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.

The Power of Spiritual Leadership in Anger Management

Anger doesn’t always come from the moment you’re in.

Sometimes it’s borrowed from a wound…
A betrayal. A disrespect. A disappointment that never got voiced.

But once it shows up, it colors everything.
Even love.
Even silence.
Even kindness.

That’s why connection breaks down it’s not because you stopped loving each other.
It’s because pain started speaking louder than presence.

Spiritual leadership isn’t fixing it.
It’s noticing the shift.
Slowing down.
Making space for the person inside the anger.

Because it’s not you vs. them.
It’s both of you vs. the storm that tried to sneak in.

Sometimes the anger isn’t about you.
Sometimes… it’s not even about them.
They’re just in anger.

Maybe something happened earlier, someone borrowed money and didn’t pay it back. A betrayal. A moment at work that felt unfair. A feeling of disrespect that never got a chance to breathe.
Whatever the cause, in that moment… the anger becomes the whole environment.

And here’s what matters
That emotion filters everything.
Even a kind word.
Even silence.
Even love.
It all passes through the storm.

They’re not trying to be unfair.
They’re not attacking you.
They may not even realize how loud the anger is speaking inside of them.

But in that space, your voice might feel like interruption.
Your presence might feel like pressure.
Your care might feel like conflict.

And if neither of you are aware of what’s happening, the pain will decide:
You must not understand me.
And just like that, a wall goes up.
Not because they want to shut you out…
but because they’re trying to survive something bigger than the moment.

That’s where spiritual leadership steps in.
Not control.
Not correction.
But leadership in the form of stillness.
In the form of discernment.

Leadership notices the shift.
Leadership slows down.
It doesn’t try to fix the anger, it makes space for the person inside it.

You don’t have to agree with the reason.
You don’t have to solve the situation.
But you can protect the connection by not pretending nothing’s wrong.

Because it’s not you vs. them.
It’s both of you vs. the storm that tried to sneak in.

And if you’re the one in pain this matters too
You’re not wrong for feeling.
You’re not broken.
You’re human.

But remember
The body doesn’t always know what to do with pain.
So it grabs anger.
And tries to speak for you.

Don’t let it put words in your spirit’s mouth.
Don’t let it turn someone who loves you into a stranger.

They may not be perfect.
But sometimes… they’re not the enemy.
They’re just standing too close to the wound.

Unmasking Cultural Scripts: Finding True Identity

Not everyone who turns on you is your enemy.
Sometimes, they’re just echoing a system they never questioned.

You didn’t betray them you just stopped betraying yourself.

When you stop rehearsing the script that others are still performing…
even love can look like rebellion.
Even peace can feel like war.

But this is not proof you’re wrong.
It’s proof you’ve stepped out of the lie.

The moment you stop following what doesn’t match who you’re becoming, the tension that follows isn’t punishment.
It’s exposure.

And exposure always feels dangerous…
To the parts of us that haven’t been tested yet.

But you were not made to keep validating other people’s idols.
You were made to walk in truth.
Even if it costs you every mirror you used to find your worth in.

Stepping Out of the Lie

Not everyone who turns on you is your enemy.

Sometimes they’re just echoing the system they didn’t know they were part of.

You didn’t betray them, you just stopped betraying yourself.

This isn’t a call to judge them.

It’s a call to see clearly.

Most people don’t know the script they’re following. They speak in lines they didn’t write, feeling emotions they were programmed to react with, convinced it’s who they really are.

But when you stop rehearsing the same lines, when you choose peace instead of shouting, grace instead of vengeance, you seem “off-script.” And the ones still playing their parts respond the only way they know how: with discomfort, distrust, even anger.

Exposure always feels dangerous to the parts of us that haven’t been tested yet.

This moment, when you no longer go along with what doesn’t match who you’re becoming, isn’t proof you’re alone.

It’s proof you’ve stepped out of the lie.

The Collapse of Compromise

The tension that shows up next isn’t new.

It was always there, hiding beneath a surface of “getting along.”

This is what conformity does: it rewards the personalities that help the script flow, and quietly punishes the ones who pause the scene and ask, “Is this who I really am?”

Even the softest, most gracious choice can look like betrayal when a group has agreed on anger.

And when you stop mirroring their reflection, they panic.

Because when a mirror goes missing, people lose their validating reference point.

Kingdoms of the Mind

Just like in the days of Nebuchadnezzar, the kingdom isn’t just outside, it’s in the mind.

His rule didn’t only manifest in gold statues and fiery furnaces. It showed up in the expectation that everyone must bow…or else. And when three men refused, they weren’t just resisting a king.

They were rejecting a cultural agreement.

Their punishment? A furnace.

Their reward? The presence of God.

We face similar furnaces: social, emotional, spiritual.

When You’re the One It’s Working Through

Can thoughts or values be implanted in us without our awareness?

Absolutely. And most of the time, it doesn’t look evil.

It looks normal.

Familiar.

Repetitive.

Until one day, something in you starts to move that you never invited.

That’s how emotional conditioning works.

And it’s not new.

A Scroll Through the Mind

You scroll social media. Ideal couples. Perfect bodies. Luxury homes.

You don’t even have to like the post, your brain still notices.

And over time, what once felt like a blessing now feels like a failure.

Your spouse’s quirks? Now irritants.

Your home? Now not enough.

Your heart? Restless.

Why?

Because a desire was implanted, and now it speaks in your voice.

It feels like you’re finally speaking up… even if what you’re saying is tearing down something that was never broken.

The Hijacked Heart

Dr. Daniel Goleman describes an “amygdala hijack”, your emotional brain bypassing your rational one under perceived threat or pressure.

But the threat doesn’t have to be obvious.

Sometimes it’s just the suggestion that your life is drifting away from what’s being praised.

Not because you chose it, but because something in you was trained to protect it.

These grooves aren’t visible.

But they live in your body.

Rehearsed reactions. Old agreements. Childhood triggers.

They begin to speak for you.

Rewriting the Default

Wiring doesn’t mean you’re doomed. It means you’ve been patterned.

And patterns can be changed.

The mind isn’t just a storage unit it’s a battlefield.

Most of us were trained to lose before we knew we were in a war.

But Jesus didn’t just come to save your spirit.

He came to renew your mind.

False Loves & Familiar Idols

Some of the most dangerous lies aren’t the ones that feel wrong.

They’re the ones that feel right.

Sometimes what we call “love” is just agreement with a wound.

Not romance, just pain seeking compensation.

You don’t love them.

You love what they quiet in you.

When the Head Is Sick

Isaiah opens with a haunting image:

“The whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint… bruises, sores, and raw wounds.” (Isaiah 1:5–6)

The “head” is where we interpret love.

Where we decide. Where we lead.

When the head is sick, we call pain “normal,” sickness “safe,” and trauma “home.”

And the longer we follow that path, the more the flesh leads instead of the Spirit.

Not because we’re evil, because we were never taught how to tell the difference.

Familiar Isn’t Holy

Not everything that feels like love is love.

Sometimes it’s just someone who matches our wound.

Not healing us, just not challenging the pain.

We mistake trauma mirroring for connection.

Familiarity for destiny.

Survival for love.

But God’s love?

It doesn’t coddle the wound.

It confronts it gently, and directly.

Idols in Disguise

“I just like this type.”

“That’s just who I am.”

“I deserve this.”

But where did that come from?

Was it born in peace… or in pain?

When a preference becomes an idol, you don’t defend truth, you defend your trauma.

The Lie That Spoke in Your Voice

“Their god is their belly…” (Philippians 3:19)

This doesn’t just mean food.

It means craving. Appetite. Emotion dressed as identity.

Not everything that feels like you is from you.

Some of it is fear in disguise.

And when fear becomes your compass, you end up worshiping the idol of survival instead of the God of truth.

Let Truth Redefine You

Let God challenge it.

Let love rewrite it.

Let the Spirit expose it.

Because…

The heart that’s been claimed by Christ cannot be ruled by old appetites.

And the spirit that’s been made new will grieve before it bows to a false identity again.