Soul Ties: How to Break What Holds You and Heal What’s Beneath

Some connections don’t begin with a clear heart; they start with a need for belonging, comfort, or to prove something to ourselves or others.

When those needs go unsatisfied in healthy ways, we can start to place too much meaning in the wrong places. Boundaries blur. Choices get made in moments of loneliness, restlessness, or the search for identity. And instead of finding the connection we truly long for, we form bonds that don’t carry the weight to hold us up.

These are what many call unhealthy soul ties connections that link more to our wounds than to our wholeness. They’re not always visible from the outside, but they affect how we think, what we expect, and how we trust.

When those bonds end in betrayal, disappointment, or regret, their imprint can linger. Without forgiveness for them and for ourselves something inside us closes. A gate inside stays locked. And while that gate is shut, the love and life meant for a healthy bond spills into places it doesn’t belong. The mind and body has a process it goes through called cortical remapping, where the brain redirects the space and energy once dedicated to one area into another. When this happens in the physical body such as after the loss of a limb the brain reallocates its processing power, sometimes in unexpected ways. In the same way, when a deep emotional bond is broken but not healed, the mental and emotional “space” once devoted to that person is reassigned, often spilling into areas of life where it doesn’t belong. Without forgiveness and renewal, those reassigned patterns can shape new relationships in the image of the old wound.

Some people try to fill the emptiness with new encounters, but repeating the connection doesn’t repair the meaning. Instead, it lays one fragile foundation after another, where nothing lasting can stand.

Life is experienced from the inside out. What’s within us shapes what we see, how we interpret it, and what we believe is possible. Old pain filters our view, making even healthy opportunities look unsafe.

The body remembers, too. Every connection leaves patterns in how our emotions rise, how our chemistry flows, and how safety feels. Without forgiveness, those patterns loop endlessly, repeating what’s familiar even if it harms us, in an endless cycle.

But when the heart is cleansed, the whole person changes. Clarity returns. Trust becomes possible again. And that healing doesn’t stop with you it ripples into your relationships, your family, and the generations after you.

This is a peronal revelation of life that has helped me in so many ways including in this area. No one you’ve met including yourself is a finished work. Some of the harm you’ve felt came from people still in their forming stage, still unaware of how their actions affect others. And the same may be true of harm you’ve caused. Who we are is our soul, which is not yet formed but in its embryo stage, contained within the womb space we call life.

If we could see one another as works still being shaped, we might stop holding yesterday’s mistakes against each other. We might remember that mercy isn’t for those who’ve “earned” it it’s for those still becoming whole.

Forgiveness doesn’t erase what happened, but it breaks the chain that keeps the past alive in the present. It calls back your energy from old wounds and restores it to where you stand now.

Inside, something shifts. The mind begins to form new pathways for trust. The body lowers its guard. The heart opens to connection without the reflex of self-protection. Love becomes possible again not the rushed, fragile kind, but the kind that grows deep roots.

Breaking unhealthy soul ties isn’t just about ending a bond it’s about restoring the sacred meaning of connection. When you heal what’s within, you stop repeating what once broke you. Forgiveness becomes steady ground beneath your feet, and from there, everything healthy can grow.

Understanding Emotional Distortion in Relationships

Learn how emotional overwhelm can distort truth in Christian relationships, and how biblical wisdom brings healing and clarity in conflict.

How Emotion Can Distort Love, Rewrite the Past, and What to Do About It

By Heaven In A Moment Ministries

There are moments in close relationships, especially the ones rooted in deep commitment, when a conversation suddenly turns into something else entirely. One person is trying to connect, but the other is overwhelmed. The pain of old moments starts boiling, and all of it comes pouring out, spilling into the present like it was never processed at all.

But instead of healing, the flood begins to change the shape of everything. The past. The truth. Even the identity of the other person.

This is for the ones who’ve been caught in that storm and the ones who’ve unknowingly caused it. You’re not alone. And you’re not crazy. But you are at war with something deeper than what’s on the surface.

The Moment It All “Changes”

It usually starts mid-conversation.

“You never really loved me.”
“You don’t want this.”
“We were always wrong from the beginning.”

Suddenly, the argument isn’t about the dishes or the tone or the silence. It’s about everything, past, present, and future. One person becomes both narrator and judge, and the other is left wondering, “Where did all this come from?”

What’s happening isn’t just miscommunication. It’s emotional distortion. When pain gets too loud, it starts speaking for everything. And if we don’t recognize it, we’ll believe it. Even when it’s not true.

When Pain Becomes the Narrator

This is one of the most dangerous patterns in any relationship:

When one person’s internal pain begins rewriting history through the lens of emotional overwhelm.

They’re not remembering the good. They’re not even seeing the current moment for what it is. Instead, they’re letting every old wound rise up and tell them what’s “really” happening.

They aren’t lying intentionally. They’re just being led by pain that was never healed. It’s not their spirit speaking, it’s their storm.

“Be sober, be vigilant…”
1 Peter 5:8

The Identity Theft That Happens in Emotional Conflict

In these moments, there’s a terrifying shift that occurs:

One person begins speaking for the other.

“You don’t care.”
“You were never honest.”
“You never wanted this.”

This is more than just misunderstanding. It’s a spiritual hijacking of identity. And while it may feel like “clarity” to the person in pain, it’s actually a narrative driven by fear, not truth.

But love doesn’t do that.

“Love believes all things…”
1 Corinthians 13:7

Love may be disappointed. It may be hurt. But it doesn’t twist the past to match the pain of the present. That’s not love, that’s emotional infection.

What the Other Person Might Be Trying to Say (But Can’t Get Through)

For the one on the receiving end of this wave, it’s disorienting. They may be calm, soft-spoken, or even pleading:

“That’s not how I see it…”
“That’s not what I meant…”
“I love you, even when I don’t bring up the past.”

But those words often can’t reach the person drowning in pain. When our emotions are overflowing, love can sound like denial. And grace can feel like silence. But sometimes, silence is strength. And refusing to rehearse the past is actually a choice to protect the present.

When Refusing to Rehash Is a Sign of Spiritual Maturity

There’s a wisdom that many overlook:

Some people don’t bring up the past, not because they’re in denial,
but because they’ve truly forgiven it.

To them, forgiveness isn’t about pretending nothing happened. It’s about refusing to keep the pain alive.

They don’t need to revisit the old arguments. They don’t need to tally up emotional debts. They’ve chosen peace over punishment.

“Love keeps no record of wrongs…”
1 Corinthians 13:5

A Lifeline: The Golden Glass Bridge

There’s a tool I’ve come to see as spiritual gold during emotional storms. I call it the Golden Glass Bridge.

It’s the practice of pausing and asking:

“If this version of the story was born during pain,
could it be pain talking and not truth?”

That question creates space.
It lets light in.

It becomes the bridge between how we feel and what’s really happening.
It helps us see clearly through the storm, not just with it.

For the One Overwhelmed by Emotion

If you’re the one who sometimes spirals, if your hurt suddenly starts narrating everything, I want you to know this:

You are not your pain.

But you’ve been trying to carry something that was too heavy. And that weight started speaking for you.

Let Jesus speak instead. Let healing speak. Let the Spirit show you which feelings are echoes of old battles and which ones are truly about today.

“Be transformed by the renewing of your mind…”
Romans 12:2

For the One Holding Steady

And if you’re the one staying calm, holding steady, choosing to love even when you’re misunderstood…

Stay rooted.
You’re not weak for refusing to engage the way pain wants you to.
You’re not dismissive for choosing peace.

Sometimes spiritual strength looks like refusing to let pain take the mic.
You’re not avoiding truth, you’re protecting it.

“The servant of the Lord must not strive; but be gentle unto all…”
2 Timothy 2:24

In love, perception can shift fast. Old emotions rise like shadows and whisper stories that were never true. But that doesn’t have to be the end.

Love, real, Spirit-led love, can outlast the storm.

And when we learn how to see through the moment instead of reacting to it, we don’t just save the relationship. We save the hearts inside it.

Understanding Intrusive Thoughts in Relationships

Not every wound is loud.

Sometimes it’s just a glance that lingers too long. A forgotten birthday. A message left unanswered. But what breaks us isn’t always what happens—it’s what we believe it means.

“I’m not enough.”
“They don’t care.”
“I always get left behind.”

These aren’t just passing thoughts. They’re intrusions—voices that echo past pain and write scripts we never meant to follow. And if we’re not careful, they lead us into reaction, not truth.

This reflection explores how spiritual warfare shows up in everyday moments relationships, friendships, even our inner self-talk. You’ll learn how to recognize the voices that aren’t yours, test them by their fruit, and walk in the authority Christ gave you.

Because not every thought that feels like you… is from you.

And freedom begins the moment you know the difference.

Part 3

A Christian Reflection on Thoughts, Identity, and Spiritual Warfare

It doesn’t always take betrayal to break someone.

Sometimes, it’s a glance held too long. A shared joke that left you out. A birthday forgotten. An anniversary missed. A plan you were excited about quietly canceled or brushed aside.

We don’t always grieve the event itself.

We grieve what the event became inside of us.

That forgotten birthday wasn’t about the cake.

That silence after your message wasn’t about busyness.

That missed anniversary wasn’t about time.

It was about the story that began writing itself inside you:

“I don’t matter.”

“They chose someone else.”

“I was never really seen.”

“I always get left behind.”

But where did that story come from?

Did you decide that? Or did it begin speaking before you had time to think?

These inner narrators… they move fast. They speak with your voice. They don’t knock. They just are.

And we call them many things:

Sometimes we say it’s our gut feeling.

Sometimes it’s a mood we’re in.

Sometimes we call it intuition or instinct.

Other times, we say, “I’m just being real,” or “I felt something was off.”

But these can also be intrusive thoughts in disguise.

Not always violent or shocking but invasive all the same.

They intrude. They settle in. And if we don’t recognize them for what they are, they take over.

And that’s how they work not just to hurt us, but to hurt the people around us through us.

They redirect how we see the other person.

They twist every silence into rejection.

They replay every delay like a betrayal.

They make us suspicious, guarded, and defensive because they’ve convinced us that we must be.

And without realizing it, we become vessels not of clarity or love, but of a false spirit a voice that isn’t us, whispering through what we believe is us.

And because it isn’t even the truth of the situation,

we end up living the lie.

And that part of our life begins to suffer because of it.

Romantic Relationships and the War for the Inner World

Romantic relationships are often one of the clearest mirrors showing us how much our inner world has been shaped by things we didn’t consciously choose. Not just shaped triggered.

Activated in moments when what’s really happening gets hijacked by something deeper that’s been left unchecked for too long.

Consider a common situation:

Two people care about each other. There’s genuine connection. They’ve talked, laughed, made memories, and even weathered a few small storms together. But then something changes not necessarily anything big, just something… off. A delay in responding. A forgotten plan. A vague response about something you thought was important.

And suddenly, you’re not just feeling disappointed. You’re interpreting. You’re rehearsing.

The mind runs like it’s been waiting for this moment to fire off a script that feels all too familiar:

“See? This always happens.”

“I should’ve known better.”

“They didn’t forget they just don’t care.”

But where did that script come from? Did you write it?

Or did it get handed to you somewhere along the way from an old heartbreak, a story someone told you, a subtle cue you absorbed without even realizing?

It might come with a sinking feeling not just anger or sadness, but something beneath it that whispers:

“You’re not enough.”

“They’re going to leave you, just like the others.”

These aren’t thoughts we decide to believe.

They feel like facts, even when they’re just echoes.

And if we’re not careful, those echoes begin to act through us. Not in dramatic outbursts, necessarily but in small withdrawals. In second guessing everything. In shutting down. In sending the kind of message we later regret.

In those moments, we may think we’re being self protective or intuitive.

But if the response is growing more fear than love… more control than clarity…

then we may have been led into reaction, not response.

This is where spiritual warfare becomes personal.

The voice that hijacks our perception doesn’t always shout.

Sometimes, it simply agrees with our worst fears just loud enough to become believable.

When we say things like, “It wasn’t just what happened… it’s what it meant,”

we’re not responding to a moment we’re responding to a whole storyline,

written by past pain, fear of loss, social programming, and emotional trauma.

And most of the time, that storyline was seeded long before we ever knew what it would grow into.

These voices whether we call them feelings, instincts, or gut reactions don’t always come from us.

Sometimes they’re the residue of someone else’s pain, passed down through culture, family, trauma, or relationships that left something unresolved in us.

They are intrusive because they override our ability to be present.

They tell us what must be true without ever giving space to ask if it actually is.

And if we believe them, we begin to act on their conclusions.

But these aren’t our thoughts.

They didn’t originate from the part of us that seeks peace or truth.

They came from pain.

And if we don’t test them, they begin to live through us using our voice, our body, our reactions until they’ve shaped not just what we think, but who we become in our relationships.

This is how many romantic relationships fall apart not because of what happened, but because of what was believed in the aftermath.

The silence after an unmet expectation becomes filled with meaning:

“They don’t care.”

“They’re hiding something.”

“I was foolish to trust.”

And if those beliefs go unchecked, they become agreements.

And agreements create patterns.

Testing the Voice: Fruit Over Feeling

Jesus said, “You will know them by their fruits” (Matthew 7:16).

Paul said, “We wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers…” (Ephesians 6:12).

What if we applied this not just to others, but to our own internal voices?

If a reaction leads to disconnection, bitterness, fear, or false assumptions

Is that fruit of the Spirit? Or fruit of the flesh?

And if it’s the latter… what influenced it?

The Bible tells us:

“You are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you.” (Romans 8:9)

“I discipline my body and keep it under control…” (1 Corinthians 9:27)

That means:

Even our emotions, reactions, and impulses are not who we are.

We are spirit. We are not prisoners of what we feel.

We are not obligated to interpret a moment through pain.

We have authority if we’ll learn to walk in it.

When someone doesn’t answer a text right away…

When a tone sounds off…

When a plan gets forgotten…

We don’t have to assume the worst.

We don’t have to carry old betrayals into new spaces.

We can take a moment. Ask questions.

Stay curious.

And above all ask the Spirit of Truth to guide our vision.

Because the enemy would rather we live in suspicion than love.

In self protection rather than presence.

In reaction rather than truth.

But we don’t have to give him that permission.

“There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus,

who do not walk according to the flesh but according to the Spirit.”

Romans 8:1

Friendship, Familiarity, and the Influence of Unseen Voices

Friendships, too, are shaped by this inner battle often in even subtler ways.

Because the expectations we hold in our closest relationships are rarely spoken out loud. They’re lived. And when those expectations are unmet when someone forgets, cancels, speaks sharply, or prioritizes something else we often feel betrayed long before we realize we’ve made an interpretation.

Maybe we think:

“Real friends don’t act like this.”

“They should have known I needed them.”

“They never show up when it matters.”

And once again, we’re responding to meaning more than moments.

We might even say nothing at all but slowly pull away.

Distance ourselves. Letting the story settle.

But ask yourself:

Where did that story come from?

Was it shaped by how love was modeled to you?

By a belief that you should never need to explain your needs?

By a past experience that left you guarded?

Or by cultural voices that told you to “cut them off” instead of seeking understanding?

The enemy works best when assumptions are left unspoken.

When someone’s delay becomes your rejection.

When a missed check in becomes “They don’t care.”

When a moment of awkwardness becomes “They’re fake.”

When a disagreement becomes “They were never real.”

But these aren’t conclusions they’re intrusions.

And unless tested, they become barriers.

Jesus calls us into reconciliation, not cancellation.

Into clarity, not confusion.

Sometimes your friend is just tired.

Sometimes they’re hurting.

Sometimes they just didn’t see what you saw.

But if the voice you listen to convinces you to give up instead of lean in.

You may be defending yourself from a threat that never existed.

And isn’t that exactly what the enemy wants?

Healing Is Possible

Healing starts here not in changing others,

but in changing how we interpret the story being written in our minds.

We must reclaim authority over the thoughts that were never meant to lead us.

We must stop giving power to fear simply because it sounds familiar.

We don’t need more self protection. We need more truth.

And truth is not afraid to slow down.

So here’s the question to carry with you:

“If this thought leads me toward fear, shame, or disconnection

whose voice is it really?”

The fruit will always tell you the root.

And if the root isn’t love… you don’t have to let it grow.

Let the Spirit of Truth lead you back to peace in love, in friendship, and in the way you speak to yourself.

Because not everything that feels like you… is from you.

And freedom begins the moment you notice the difference.