On Trauma, Relationships & Healing
Family Estrangement: What If You're Not the Problem?
Estimated read time: 4 minutes
People who seek therapy while working through the pain of estrangement know all too well the existential pain that comes with having an emotionally immature family system. Stay, and you may feel like there is little room to exist as yourself or have meaningful boundaries; leave, and you may find yourself grieving a relationship you needed, even when staying connected became too painful. Deciding to go low or no contact with family goes against so much of what society and family has instilled in us that you question yourself repeatedly and will likely hear advice from trusted relatives, mentors, and friends: why can't you just deal with it? You should stay in touch, it's better for everyone! You start to second guess yourself: Am I overreacting? Am I being too sensitive? What if I am the problem?
Many adults who eventually go low or no contact with family learned that they shouldn't trust their own perceptions from the system they grew up in. Family members demanded that they minimize their own feelings and needs so that they themselves didn't have to deal with the conflict or the cognitive dissonance of having their child disagree with them. Being quiet about being an independent person was survival. Keeping the peace and doubting their own read of a situation: these were adaptations that kept them safe and under the control of people who couldn't handle dissent. Drawing a boundary with family who minimized emotional needs sets off alarm bells in the nervous system because memory warns that the consequence of that is too high and too risky, so even as adults, people tend to try and find the flaw in their own perception before they feel allowed to question someone else violating their boundaries.
Estrangement Is Rarely a First Choice
One of the most persistent misconceptions about family estrangement is that it happens impulsively, or that it reflects a low tolerance for discomfort. The opposite is usually true. Most people who decide to limit contact with family members have tried everything they can think of to solve the problem. They have explained their feelings more times than they can count, and extended forgiveness that was never acknowledged. They have done the very hard work of setting boundaries with difficult people only to find the limits ignored, ridiculed, and trampled. They have said what they needed to be different and held out hope for change only to find the situation repeating again. It's exhausting and feels hopeless. Distance feels like the only chance to have any peace, but it comes at a high price. The attachment doesn't end even when the relationship goes quiet. Emotionally unsafe family members often set out to draw estranged adult children back in by sending texts or letters, showing up unexpectedly or sending gifts, not understanding that these things are violations of the boundary and often sets off the same panic that the abuse set off. It doesn't close the distance; it reinforces it.
Estrangement also comes with grief for the relationship that was wanted, for the person they hoped their relative would become, for the support and love they needed and didn't get. It may involve grief also for the rest of people lost when the estrangement boundaries were set. Other relationships are likely to suffer collateral damage because there is no way to protect oneself inside the existing relationship.
The Question That Actually Helps
People often come to therapy hoping someone will give them a clear answer: reconcile or stay estranged? Everyone's situation is different, so there is not an easy answer, and the answer belongs to the person who decided to go no contact alone. No one else has walked in their shoes or knows their life with the depth to judge. As a therapist, my role is not to advise what to do but to help understand what is needed for one to be emotionally healthy, to process grief and ambivalence, and to heal. You don't have to keep managing someone else's emotions and behavior.
If you grew up in this type of environment, it's difficult to hear your own voice over the needs of the people around you, and that doesn't stop when you separate from your family. Very likely it repeats in many areas of your life. People who have lived this experience are often extremely high functioning, high achieving people pleasers who put other people's needs above their own to the point that it's damaging to themselves. Therapy can help you stop going through the same cycle of ignoring your own needs, minimizing your own emotions and invalidating yourself. This is the beginning of peace and safety.
Feeling safer and more comfortable within yourself can help you gain clarity about how you want to work with your family system, whether that means you stay estranged completely, or try to work out a relationship that allows you to have boundaries. Sometimes people learn to accept that their family member is never going to be capable of having the relationship you needed them to have with you, and sometimes family systems do shift to make more space for their adult children's needs.
None of these outcomes require your family's participation or cooperation to pursue; therapy can help even if no one else is willing to engage or you don't want to try and work out the relationship. Your healing is not contingent on someone else's willingness to change, acknowledge harm, or show up differently. Even if your family continues to deny the problem and refuse any accountability, you can still do meaningful work. You can learn to trust your own perception and reduce the guilt that has followed you into adulthood. You can grieve what was lost, understand the patterns that shaped you, and build relationships in your current life that do not require you to make yourself small.
You Do Not Have to Decide Anything Today
If you are in the middle of this, you do not have to resolve it all at once. You do not have to know right now whether reconciliation is possible, or whether continued distance is the right call. What you can do is create space to look at your own story honestly, without the pressure of someone else's narrative crowding out your own. If you have spent years wondering whether your feelings were valid, therapy can help you find your own voice and make decisions from that place, rather than from fear, guilt, or the chronic need to keep everyone else comfortable.
You do not have to navigate this alone. If you would like to read more about working with me on these issues, you can read my page on therapy for adult children of emotionally immature family systems here. You might also find my page on narcissistic abuse recovery relevant. If you are wanting to see if reconciliation is something you want to pursue, you may want to read my page on family therapy for estrangement.
About the Author
Tiffany Savener, PhD, LPC-Associate (#93330), is a trauma-informed therapist and the owner of Seek the Sun Psychotherapy, supervised by Mark Cagle, LPC-S (#71799). She specializes in trauma-informed therapy for individuals and couples navigating betrayal trauma, family estrangement, emotionally immature family relationships, attachment wounds, narcissistic abuse recovery, and relationship patterns that feel difficult to change.
Seek the Sun Psychotherapy offers in-person therapy in Northwest Austin and Round Rock, Texas, and secure virtual therapy throughout Texas.
If something in this post resonated, I'd welcome the chance to connect.
Whether you're navigating something you recognized here or simply wondering if therapy might help, a consultation is a low-pressure opportunity to ask questions and see if we're a good fit. You don't need to have it figured out before you reach out.
If you don't see a time that works, reach out directly at tsavener@seekthesun.net and we'll find one.
What to Expect in a Therapy Consultation (and How to Know If It’s the Right Fit)
Estimated read time: 5 minutes
Finding a therapist can feel overwhelming. Even if you’re ready for support, the process of reaching out can bring up uncertainty about what to say, what will happen, and whether you’ll choose the “right” person.
A consultation call is designed to help with exactly that.
It’s not a commitment. It’s not an intake session. It’s a brief conversation to help you and the therapist decide whether working together feels like a good fit.
What a therapy consultation is really for
A consultation is a space to slow things down before beginning therapy.
It helps you:
understand how a therapist works
share a brief sense of what’s bringing you in
ask questions about approach, experience, and logistics
get a feel for whether the relationship feels safe and comfortable
The goal is not to pressure you into starting therapy. The goal is clarity—so you can make an informed decision about what support feels right.
If you decide not to move forward, that is completely okay and expected. Fit matters more than anything else.
How I approach consultation calls
Because I specialize in trauma, attachment wounds, betrayal trauma, and relational distress, I view the consultation as part of the therapeutic process—not just scheduling.
Many people reaching out for therapy are carrying experiences of:
emotional disconnection in relationships
betrayal or infidelity
family estrangement or emotionally immature parents
long-standing patterns of anxiety, shutdown, or overwhelm in relationships
For these experiences, feeling safe with a therapist matters from the very beginning.
In consultation calls, my focus is on:
creating a grounded, respectful space
understanding what you’re hoping to work on
answering questions clearly and directly
exploring whether my approach fits your needs
There is no expectation to share everything. You can go at your own pace.
What we typically talk about
Most consultation calls include a combination of:
what brings you to therapy at this time
what you’re hoping will feel different
a brief overview of your history or current situation (only what you feel comfortable sharing)
questions about how I work
logistics such as scheduling, session format, and fees
You do not need to prepare anything in advance. It is okay to come in unsure.
How to know if a therapist is a good fit
Choosing a therapist is not only about credentials or modalities. The relationship itself matters.
During a consultation, you might notice:
Do I feel heard and not rushed?
Do I feel respected in how I describe my experience?
Does the therapist’s approach make sense for what I’m going through?
Do I feel pressure or do I feel space to decide?
Some people want a more structured or directive approach. Others prefer something more exploratory and relational. There is no “right” style—only what fits you.
Fit is often something you can sense, even if you can’t fully explain it yet.
Questions you may want to ask
If it’s helpful, you can ask things like:
Have you worked with concerns like mine before?
What is your approach to trauma or relationship issues?
What does a typical session look like with you?
How do you approach couples or family work?
What are your expectations around frequency or structure?
These questions are not only welcome, they are part of building trust.
Practical details matter too
Therapy has to fit into your real life.
In a consultation, we may also discuss:
in-person vs. online therapy options
session length and frequency
availability
cancellation policies
whether individual, couples, or family therapy is appropriate
These logistical pieces are part of making therapy sustainable, not just possible.
You don’t have to be certain before reaching out
Many people hesitate to contact a therapist because they feel like they should already know what they need.
You don’t.
Uncertainty is often part of the process—not a barrier to it.
A consultation exists so you can explore that uncertainty with support, rather than trying to resolve it alone first.
Who I typically work with
I provide therapy for individuals and couples navigating:
betrayal trauma and infidelity recovery
relationship distress and emotional disconnection
attachment wounds and relational patterns
family estrangement and complex family systems
anxiety, depression, and trauma responses connected to relationships
I work with clients throughout Austin, Round Rock, and across Texas via online therapy.
Ready to take the next step?
If you’re considering therapy, a consultation call can help you get clarity without pressure.
It’s a space to ask questions, understand how I work, and decide whether this feels like the right fit for you.
If it does, you’re welcome to schedule a consultation. If it doesn’t, you’ll still leave with more clarity than you started with—and that matters too.
Schedule a consultation when you’re ready.
About the Author
Tiffany Savener, PhD, LPC-Associate is a trauma-informed therapist and the owner of Seek the Sun Psychotherapy. She specializes in helping individuals and couples heal from trauma, family estrangement, emotionally immature family systems, attachment wounds, betrayal trauma, and relationship conflict.