You are currently viewing The Pattern Beneath Estrangement
A family scapegoat isn’t created because one person is broken, but because the system resists looking at what’s hurting it.

The Pattern Beneath Estrangement

I’m learning to recognize a pattern.

I name something specific: a word that was said, a boundary crossed, a moment that caused distress.
The response shifts quickly—to my tone, my sensitivity, my way of being, my capacity to perceive.

What starts as a conversation about what happened becomes a conversation about who I am.

That shift does the work. It replaces interest and accountability with assessment. What remains is a familiar choice: explain myself, or step away—often described as opting out of connection, though it feels more like leaving a diminishing exchange. I step away from being disregarded.

Over time, this response teaches what will and won’t be tolerated. Naming limits or discomfort leads to character judgment. Peace is kept through silence or compliance, not reflection or repair.

The system protects itself by working efficiently. Questioning a person’s perception instead of engaging their experience ends the conversation and thins the connection.

This took me a long time to understand: patterns like this resist being named. Accountability is replaced by distance, then by a story about why connection became difficult. The focus shifts. The pattern disappears. The person who noticed it remains.

I’ve watched this repeat across relationships and roles. Discussion of behavior is rerouted into judgment of character. Repair is replaced by quiet. Distance forms without being acknowledged.

And this becomes disorienting. Attempts to understand or address what happened are treated as evidence of being “too much,” while the questioned behavior itself remains unexamined and unamended. Connection is offered provided that nothing difficult is said.



This space is a sanctuary, a place where we cannot be silenced or erased.  If my experiences or sentiments resonate with you and you feel like sharing or connecting, please feel free to reach out.  No pressure, always, I’m down to listen. Message me anytime 🤍🤍🤍 wholesomebadass@gmail.com

Magda Gee

I am in a program of recovery for those whose lives have been affected by someone else's drinking, drug use, mental illness. I am newly learning faith, hope, and courage, practices not witnessed by me, in my childhood, with my family. Sadly, No Contact, as a last resort, is how I keep safe from diminishing words and actions directed at me. I think I have listened for the last time to how I deserve mistreatment. By holding out for something more wholesome and loving, I have been both banished and demanded to return. I prefer serenity to proximity. I will continue with my program and faith in the best possible outcome, so long as I do my part-- to stalk GOD as if my life depends on it.