In my last poll, most of you felt that “no contact” is too extreme and damaging to families. That perspective is powerful, and it shows how deeply estrangement can wound both sides.
At the same time, many Millennials and Gen Z describe going no contact as the only way they know how to protect their emotional well-being.
This tension is at the heart of the debate: ** Is no contact more about protection, or does it end up causing even greater pain?
Marie Morin LMHC
In my last poll, most of you felt that “no contact” is too extreme and damaging to families. That perspective is powerful, and it shows how deeply estrangement can wound both sides.
At the same time, many Millennials and Gen Z describe going no contact as the only way they know how to protect their emotional well-being.
This tension is at the heart of the debate:
** Is no contact more about protection, or does it end up causing even greater pain?
I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments.
4 months ago | [YT] | 1