The One Gift I Wish I Had Given Myself in My 30s: A Journey to Self-Compassion and Healthy Love

Ideally, I would love to tell you that over the course of the last decade, as I traversed the wild and unmapped terrain from divorce to dating to disastrous short-lived relationships, I transformed seamlessly from a boundary-less, anxious, heart-on-her-sleeve optimist into a shrewd, steely-eyed, sovereign queen. But that would not be the whole story. It would gloss over many of the harder experiences that have shaped me into the person I am today.

You see, despite all my training, qualifications, and personal development courses, I felt like I would never have a lasting relationship without compromising who I was at my core. I thought I must be wanting something that did not really exist. Or even worse, perhaps there was something fundamentally wrong with me that made me impossible to love.

I felt ashamed and embarrassed. Instead of giving myself the one thing I actually needed, which was time, I rushed to mask my feelings and move onto the next thing. This is a tactic I absolutely do not recommend.

The Unexpected Arrival of Healthy Love

Recently, I have found myself through seemingly no effort of my own (although this, of course, is not entirely true) in a loving, stable, drama-free, and secure relationship. Because I cannot just let this happy accident be, I went looking for the mechanics behind it. You could say I am a big fan of reverse engineering.

My story is not so dissimilar to many women in the health and wellness industry. A history of health issues, a dash of unresolved trauma, a soul memory that hungers for the open horizon, and with a splash of magic thrown in, you have my life up until my mid-thirties. Degrees, marriage, world travel with a soul mate, a home in a backpack across a couple of continents. It looked perfect from the outside.

But that hunger remained. That hunger that women nod in agreement with when I mention it. Hunger for connection: with themselves, with their lover, with the spark of their life. So I spent my thirties painfully and publicly unraveling, leaving my marriage, making a million bad decisions, and eventually, broke and bruised but in one piece, embracing my single beautiful life.

Have you ever felt that deep hunger for something more in your relationships, even when everything looked perfect on the surface?

Drop a comment below and let us know what that longing feels like for you.

The Gift of Compassion: What I Wish I Had Known

If I could go back and gift myself anything, it would be compassion. Pure, unadulterated self-compassion and the understanding that I was giving myself the experiences I needed to learn how to make strong, sovereign decisions. These were experiences that would cultivate future discernment and self-love, however hard-won they were.

Research from Dr. Kristin Neff at the University of Texas has shown that self-compassion is strongly associated with emotional resilience and psychological well-being. Women who practice self-compassion tend to recover more quickly from relationship difficulties and make healthier choices in future partnerships. Yet this is exactly what we deny ourselves when we are in the thick of heartbreak.

At some point, it became very apparent that I was addicted to a kind of chaos. And no, not in the way that some very unhelpful people may have mentioned this to me over time. But at a cellular, biochemical level: the push-pull dynamic, the abandonment, and the abuse had been hard-wired into my very chemistry.

Understanding the Biochemistry of Unhealthy Attachment

With all the aforementioned study, I intellectually understood what was happening. According to research published in Psychology Today, our early attachment experiences literally shape the neural pathways that govern how we respond to romantic relationships as adults. The excitement I felt in tumultuous relationships was not love at all. It was my nervous system responding to familiar patterns of stress.

I needed to step away once I felt that all-too-familiar rush that I associated with love, which was actually the precursor to pain and drama. The one thing I did not realize, though, was that I did not have a reference point. A physical, internal reference point for what the opposite of this felt like. What a safe, loving, secure relationship actually felt like in my body.

This needed to be an inside job, and I was not sure where to begin.

The Unexpected Power of Giving Up

So for a little while, I gave up. The unknown felt too vast, and it seemed like it would take too much work. Ironically, this was the best thing I could have done. Finally, I had given myself the gift of time.

I focused on my health. My poor adrenals had been absolutely smashed from years of chronic stress, and I poured myself, heart and soul, into my business. I was a single woman living on her own, running her own business, and I got to decide that this was, in fact, an enormous privilege.

I was enjoying a lifestyle that women for centuries had fought for. I came home to my dog. I watched the sunrise every morning on the beach. I learned to create morning rituals that nourished my soul rather than depleting it.

Success gets to look like whatever I damn well want it to, and I was pretty happy with this version of it.

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How Self-Care Created the Foundation for Healthy Love

So how did this all conspire to create the right conditions for a healthy relationship? The benefit of time and self-care seems obvious in hindsight. I gave myself permission to focus on nourishing myself in a way that supported running the life I was actually leading, not the life I thought I should want.

I cultivated a solid internal reference point for how much energy I had left to share with friends and colleagues alike. There is nothing like burning out to make you work on your boundaries. I was no longer prepared to compromise myself or my values. I had developed a deep respect for myself and a newfound level of discernment that worked like a superpower.

According to Harvard Health, strong relationships are built on a foundation of individual well-being. When we enter relationships from a place of wholeness rather than lack, we are far more likely to create sustainable, healthy partnerships.

All in all, I gave myself the foundation for a healthy, successful life regardless of whether I found myself in a relationship ever again. And that shift in perspective changed everything.

When Love Arrived Without the Fireworks

And yet with all of this inner work, I still did not recognize it when he walked into my life. There was no spark, I said. But I really love how we communicate and spend time together. Can we keep doing that?

It was as if I was used to being showered in cheap, high-intensity chili sauce, and now my palate was being required to savor a more subtle flavor while still glancing around for the tabasco.

The clever man said, “Yes, sure, I am enjoying our friendship.” So it began. The slow burner they always talk about. It took time (so much time) for my nervous system to deregulate and for me to recognize who he really was, and is, to me.

This is a process that honestly is still ongoing. It has been a lifetime of adrenaline, cortisol, fear, and shame. It might take a little while for that pattern to wane and for the new, healthy one to take solid formation. And that is okay.

Recognizing Safe Love When Your Body Is Wired for Chaos

One of the most challenging aspects of healing from unhealthy relationship patterns is that safe, secure love can initially feel boring or even wrong. When your nervous system has been calibrated to equate intensity with love, the absence of drama can feel like the absence of connection.

What I have learned is that this feeling is not a sign that something is missing. It is a sign that your body is recalibrating. The absence of anxiety is not the absence of love. It is the presence of safety.

What I Wish More Women Knew

What I would love is if more women knew this. That it is okay to stop rushing. To stop pleasing. To stop glancing at others in relationships and assuming that they have it all sorted out.

What if we took time to discover in ourselves what we truly need and then share that with those in our lives as non-negotiable? How much more straightforward could dating and relationships be? How much less shame and berating of ourselves there might be?

This is my prayer for all of us.

The Practice of Radical Self-Trust

Learning to trust yourself after years of second-guessing your instincts is perhaps the most profound gift you can give yourself. It means honoring your needs without apology. It means walking away from situations that do not serve you, even when everyone else thinks you are crazy. It means believing that you deserve love that feels like peace, not like a battlefield.

Love, in all its forms, is an inside job. I am so glad I eventually focused on me.

Practical Steps Toward Self-Compassion in Your 30s and Beyond

If you find yourself where I was, caught in cycles of unhealthy relationships and wondering if you are the problem, here is what I wish someone had told me:

Give yourself the gift of time. There is no deadline for finding love. The pressure you feel is manufactured by a society that profits from your insecurity.

Learn what safety feels like in your body. This might mean working with a therapist, practicing somatic exercises, or simply spending more time alone until you can distinguish between excitement and anxiety.

Redefine what success looks like. A full, rich, single life is not a consolation prize. It is an achievement that many people never allow themselves to experience.

Trust the slow burn. The relationships that last often start without fireworks. That is not a red flag. It is a green one.

Practice radical self-compassion daily. Speak to yourself the way you would speak to your dearest friend. You are doing the best you can with what you know.

We Want to Hear From You!

What gift would you go back and give your younger self? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do I keep attracting unhealthy relationships?

Often, we unconsciously seek out relationship dynamics that feel familiar, even if they are harmful. Our nervous systems become wired to certain patterns through early experiences, and what feels “normal” to us may actually be chaotic or unhealthy. Breaking this cycle requires conscious awareness, often with professional support, and deliberately choosing partners who feel different from your usual type.

How long does it take to heal from unhealthy relationship patterns?

There is no fixed timeline for healing. Some women find significant shifts within months of dedicated inner work, while for others, it takes years of gradual progress. The key is consistent self-compassion and recognizing that healing is not linear. You may have setbacks, and that is completely normal and part of the process.

What does a healthy relationship actually feel like?

Healthy relationships often feel calmer and more stable than what you might be used to. There is mutual respect, consistent communication, and an absence of drama. You feel safe being yourself, your needs are acknowledged, and conflict is resolved through discussion rather than escalation. Initially, this calm can feel unfamiliar or even boring if you are used to intensity.

Is it selfish to focus on myself instead of looking for a relationship?

Focusing on yourself is not selfish. It is essential. Building a strong foundation of self-knowledge, self-care, and self-compassion actually makes you a better partner when the right relationship does come along. You cannot pour from an empty cup, and a relationship will not fix internal wounds that need your own attention first.

How do I know if I am ready for a healthy relationship?

Signs of readiness include feeling content with your life as it is, having clear boundaries, knowing your non-negotiables, and no longer feeling desperate for partnership. You can distinguish between loneliness and genuine desire for connection. Most importantly, you trust yourself to walk away from anything that does not serve your well-being.

Can therapy help with breaking unhealthy relationship cycles?

Yes, therapy can be incredibly valuable. Approaches like attachment-based therapy, EMDR, or somatic experiencing can help rewire the nervous system responses that keep you stuck in unhealthy patterns. A good therapist can help you understand your patterns, heal underlying wounds, and develop new ways of relating to yourself and others.


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about the author

Natasha Pierce

Natasha Pierce is a certified relationship coach specializing in helping women heal from heartbreak and build healthier relationship patterns. After experiencing her own devastating breakup, Natasha dove deep into understanding attachment styles, emotional intelligence, and what makes relationships thrive. Now she shares everything she's learned to help other women avoid the pain she went through. Her coaching style is direct yet compassionate-she'll call you out on your BS while holding space for your healing. Natasha believes every woman can have the relationship she desires once she's willing to do the work.

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