks of gaslighting, emotional manipulation, and growing up in environments where boundaries weren’t honored — or were punished.
In this gentle, trauma-informed healing circle, we’ll explore the body-based impact of:
- Internalized guilt and shame when setting boundaries
- The disorientation of gaslighting and emotional invalidation
- How people-pleasing patterns live in our fascia, breath, and posture
- Reclaiming your right to say no — and your right to feel safe doing it
What to Expect:
This is not a lecture or support group — it’s a somatic healing space. You’ll be gently guided through grounding, reflection, and body-based practices including:
- Nervous system regulation to unwind guilt and bracing
- A healing visualization for boundary repair
- Gentle journaling and optional sharing
- A Body Talk script to reconnect with your truth
You’ll leave feeling more grounded, validated, and supported in your boundary work — not from the mind, but from your nervous system and fascia up.
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Come As You Are:
This space is open to anyone navigating family dynamics, emotional confusion, or recovery from narcissistic abuse. No prior experience is necessary — just a willingness to be gentle with yourself.
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Natalie Bussell
Healing & Embodiment Coach | NB Holistic Health
Trauma-informed. Nervous-system aware. Body-based healing.
### Core Principles of Trauma-Informed Practice
- Safety – Physical, emotional, and energetic safety are prioritized. People aren’t pushed to do anything that feels overwhelming.
- Choice – Participants have agency; they can opt in or out of any practice, change positions, or just observe without pressure.
- Collaboration – The facilitator and participants are in a shared experience, rather than a top-down “expert/subject” dynamic.
- Empowerment – Focus is on strengths, resilience, and self-trust rather than on deficits or “fixing.”
- Cultural Humility – Recognizing and respecting that people’s experiences, beliefs, and bodies are shaped by diverse backgrounds.
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### Why It Matters for Healing
- Many trauma survivors are hyper-aware of threat cues (tone of voice, body language, abrupt changes), so being mindful of these creates a safe space where healing can actually happen.
- The nervous system learns safety through experience, not just logic — so a calm, respectful, choice-based space helps the body downshift out of survival mode.
- Avoiding re-traumatization means you don’t accidentally trigger someone into reliving their trauma through overly intense, invasive, or fast-paced practices.