Master Stress with Dr. S

How to Love Without Losing Yourself

Safia Debar Episode 65

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0:00 | 30:03

Dr. S continues the addiction series by focusing on loved ones and the central question of how to love someone with addiction without losing yourself, staying compassionate without becoming responsible, and stepping out of the rescuer role. The episode describes a turning point where the rescuer recognizes the cost of living in someone else’s “storm,” shifts from action to awareness, and adopts principles such as not causing the addiction, not being able to control it, and giving your life its own center of gravity while distinguishing support from rescue. Dr. S outlines phases including hypervigilance/checking, researching solutions, chronic stress physiology, confused emotions and trust erosion, and quiet clarity. Healing involves telling the truth, observing, seeking safe support, rebuilding identity and relationships, using therapy and somatic practices, addressing physiology with health screening and gradual lifestyle shifts, and viewing the addict–rescuer dynamic as an interactive “dance” explored with curiosity rather than blame.

00:00 Series Setup and Core Question
02:06 The Turning Point Moment
03:34 Shift the Spotlight to You
04:45 Principles Before Action
07:12 Step Back and Observe
08:29 Beyond One Relationship Pattern
11:49 Phases of the Rescuer Cycle
17:40 Clarity and Support Systems
21:35 Healing Body and Identity
25:08 Wrap Up and The Dance Dynamic
28:03 Journaling Prompts and Next Episode


If you recognise yourself in some of these patterns, I’d like to offer a few more journaling prompts to reflect on and I’ll add them to the show notes but I’ll also read them out here.
You don’t have to answer them immediately.
Just notice what arises.
Ask yourself:

  • Where in my life do I feel responsible for another person’s emotional stability?
  • When something goes wrong in their life, do I immediately feel the need to fix it?
  • How much of my time and energy is spent anticipating someone else’s reactions?
  • And perhaps the most important question:
  • If I stepped out of the role of rescuer — who would I be?
  • What parts of my life might return?
  • What parts of myself might reappear?

Connect with Dr Safia Debar

Dr Safia Debar
Speaker / Coach | Medical Doctor | Breathwork Facilitator 

One of Tatler's "Top 21 private doctors in Britain" 2020
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