Trauma Rewired

Why Boundaries Feel Like Rejection After Trauma (And How to Rewire That)

Feb 9, 2026
Margy Feldhuhn, co-owner of Brain-Based Wellness and entrepreneur who blends personal development with nervous system work. She explores why boundaries feel like abandonment after trauma. Short, concrete tales about setting limits from anger versus aligned truth. Practical somatic practices and real-life stories about leaving a partnership and learning to receive no.
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ANECDOTE

Grief Made Boundaries Feel Like Attack

  • Margy Feldhuhn describes losing her dad to suicide and how her nervous system could not receive boundaries afterward.
  • She felt boundaries as attack, abandonment, and cruelty despite knowing it was dysfunctional.
INSIGHT

Oxytocin Makes Bonding Context-Dependent

  • Under stress humans evolved a tend-and-befriend response using oxytocin to support group survival.
  • Oxytocin boosts social salience, so in unsafe contexts it can amplify perceived rejection or threat.
INSIGHT

Connection Distributes Vigilance

  • Co-regulation is core human biology and shares threat detection across a group to reduce vigilance.
  • Boundaries that preserve connection align with these survival mechanisms and improve regulation.
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