Nobody talks about the guy who shows up during your healing stage. The one who’s calm, patient, & genuinely kind. He makes you feel safe in ways you didn’t even realise you needed. He’s not love bombing or playing games,he’s consistent, steady, & truly sees you. It’ll scare you.
Especially after dealing with the ‘fake nice guys’ the manipulators, the gaslighters, the ones who wore kindness like a mask, it’s almost unsettling to meet someone who’s exactly who they say they are.
His presence will feel so unfamiliar that it might even make you question him. “Is this real? What’s the catch?” When you’ve never had true emotional safety, your brain is rewired to survive in a world where love didn’t feel safe.
It’s constantly scanning for danger, hyper-vigilant to red flags, even in ppl who mean well. It’s like it’s saying, We’ve been burned before, so let’s make sure it doesn’t happen again.
The same hyper-vigilance that protected you before can now sabotage you. When you’re so used to chaos, calm feels suspicious. When you’ve only known manipulation, authenticity feels like a trap.
And this is where things get tricky. You might find yourself nitpicking, overanalysing, or pulling away from someone who’s actually good for you.
Because your brain is still stuck in survival mode. You’ve spent so long navigating unsafe relationships that you don’t know how to trust a safe one.
You’ll start to notice the mirror flips. Now you’re the one holding up the red flags. Your unhealed wounds are now influencing how you show up. You might get defensive, question their motives, or keep them at arm’s length, all to protect yourself.
Doing this, you risk sabotaging the very thing you’ve been waiting for. Remember, what you assume, you attract. If you walk into a new relationship assuming it’s too good to be true or waiting for the other shoe to drop, your energy will create the very tension you fear.
You’ll unintentionally project doubt and fear onto someone who’s only ever tried to show up for you. But what if you assumed the opposite? What if you told yourself, This is what I deserve. This is the reflection of the work I’ve done.
The gentle man who shows up during your healing stage isn’t just offering you love; he’s offering you a mirror. He’ll reflect back the areas where you still struggle to feel safe, to trust, to open up.
And that’s not a bad thing. Growth always comes with discomfort. He isn’t a test, he’s a gift. But his presence will challenge you to confront parts of yourself that are still healing. He’s not here to fix you, and you’re not here to sabotage him.






