Knowledge about personal growth, biology, psychology en energy psychology

You’re tired. Not just "need a nap" tired, but a deep, existential exhaustion. You try so incredibly hard. you're always there for your boss, your friends, and your partner. You tackle new projects and relationships with a burst of passion, trying to keep every plate spinning at once.
And yet... you constantly end up empty-handed. Your projects die a slow death, your body hits the emergency brake with vague physical complaints, and your love life feels like a recurring nightmare. You either attract people who can’t match your effort, or you end up doing all the emotional heavy lifting while they lean back.
The hard truth? You aren't a victim of bad luck. You are executing a "Script" you wrote when you were four years old
Imagine having a brand-new computer running software from 1985. That’s what’s happening in your head. In psychology, we call this your Life Script.
As a child, you made "decisions" just to survive your environment. Maybe you learned: "I’m only safe if I’m working myself to death" or "I only get attention when I’m sick or struggling." Now, as an adult, you’re still running that outdated software. You think you’re making conscious choices, but you’re actually following a pre-programmed recipe that always results in the same dish: disappointment.
People who start everything but finish nothing at work usually do the same in love. You fall for potential, not reality.
The inner voice screaming that you must "try harder" is destroying your relationships. In love, "trying your best" is often just a mask for neediness.
If your script says you aren't allowed to succeed or be happy, your brain must find an emergency brake.
The reason you’re stuck is that you’ve severed the link between your behavior and your results.

You are not a passenger in your own life. You are the driver. If your relationships and your work are a mess, you are the one behind the wheel.
How do you break out of this system?
Your script rarely survives in a vacuum; it needs an ecosystem. In TA, we call this symbiosis. Enabling happens when people around you facilitate your destructive patterns, often disguised as "love" or "helpfulness."
What to do?
You can keep hoping for that one partner who fixes everything or that one project that finally gives you the recognition you crave. But the truth is: the outside world is merely an echo of your internal script.
The line between your goal and your behavior only becomes straight when you stop nurturing your own powerlessness. Stop collecting disappointments as evidence for your own tragedy. Grab the wheel, accept the law of cause and effect, and take full responsibility for the results in your life. That is the end of your script, and the beginning of your life.
Published 2026-04-26