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Self-sabotage can feel maddening. On one level, you’re motivated and want growth. On another level, something inside you pulls the plug — and you’re left wondering what’s wrong with you.
Self-sabotage might show up as:
If this is your experience, you’re not broken. Self-sabotage is not a character flaw — it’s a pattern with understandable roots. And it can change.
Self-sabotage is any behavior, choice, or pattern that gets in the way of what you say you want. It can be:
Sometimes it’s deliberate (“I know this is bad for me and I’m doing it anyway”). Other times it’s automatic and outside of awareness — you look back and realize, “I did it again, and I’m not even sure why.”
A striking thing about self-sabotage is that it often shows up right when you’re about to reach a new level — a healthier relationship, more success, more visibility, or more emotional honesty. That timing is a clue: something in you feels unsafe with change, closeness, or expansion.
It’s normal to occasionally drop the ball. Self-sabotage becomes a problem when the pattern is chronic and costly. Some signs:
On the surface these look like “bad habits.” Underneath, they’re often attempts to manage deeper fears and beliefs.
You don’t have to figure this out alone. Let’s take the first step together. Call so we can schedule a consultation.
The reasons vary from person to person, but common threads include:
The brain tends to prefer what’s familiar over what’s healthy. Even painful patterns can feel safer than something new.
Self-sabotage can be a way of staying in a known zone, even if that zone is small and unsatisfying.
If you’ve been criticized, rejected, or hurt — especially earlier in life — getting close to others or taking risks can feel genuinely dangerous. Your mind might think:
Self-sabotage becomes a way to pre-empt pain: better to lose on your own terms than be blindsided.
Many people who sabotage themselves carry core beliefs like:
When these beliefs are operating in the background, new opportunities can actually feel threatening. Self-sabotage then “proves” the belief right, reinforcing the loop.
If you learned early that people can be unsafe, unpredictable, or emotionally unavailable, your system may react to vulnerability with alarm. You might:
In this way, self-sabotage can be a misguided attempt to protect yourself from being hurt again.
Sometimes, people self-sabotage simply because they’re operating with a faulty inner “manual” for how life works:
These kinds of assumptions quietly drive choices that keep you stuck and frustrated.
Self-sabotaging patterns are closely linked with:
Self-sabotage is often a clue that something deeper needs attention — not a sign that you’re lazy or hopeless.
You don’t have to figure this out alone. But there are some essential ingredients in changing self-sabotaging patterns:
You can’t change what you can’t see. A big part of this work is slowing down and noticing:
Journaling, therapy, or even simple notes in your phone can help you map these patterns over time.
Many people try to stop self-sabotage by shaming or scolding themselves. Ironically, shame is often part of what fuels the pattern.
A more effective approach is learning to treat yourself with curiosity and kindness, even when you’re frustrated:
This kind of inner stance doesn’t excuse harmful behavior; it creates the safety needed to actually change it.
Because self-sabotage is tied to negative core beliefs and automatic thoughts, we need tools that help you:
This is where Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and related approaches can be especially powerful.
Insight alone isn’t enough. We also need to experiment with concrete, doable steps:
Therapy can help you design strategies tailored to your real life, not just generic advice.
In therapy for self-sabotage, we’re doing more than “fixing bad habits.” We’re exploring:
Depending on your needs, our work together may include:
Over time, the goal is not to become “perfectly disciplined.” It’s to develop a more honest, compassionate relationship with yourself so you don’t have to keep tripping your own progress.
I’m a Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist and Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor providing therapy in Orange County and online throughout California. I’ve worked with many people who describe themselves as:
My approach is gentle, curious, and empowering. I’m not here to lecture or shame you — you’ve had enough of that from your own inner critic. Instead, we’ll work together to:
As we do this work, many clients report feeling more grounded, more consistent, and less afraid of closeness, success, and change. The old patterns may still whisper — but they no longer run the show.
You don’t have to figure this out alone. Let’s take the first step together. Call so we can schedule a consultation.