When you don’t feel like yourself anymore: Exploring self-loss in relationships
What is self-loss? Learn the common signs of losing yourself in relationships, stress, or life transitions, and how therapy can help you reconnect with your voice, needs, and identity.
By Maraya Pena, Marriage and Family Therapist, Intern
What Is Self-Loss?
Have you ever had the thought, Who am I now?
That question can feel unsettling, especially when you cannot pinpoint exactly when things changed. For many people, self-loss does not happen all at once. It happens slowly, through patterns of overgiving, people-pleasing, stress, caregiving, and trying to keep everything from falling apart.
Over time, you may begin to feel disconnected from yourself in ways that are difficult to explain but impossible to ignore.
What self-loss means
Self-loss happens when you slowly disconnect from your:
voice
preferences
needs
values
sense of direction
It can feel like you have spent so much time taking care of everyone else, managing expectations, or avoiding tension that you no longer know what you want or need.
Common signs of self-loss
You may be experiencing self-loss if you notice:
“I don’t know what I want anymore”
constant people-pleasing
avoiding conflict at all costs
making decisions to keep others comfortable
feeling resentful but staying silent
anxiety when asserting yourself
feeling smaller than you used to
These patterns are often signs that you have been disconnecting from yourself for a long time.
How self-loss happens
Self-loss often develops through:
repeated conflict cycles
fear of abandonment
childhood dynamics
cultural expectations
high-responsibility roles
long-term relationships where accommodation becomes identity
It is rarely intentional. More often, it is protective.
At some point, staying quiet, staying agreeable, or staying focused on others may have felt safer. But over time, those same patterns can leave you feeling emotionally drained and disconnected from who you are.
The emotional cost of losing yourself
When you lose connection with yourself, you may experience:
increased anxiety
emotional numbness
irritability
disconnection from your partner
low self-worth
feeling stuck
Sometimes people come to therapy believing the issue is only communication. But underneath the communication struggles, there may be something deeper happening: identity erosion.
It is hard to speak up when you no longer feel fully connected to your own inner voice.
Healing from self-loss
Healing begins with awareness.
It starts by noticing the moments when you override yourself, silence your needs, or ignore what you feel. From there, the work becomes learning how to reconnect with your voice, your values, and your sense of self.
That may include:
identifying your needs more clearly
understanding patterns of self-abandonment
setting healthier boundaries
building self-trust
making decisions that reflect your values
learning that your needs matter too
This process takes time, but it is possible.
You are not broken.
You have not failed.
You may simply be carrying patterns that once protected you but no longer support the life or relationships you want.
Final Thoughts
If you have been feeling disconnected from yourself, that matters.
Self-loss can happen quietly, but healing can begin with small, intentional steps. Reconnecting with who you are does not require perfection. It begins with noticing, naming, and allowing yourself to take up space again.
At One Percent Counseling, that kind of healing is honored. One step. One choice. One percent at a time.
Ready to Take the Next Step?
If this resonates with you, therapy can be a place to begin reconnecting with yourself in a deeper and more intentional way. Whether you are feeling stuck in old patterns, disconnected in your relationships, or unsure of who you are in this season of life, support is available.
Reach out through the contact page to schedule a consultation and take your next step toward healing.
About The Author
Maraya Pena is the founder of One Percent Counseling, LLC. She helps individuals and couples navigate anxiety, relationship challenges, emotional overwhelm, and life transitions with greater clarity, self-awareness, and connection. Her approach is grounded, compassionate, and focused on helping clients create meaningful change one step at a time.