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  <title>When to Stay and When to Leave: Processing My Breakup with Relationship Coach Karen McMahon</title>
  <description>This episode is a deeply personal one. I sat down with my dear friend Karen McMahon, and while she’s known as a high-conflict divorce strategist, this conversation goes far beyond divorce. It’s about personal power. It’s about self-abandonment. It’s about the moment you realize you’ve been editing yourself to keep the peace, and what it takes to finally come home to yourself. Karen supported me through a major breakup, and what she helped me see changed everything: sometimes what we think is “chemistry” is actually a dysregulated nervous system. Sometimes what we call love is actually a trauma loop. In this episode, we unpack the difference between healthy conflict and high-conflict dynamics, how we lose ourselves in relationships, and what it really looks like to reclaim your voice, your truth, and your life. Key Takeaways   Not all conflict is unhealthy, but high conflict has clear signs. Lack of empathy, inability to take responsibility, “my way or the highway” dynamics, and revisionist history are major red flags. If you’re constantly questioning your reality, pay attention.   What feels like chemistry can actually be trauma. That intense push-pull dynamic? The fighting followed by closeness? It’s often a nervous system loop, not deep compatibility.   Self-abandonment is usually rooted in childhood survival. If you learned to manage a parent’s emotions growing up, you may now overgive, people-please, or edit yourself in relationships without even realizing it.   A powerful lens: fear vs. desire. Every decision is either fear-based or desire-based. Fear leads to self-abandonment. Desire leads to alignment.   You are not responsible for managing someone else’s emotions. You can have compassion for someone’s wounds without taking them on as your job to fix.   Feelings are valid. Behavior is where boundaries matter. Anger is okay. Hurt is okay. But how someone behaves because of those emotions is what determines what you will or won’t tolerate.   “Observe, don’t absorb.” You can witness someone else’s emotional experience without taking it into your own body or identity.   Boundaries are about your behavior, not controlling theirs. It’s not “make them change.” It’s “this is what I will or won’t stay for.”   The fable of the rope: stop doing someone else’s work. When you’re holding the rope for someone who refuses to pull themselves up, you’re abandoning yourself… and keeping them stuck.   You are not responsible for other people’s stories about you. Let them misunderstand you. Let them share their version. The people who truly know you won’t be swayed.   Relationships aren’t meant to make you happy. They’re meant to grow you. The right relationship will challenge you, expand you, and invite you into deeper emotional maturity.   Green flags matter just as much as red ones. Look for communication, trust, respect, and the ability to be honest without fear.   If there’s one thing I hope you take from this conversation, it’s this: You are allowed to choose yourself. Not in a way that disconnects you from love, but in a way that deepens it. Real love doesn’t require you to shrink, edit, or abandon who you are. It invites you to become more fully yourself. And that takes courage. It takes the kind of courage Karen talked about: Looking in the mirror, taking responsibility for your own healing, and choosing growth over comfort. Because at the end of the day, the bravest thing you can do is come home to yourself. Meet Karen Karen McMahon is a High Conflict Divorce Strategist, Certified Divorce Coach and Founder of Journey Beyond Divorce.&amp;amp;nbsp; She began divorce coaching in 2010 after recognizing that the pain of her divorce led her on a transformational journey into a powerful and unexpected new life. Karen leads a national team of divorce coaches in supporting men and women around the world to become calm, clear and confident as they navigate divorce.&amp;amp;nbsp; Karen is also the host of the acclaimed Journey Beyond Divorce Podcast, and co-author of ‘Stepping out of Chaos: Turning Pain to Possibility”. Connect with Karen Journey Beyond Divorce WebsiteFree Rapid Relief CallBoundary BootcampJBD PodcastKaren’s Instagram Click here for more ways to listen to this episode. </description>
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