Beloved: Christian Healing for Identity & Self-Worth

Cherise Rochelle

Welcome to Beloved with Cherise Rochelle. Beloved is a faith-based podcast for women navigating relationships who want to understand their patterns, grow in emotional and spiritual maturity, and choose healthy, covenant-oriented love. Drawing from biblical wisdom, attachment research, personal reflection, and conversations with trusted voices in psychology, faith, and relational health, Beloved helps women name what’s happening beneath the surface — without shame — and discern a wiser way forward. If you’ve ever felt unseen, unchosen, or stuck in the same relationship dynamics, this space will help you reconnect with your God-given worth, deepen self-awareness, and pursue relationships marked by security, clarity, and love. You are wanted. You are seen. You are His dear one. You are beloved. 💌 Subscribe for thoughtful conversations, faith-filled insight, and gentle guidance for becoming whole before choosing a partner. cheriserochelle.substack.com

  1. 6D AGO

    Beloved Season 2 Trailer

    What if the stories we love…are quietly revealing the patterns we live by? This is Beloved — a space for healing, discernment, and becoming whole. Beloved was created for women who want more than chemistry…more than romance…more than repeating cycles they don’t fully understand. Women who want wisdom.Clarity.And love that actually reflects the heart of God. In Season 2, we’re taking a new approach. Instead of only talking about relationships, we’re examining them through the stories many of us already know — romantic movies, series, and cultural favorites. Rom-coms. Period dramas. Love stories we’ve laughed at, cried over, and rewatched more times than we can count. What anxious attachment looks like in real life The red flags of emotional unavailability and avoidance What secure, godly love actually looks like How father wounds and unresolved trauma shape adult relationships And how healing — not just romance — is God’s intention for us All through a biblical lens. Because attraction alone isn’t discernment.Intensity isn’t intimacy.And not every love story is meant to be imitated. But every story can teach us something. From time to time, I’ll also be joined by trusted voices — clinicians, pastors, and teachers — to help deepen the conversation at the intersection of faith and psychology. If you’ve ever wondered why certain dynamics feel familiar…why you’re drawn to certain types of people…or how to heal without losing hope — Season 2 of Beloved is for you. Because you are not too much.You are not broken.And you were never meant to love without wisdom. Happy Valentine’s Day Beloveds, and welcome to Season 2💛 Together, we’ll look beneath the surface to explore:

    2 min
  2. JAN 5

    We Can’t Claim to Love God While Hating Our Father: Choosing Love Over Hatred

    Can we truly claim to love God if our hearts are consumed by anger or hatred toward our father or father figure? In this episode, you will gain: * clarity on the connection between loving God and handling father wounds * practical understanding of choosing love over hatred without compromising boundaries * insight into why healing matters for breaking generational cycles of brokenness * actionable steps for guarding your heart while practicing love and forgiveness Father wounds can make love feel impossible. Anger, resentment, and grief are natural responses to betrayal and harm. But Scripture reminds us that unhealed hatred can block our relationship with God. Choosing love does not mean ignoring the pain, pretending all is well, or inviting further harm. It means refusing to let someone else’s sin dictate your heart or your destiny. Healing matters because unhealed wounds perpetuate cycles of brokenness — and that is exactly how the enemy gains ground. SIGNS YOU MAY BE STRUGGLING WITH HATRED TOWARD YOUR FATHER * You replay painful memories with anger or resentment * You find yourself wishing harm on him or secretly hoping he suffers consequences * You struggle to pray for him or even think about him without irritation * You feel stuck, unable to move forward in faith or intimacy with God * You avoid reconciliation at all costs because of fear, resentment, or unresolved pain These are normal, human responses — but they signal areas where God’s healing is needed to protect your heart and faith. EXPLANATION: CHOOSING LOVE OVER HATRED Love is not feeling warm toward the person who hurt you.Love is a decision — a choice to act in alignment with God’s truth. Key components of loving someone who hurt you: * Acknowledgment of Pain * Admit the hurt, betrayal, or neglect * Recognize the impact of their actions on your life * Refusal to Retaliate * Leave justice to God * Do not allow anger or vengeance to dictate your actions * Guarding Your Heart * Maintain healthy boundaries * Protect yourself emotionally, spiritually, and physically * Choosing Integrity * Respond in ways that reflect God’s character, not theirs * Refuse to dehumanize or seek their harm * Forgiveness as Release * Forgiving doesn’t require contact or warmth * Forgiveness frees your heart and aligns you with God’s will BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVE * We are not fighting against flesh and blood * “For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness…” — Ephesians 6:12 * Hatred fuels the enemy’s work; choosing love resists it. * Love and hate cannot coexist * “If anyone says, ‘I love God,’ and hates his brother, he is a liar.” — 1 John 4:20 * Guard your heart * “Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.” — Proverbs 4:23 * Protecting your heart allows you to love wisely. * Forgive generously * “Jesus said, ‘I tell you, not seven times, but seventy-seven times.’” — Matthew 18:22 * Respond with good, not evil * Do not repay anyone evil for evil. Be careful to do what is right in the eyes of everyone. 18 If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone. 19 Do not take revenge, my dear friends, but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written: “It is mine to avenge; I will repay,”[a] says the Lord. 20 On the contrary: “If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink.In doing this, you will heap burning coals on his head.”[b] * 21 Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good. * Romans 12:17-21 * Love your enemies * “But I say to you, Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” — Matthew 5:44 Additional verses * Luke 6:27–28 (love those who hate you) * Colossians 3:13 (bear with one another, forgive as the Lord forgave you) REFLECTION / JOURNAL PROMPTS * In what ways do I still feel anger or resentment toward my father? * How have these feelings affected my relationship with God? * Which boundaries do I need to establish to protect my heart while still choosing love? * What does releasing justice to God look like for me personally? * How can I practice forgiveness without compromising my emotional safety? AFFIRMATION “I choose love over hatred. I guard my heart while releasing justice to God. My healing is my responsibility, and it aligns me with God’s will. I will not allow the actions of others to dictate my heart or my faith.” KEY VERSE 1 John 4:20 “If anyone says, ‘I love God,’ and hates his brother, he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother whom he has seen cannot love God whom he has not seen.” Loving and forgiving a father who hurt you is not easy — it will require intentionality, courage, and alignment with God. It does not mean reconciliation or emotional closeness. It does mean refusing to let hatred take root, guarding your heart, and leaving justice in God’s hands. Healing matters. Love matters. And through choosing love over hatred, you protect your soul, break cycles of generational pain, and align yourself with the life God intended for you. Get full access to Beloved with Cherise Rochelle at cheriserochelle.substack.com/subscribe

    8 min
  3. 12/29/2025

    Authenticity Is Your Superpower

    What if the exhaustion you feel isn’t from doing too much — but from constantly being someone you’re not? In this episode, you’ll gain: * clarity on why father wounds often lead to people-pleasing * insight into why authenticity feels risky when safety was conditional * freedom from the belief that being liked equals being aligned * a biblical framework for choosing truth over approval * practical steps to begin living authentically — without guilt For many of us with father wounds, authenticity doesn’t feel like freedom — it feels dangerous. When love, safety, or approval were inconsistent, we learned early: * read the room * adjust yourself * don’t say too much * don’t upset anyone * be who they need you to be And over time, that survival skill became an identity. People-pleasing is not a personality trait.It is a coping mechanism. This episode is about reclaiming authenticity — not as rebellion, not as selfishness — but as alignment with who God actually created you to be. SIGNS FATHER WOUNDS HAVE TURNED INTO PEOPLE-PLEASING You may struggle with authenticity if: * you feel responsible for other people’s emotions * you fear being misunderstood or disliked * you over-explain yourself to avoid conflict * you suppress opinions to “keep the peace” * you feel anxious after expressing a need or boundary * you change yourself depending on who you’re with * you equate being loved with being useful or agreeable None of this means you are weak.It means you adapted to survive. WHY AUTHENTICITY FEELS THREATENING WITH FATHER WOUNDS When a father or father figure was: * emotionally unpredictable * critical * withholding * controlling * unsafe You learned that being yourself had consequences. So authenticity became associated with: * rejection * punishment * withdrawal of love * emotional distance And people-pleasing became a way to stay connected. But what once protected you is now misaligning you. AUTHENTICITY VS APPROVAL People-pleasing says:“If I’m liked, I’m safe.” Authenticity says:“If I’m aligned, I’m free.” Authenticity does not guarantee acceptance. But it guarantees integrity. Jesus Himself was deeply authentic — and not universally liked. “If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own… but I have chosen you out of the world.” — John 15:19 Truth repels those who benefit from your silence. ACCEPTING THAT NOT EVERYONE WILL LIKE YOU This is one of the hardest shifts for people with father wounds. Because rejection doesn’t just feel disappointing — it feels dangerous. But healing teaches us: * being disliked is not the same as being unsafe * disagreement is not abandonment * discomfort is not danger You are allowed to be: * honest * direct * different * misunderstood Alignment matters more than approval. AUTHENTICITY IS TRUE FREEDOM Authenticity is not about saying everything you think. It’s about no longer betraying yourself. It looks like: * saying no without a justification speech * expressing needs without apologising * choosing peace over performance * letting people feel what they feel * trusting that who you are is enough “For freedom Christ has set us free.” — Galatians 5:1 Freedom begins internally — long before circumstances change. HOW TO BEGIN LIVING AUTHENTICALLY (PRACTICAL STEPS) * Notice where you abandon yourself Pay attention to where you say yes but feel resentment. * Practice small acts of honesty Start with low-risk situations. Alignment builds confidence. * Stop over-explaining You don’t need to convince people to respect you. * Allow discomfort Authenticity feels uncomfortable before it feels natural. * Anchor your identity in God — not feedback People’s reactions are not a reliable measure of truth. BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVE “Am I now trying to win the approval of human beings, or of God?” — Galatians 1:10 Scripture consistently points us toward: * truth over image * obedience over approval * integrity over acceptance God does not bless who we pretend to be.He blesses who He created us to be. REFLECTION / JOURNAL PROMPTS * Where in my life am I performing instead of being present? * Whose approval am I afraid of losing — and why? * What would change if I trusted that authenticity is safe? * What parts of myself have I been suppressing to be accepted? * What would alignment look like in my relationships, work, or faith? AFFIRMATION “I release the need to be liked. I choose alignment over approval. I am safe to be myself. Authenticity is my freedom.” KEY VERSE “Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.” — Proverbs 4:23 Guarding your heart includes refusing to abandon yourself for acceptance. CLOSING People-pleasing keeps you connected — but authenticity keeps you free. You don’t need to earn belonging.You don’t need to shrink to be loved.And you don’t need permission to be who God formed you to be. Healing doesn’t make you harder.It makes you truer. And your truest self is not a liability — it is your superpower. Get full access to Beloved with Cherise Rochelle at cheriserochelle.substack.com/subscribe

    7 min
  4. 12/26/2025

    How Father Wounds Are Shaping Modern Relationships & Gender Roles

    Have you noticed how many relationships today feel out of balance, where women are forced to lead, protect, or provide, while men shirk responsibility or cling to control? Could father wounds be at the heart of this pattern? In this episode, you’ll gain: * understanding of how father wounds affect both men and women * insight into how these wounds shape modern relationship dynamics * clarity on how cycles of dysfunction perpetuate across generations * perspective on what healing looks like for you, regardless of your circumstances Father wounds don’t just hurt the individual. They ripple outward, shaping family systems, relationship norms, and even society at large. Unhealed men and unhealed women often attract each other, drawn together by familiar patterns of dysfunction. For men who have never had healthy fathering, leadership, responsibility, and emotional maturity may feel foreign or threatening. Some of them cling to authority and titles without earning or understanding the weight of those roles. For women who grew up without strong fathers or with wounded fathers, independence and self-reliance often become necessary survival skills. This sometimes puts them in positions where they take on leadership in relationships, even when the man is expected to lead. The result? Roles get reversed, boundaries blurred, and the cycle of generational dysfunction continues. SIGNS OF THE GENERATIONAL IMPACT OF FATHER WOUNDS You may see it in: * Couples where women carry the emotional, financial, or practical weight of the relationship * Men who demand authority or control but avoid responsibility * Families where children are exposed to inconsistent or absent fathering * Relationship norms where entitlement and insecurity override accountability * Emotional dependence, manipulation, or cycles of blame between partners These patterns are not personal failings, they are consequences of unhealed wounds that span generations. EXPLANATION: HOW FATHER WOUNDS PERPETUATE CYCLES * Unhealed men: They may crave control, fear vulnerability, or seek validation through dominance rather than healthy leadership. * Unhealed women: They may overcompensate, tolerating disrespect to maintain relational stability, or repeating patterns learned in their upbringing. * Children: They witness and internalize these dynamics, often adopting similar relational scripts in adulthood. When trauma is unaddressed, the cycle repeats — and it’s amplified by societal pressures and distorted expectations of gender roles. BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVE God designed men and women with distinct, complementary roles in the family: * Men as leaders, providers, and protectors (Ephesians 5:23; 1 Timothy 5:8) * Women as nurturers, helpers, and supporters (Proverbs 31; Titus 2:3–5) Father wounds distort these roles: leadership becomes entitlement, provision becomes avoidance, and nurturing becomes overcompensation. Scripture also reminds us that our wounds don’t have to define the next generation: “Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.” — Ephesians 6:4 Healing can interrupt these cycles. By confronting our wounds and walking in alignment with God’s design, we prevent them from perpetuating in our relationships and families. REFLECTION / JOURNAL PROMPTS * In what ways do I see father wounds affecting the relationships around me? * Have I tolerated dysfunction because of my own unhealed patterns? * How can I take responsibility for breaking generational cycles in my family? * What would a healthy balance of roles look like in my relationships? * Which behaviours do I need to model differently for the next generation? AFFIRMATION “I do not have to repeat the cycles of dysfunction. I can walk in healing, wisdom, and integrity. I choose to model love, responsibility, and Godly leadership in my life and relationships.” KEY VERSE “Fathers, do not provoke your children, lest they become discouraged.” — Colossians 3:21 Healing and leadership start with awareness and intentionality. CLOSING Father wounds have ripple effects far beyond the individual — shaping relationships, families, and even societal norms. But awareness and healing give us power to break the cycle.You can choose to walk differently with integrity, boundaries, and alignment with God’s design and in doing so, model a new way forward for yourself and the next generation. Get full access to Beloved with Cherise Rochelle at cheriserochelle.substack.com/subscribe

    7 min
  5. 12/22/2025

    Accepting an Underpaying Job: What It Revealed About Father Wounds & Self-Worth

    Have you ever accepted less than you deserved — not because you lacked ability, but because you didn’t fully see your own value? And later realised it wasn’t just about the job… it was about self-worth? WHAT THIS EPISODE WILL GIVE YOU In today’s episode, we’re talking about how father wounds and unhealed trauma can quietly shape the standards we accept — at work, in relationships, and in life. If you’ve ever: * undercharged * over-tolerated * stayed too long out of fear * accepted mistreatment to “keep the peace” * or felt grateful just to be chosen This episode will help you: * recognise where trauma may be driving your decisions * understand the difference between wisdom and fear * see how father wounds distort self-worth * and learn how healing changes what you accept, how you negotiate, and how long you stay ACCEPTING LESS WITHOUT REALISING WHY Three years ago, I accepted a job where I was paid the minimum amount possible. Not only that, I actually asked for less than what was offered. I was pivoting careers, and I evaluated my worth solely based on what I didn’t know yet, instead of recognising how my previous education, skills, and experience made me more valuable in this new role. I completely discounted myself. And because I couldn’t see my value: * I accepted an underpaying role * I tolerated mistreatment and disrespect * I became afraid of losing the job * I stayed longer than I should have * I got comfortable in an environment meant to be temporary Eventually, I was let go before I could leave on my own terms and that left me in a more vulnerable position than if I had trusted myself earlier. At the time, I thought I was being wise. But looking back, I see how much of that “wisdom” was actually fear. HOW FATHER WOUNDS AFFECT SELF-WORTH & WHAT WE ACCEPT Father wounds don’t just affect emotions they shape standards. If you grew up: * having to beg for approval * being made to feel replaceable * having your contributions minimised * being financially, emotionally, or verbally controlled * being taught love was conditional You may internalise beliefs like: * I should be grateful for whatever I’m given * I shouldn’t ask for too much * I could easily be replaced * Peace matters more than my dignity * If I push back, I’ll lose everything These beliefs don’t stay in childhood. They follow us into: * jobs * relationships * friendships * churches * leadership spaces And they quietly lower what we believe we’re allowed to ask for. WISDOM VS FEAR — THEY ARE NOT THE SAME Yes, there is wisdom in compromise. Yes, there are seasons where we take stepping-stone opportunities. Yes, sometimes we endure difficulty for a greater goal. But wisdom and fear are not the same thing. Wisdom says: “I know who I am, and I am choosing this strategically.” Fear says: “I don’t believe I have other options.” Wisdom has boundaries. Fear tolerates mistreatment. Wisdom has timelines. Fear overstays. Wisdom negotiates. Fear under-asks. HOW HEALING CHANGES THE WAY WE APPROACH LIFE If I had been healed and whole at the time: * I may not have accepted that role at all * or I would have negotiated differently * I would not have tolerated certain behaviours * I would not have stayed out of fear * I would have trusted myself to leave Healing doesn’t mean we never face hard situations. It means: * we enter them with clarity * we don’t abandon ourselves inside them * we don’t confuse survival with loyalty * we don’t shrink to stay safe THIS ISN’T JUST ABOUT JOBS This pattern applies everywhere. When we are unhealed, we: * accept inconsistent love * excuse disrespect * stay in environments that drain us * settle for less than we deserve * mistake endurance for character Healing restores vision. You begin to see: * your worth * your authority * your agency * your God-given value And with that vision comes better choices. BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVE “You are not your own; you were bought at a price.” — 1 Corinthians 6:19–20 Your value is not determined by an employer, a partner, or a father figure. It was set by God. “Let the one who boasts boast in the Lord.” — 2 Corinthians 10:17 Healing teaches us to anchor our worth in God — not in fear, scarcity, or approval. “For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power, love, and a sound mind.” — 2 Timothy 1:7 A sound mind does not undercut itself. A sound mind does not beg for crumbs. A sound mind knows when to stay and when to leave. REFLECTION / JOURNAL PROMPTS * Where have I accepted less than I deserved and why? * Was I being wise… or was I afraid? * What beliefs about my worth did I learn from my father or father figure? * How has healing already changed what I tolerate? * What would it look like to approach opportunities with confidence rather than fear? AFFIRMATION “I know my worth. I do not need to beg for what God has already assigned to me. I choose wisdom, not fear. I trust myself to walk away when necessary.” KEY VERSE “The Lord will perfect that which concerns me.” — Psalm 138:8 God is invested in your growth — not your diminishment. CLOSING ENCOURAGEMENT Healing doesn’t just change how we feel. It changes what we accept. And when father wounds are addressed, we stop negotiating against ourselves. You were never meant to shrink to survive. You were meant to stand: whole, confident, and aware of your value. And as you heal, your standards will rise, not because you’re arrogant, but because you finally see yourself the way God always has. Get full access to Beloved with Cherise Rochelle at cheriserochelle.substack.com/subscribe

    8 min
  6. 12/19/2025

    Why “Boring” Is Often the Healthiest Relationship Choice

    Have you ever met someone who treated you well —consistent, kind, emotionally available —and your first thought was: “He’s nice… but something’s missing.” Or worse:“He’s boring.” What if “boring” isn’t the problem?What if it’s the first sign of safety? In this episode, you’ll understand: * why healthy relationships often feel dull after emotional chaos * how father wounds wire us to confuse intensity with intimacy * why safety can feel unattractive before healing * how to discern peace from disinterest * and why choosing “boring” may actually be choosing freedom This isn’t about settling.It’s about relearning what love feels like. Many of us didn’t grow up with calm, safe love. We grew up with: * inconsistency * emotional absence or volatility * criticism, fear, or control * having to earn affection * love that felt conditional or unpredictable So when we encounter someone steady —someone who communicates clearly, doesn’t disappear, doesn’t provoke anxiety —our nervous system doesn’t recognise it as love. It recognises it as unfamiliar. And unfamiliar often gets labelled as boring. WHY “BORING” FEELS UNATTRACTIVE WHEN YOU HAVE FATHER WOUNDS 1. Chaos trained your nervous system If your early attachment was unpredictable, your body learned to associate: * adrenaline with connection * anxiety with closeness * emotional highs and lows with intimacy So when someone doesn’t: * trigger insecurity * make you chase * keep you guessing your nervous system reads that as:“There’s no spark.” But what you’re actually missing is stress, not chemistry. 2. You confuse intensity with intimacy Intensity feels like: * fast bonding * emotional rollercoasters * dramatic vulnerability * push–pull dynamics But intimacy is built slowly.Quietly.Consistently. Healthy love doesn’t spike cortisol —it builds trust. And trust feels flat when you’re used to chaos. 3. Safety doesn’t activate old survival roles In unhealthy dynamics, you may have learned to: * over-function * fix, rescue, or manage emotions * prove your worth * stay hypervigilant A healthy man doesn’t need you to perform. And that can feel… purposeless.Unexciting.Disorienting. Because you’re no longer needed in survival mode. WHAT “BORING” ACTUALLY LOOKS LIKE “Boring” often means: * consistency * emotional regulation * reliability * honesty * follow-through * calm conflict resolution * respect for boundaries In other words:peace. And peace feels quiet when your body is used to noise. “God is not a God of disorder, but of peace.” — 1 Corinthians 14:33 THE BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVE: WHY PEACE IS A FRUIT, NOT A FLAW Scripture never describes love as chaotic. “Love is patient, love is kind… it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered.” — 1 Corinthians 13:4–5 “The wisdom that comes from heaven is first of all pure; then peace-loving, considerate, submissive, full of mercy.” — James 3:17 Peace is not the absence of passion.It is the presence of safety. And safety is what allows love to deepen over time. WHY HEALING CHANGES WHAT ATTRACTS YOU As you heal: * your tolerance for chaos decreases * your nervous system recalibrates * you stop chasing what hurts * you stop mistaking anxiety for desire Suddenly, “boring” becomes: * grounding * attractive * relieving * trustworthy And drama becomes exhausting. This is not settling.This is maturity. HOW TO DISCERN PEACE VS TRUE DISINTEREST Ask yourself: * Do I feel calm or numb? * Do I feel safe or indifferent? * Is my body relaxed or shut down? * Am I bored — or just not anxious? Healing doesn’t erase attraction.It refines it. Sometimes you don’t feel fireworks —because your nervous system is no longer on fire. REFLECTION / JOURNAL PROMPTS * What kind of love was modelled to me growing up? * What emotions do I associate with attraction? * Have I ever mistaken anxiety for chemistry? * How does my body feel around safe people? * What would it look like to choose peace over intensity? AFFIRMATION “I am learning to recognise safety as attractive.Peace is not boring — it is healing.I choose relationships that bring rest, not confusion.” KEY VERSE “The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace…” — Galatians 5:22 Peace is fruit.Not a compromise. Choosing the “boring” guy isn’t about lowering your standards. It’s about raising them. It’s choosing: * stability over adrenaline * consistency over chaos * peace over performance * healing over familiarity And sometimes, the healthiest love doesn’t feel exciting at first —because it finally lets your nervous system rest. That’s not boredom. That’s freedom. Resources: Check out the Creating Healthy Romantic Relationships Workbook here! Subscribe on youtube and here on substack: Until next time, beloved— stay rooted in truth, wrapped in grace, and never forget: you are beloved 💛. Get full access to Beloved with Cherise Rochelle at cheriserochelle.substack.com/subscribe

    7 min
  7. 12/17/2025

    4 Things I Learnt When I Stopped Dating to Heal My Father Wound

    You want a healthy relationship, right?But somehow… you keep dating the same man, same pain — just dressed differently. Today we’re talking about 4 key things you gain when you pause dating and how taking a break from dating might actually be the thing that helps you finally end up in the healthy relationship you’re longing for. The last time I was in a relationship, I was ranting to my therapist about my then-boyfriend — a lot. And one day she asked me a simple question: “Is he like your dad?” At that moment, I said, “No, of course not. He’s way nicer. He’s more this and he’s more that and definitely nothing like my dad” But some time later, it hit me. I was clearly in denial. I wasn’t choosing what was healthy —I was choosing what was familiar. And truthfully this guy wasn’t really any different from anyone before him at the core. I didn’t realise that I had continued to repeat the same patterns.Do you know what your wound is/wounds are and exactly what your triggers are? It’s really important to recognise these because then you’re better equipped to heal, identify the red flags and walk away. How and Why Dating Activates Our Father Wounds? Dating activates your entire attachment system — your nervous system, your beliefs, your coping strategies, and your relationship patterns. First, your nervous system goes into survival mode.If love was inconsistent, distant, or conditional growing up, your body learned that connection is unsafe and unpredictable.So dating triggers hypervigilance — waiting for replies, reading tone, feeling a rush when there’s attention and a crash when there isn’t.That’s not you being dramatic.That’s your nervous system trying to protect you from loss. But the problem is that you’re outsourcing your emotional regulation and relying on someone else for your peace. Second, your beliefs get activated.All the Old subconscious conclusions rise to the surface —I have to earn love.I need to be chosen to matter.If I say too much, they’ll leave.If I don’t try harder, I’ll be replaced.Dating doesn’t create these beliefs — it exposes the ones that were already there. Third, your coping strategies come online.Some of us cling — over-explain, over-give, over-text — because closeness feels like safety.And some of us detach — emotionally pulling back, staying guarded, or keeping options open — because distance feels like control. Different strategies, same root: don’t lose connection. And finally, your relationship patterns repeat.You’re drawn to emotional unavailability because it feels familiar.You mistake intensity for intimacy.You confuse anxiety with chemistry.You abandon yourselfNot because you want pain — but because your system is trying to resolve an old wound in a familiar way. Ignoring all the red flags because being chosen feels better than actually being safe. So dating doesn’t just bring up the father wound.When it’s unhealed, dating keeps reopening it. That’s why pausing isn’t giving up on love.It doesn’t mean dating itself is wrong — it means timing matters when healing is still underway. It’s giving your system a chance to finally stand down — so healing can begin. Why Stopping Dating Interrupts the Cycle When you pause dating, you significantly reduce the constant evaluation and uncertainty that keeps your nervous system activated, Stop your belief reinforcement, Remove the emotional unpredictability and Interrupt coping behaviours This allows: * the nervous system to settle * identity to stabilise * worth to be rebuilt internally and spiritually Only then can discernment replace desperation 4 Things You Gain When You Pause Dating 1. Nervous System Stability Before, your emotional state was constantly leaning forward — waiting for a reply, a plan, a sign you were still wanted. When dating pauses, your body stops bracing for disappointment, your mood stops rising and falling with attention, and your days feel quieter — not empty, but steadier. Peace stops being something you hope someone else gives you. Instead of emotional highs and crashes What dating was giving you: * dopamine spikes * anticipation * anxiety-relief through attention What the pause gives you: * emotional baseline * fewer highs and crashes * the ability to feel calm without being chosen How you get it: Nothing external is yanking your emotions around anymore. Your peace stops being dependent on replies, interest, or potential. 📌 This is the first time many people experience peace without romance. 2. Self-Trust Dating often regulates loneliness, insecurity, and fear of being unchosen. When you pause, those feelings surface — and that’s the point. You learn how to soothe yourself without relying on someone else’s attention or approval. You stop second-guessing your gut and regain confidence in your own discernment. Instead of self-abandonment What dating was costing you: * ignoring intuition * overriding discomfort * explaining away red flags What the pause gives you: * the ability to hear yourself again * confidence in your own discernment * trust that you can walk away and survive it How you get it: Every time you choose not to engage with someone unsafe, your brain learns: “I protect myself now.” 📌 Self-trust is built through repeated self-protection — not affirmations. 3. Identity Separation Without dating, you’re no longer performing for attention or approval. You begin to ask: Who am I when no one is evaluating me? What do I like? What do I value? What do I need? Slowly, your sense of self becomes independent of whether someone chooses you or validates your worth. Instead of worth tied to being wanted What dating was reinforcing: * “I matter when I’m pursued” * “I’m valuable when I’m chosen” What the pause provides: * a sense of self that exists without romantic validation * identity not tied to desirability * worth not tied to availability How you get it: Because you survive being unchosen — and discover you are still whole. 📌 This is where identity actually reforms. 4. Clear Attraction When dating is paused, your nervous system recalibrates. Intensity no longer feels like depth. Anxiety no longer masquerades as chemistry. Distance no longer excites. Calm and safety start to feel attractive — not boring. You start to recognise what real, healthy connection feels like. Instead of familiar pain What dating from a wound does: * confuses anxiety for chemistry * confuses distance for depth What the pause gives you: * the ability to feel attraction without urgency * discernment between safety and intensity How you get it: Your nervous system recalibrates. You stop craving emotional unpredictability. 📌 This is why future relationships feel calmer — not boring. Pausing dating doesn’t take love away — it taught me how to stop looking for love to fix what only healing can. Practical Boundaries For this season: * No dating apps * No “just talking” situations * No emotionally charged texting with unavailable people * No fantasising about potential relationships This isn’t punishment. It’s protection. Biblical Perspective: Why Pausing Dating Is Sometimes Obedience, Not Avoidance Here’s how I’ve been processing all of this through a biblical lens. If God truly loves us — and Scripture tells us He does — then He doesn’t want us paired with just anyone, simply for the sake of not being alone. From the very beginning, we see that relationships in God’s design are intentional and purposeful.God didn’t create Eve randomly or prematurely. Adam’s identity, responsibility, and purpose were established first — and then relationship was introduced. “The Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and take care of it.” — Genesis 2:15 Adam had identity.Adam had purpose.Adam had direction — before he had a partner. That tells us something important: A relationship is meant to complement who you are — not complete what you don’t yet know about yourself. Which means we’re not meant to choose partners simply because we’re lonely, afraid, or trying to escape uncomfortable emotions.Scripture never tells us to use romantic love as a coping mechanism. Instead, we’re told where our strength and peace actually come from. “God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble.” — Psalm 46:1 “You will keep in perfect peace those whose minds are steadfast, because they trust in You.” — Isaiah 26:3 There is nothing wrong with needing support. In fact, Scripture encourages community, connection, and bearing one another’s burdens. “Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.” — Galatians 6:2 But there is a difference between receiving support and outsourcing healing. God never asks a romantic relationship to do the work only He can do. “Come to Me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.” — Matthew 11:28 When we choose partners from a wounded place, we forget something Scripture is very clear about: We are already valuable, already chosen, already deeply loved. “You are precious and honoured in My sight… and I love you.” — Isaiah 43:4 God would never want His children begging to be chosen, tolerated, or treated with basic decency.That posture doesn’t come from love — it comes from forgetting who we are. “For you are God’s masterpiece. He has created you anew in Christ Jesus.” — Ephesians 2:10 You are not required to prove your worth to anyone.You don’t earn love by enduring neglect.And you don’t miss out by waiting — especially if the waiting is making you whole. Scripture consistently tells us to be wise stewards of our hearts. Pausing dating isn’t rejecting love. It’s honouring it. It’s choosing to heal so you can both receive love properly and love properly — the way God intended. And a romantic r

    17 min

About

Welcome to Beloved with Cherise Rochelle. Beloved is a faith-based podcast for women navigating relationships who want to understand their patterns, grow in emotional and spiritual maturity, and choose healthy, covenant-oriented love. Drawing from biblical wisdom, attachment research, personal reflection, and conversations with trusted voices in psychology, faith, and relational health, Beloved helps women name what’s happening beneath the surface — without shame — and discern a wiser way forward. If you’ve ever felt unseen, unchosen, or stuck in the same relationship dynamics, this space will help you reconnect with your God-given worth, deepen self-awareness, and pursue relationships marked by security, clarity, and love. You are wanted. You are seen. You are His dear one. You are beloved. 💌 Subscribe for thoughtful conversations, faith-filled insight, and gentle guidance for becoming whole before choosing a partner. cheriserochelle.substack.com