Pattern Breakers Collective – Détails, épisodes et analyse
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Pattern Breakers Collective
Lisa Lucia
Fréquence : 1 épisode/7j. Total Éps: 12

Pattern Breakers Collective explores the psychology behind unhealthy relationship patterns and why so many strong women find themselves stuck in them. Learn how to recognize the signs, reclaim your power, and build healthier relationships.
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Apple Podcasts
🇨🇦 Canada - mentalHealth
08/06/2026#80🇨🇦 Canada - mentalHealth
12/05/2026#96🇨🇦 Canada - mentalHealth
03/05/2026#74🇨🇦 Canada - mentalHealth
02/05/2026#71🇨🇦 Canada - mentalHealth
01/05/2026#80🇨🇦 Canada - mentalHealth
30/04/2026#91
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Who Even Cares About That Anyway? | How to Stop Overthinking, Gaslighting & Getting Pulled Off Track
lundi 11 mai 2026 • Durée 38:22
Why do so many women start conversations feeling completely clear… and end them confused, apologizing, over-explaining, or questioning themselves?
In this episode of the Pattern Breakers Collective podcast, Lisa dives into the psychology behind overthinking, gaslighting, emotional manipulation, narcissistic communication patterns, and the exhausting experience of getting pulled away from your own truth.
Using a surprisingly powerful story about her toddler nephew saying, “Who even cares about that anyway?”, Lisa explores how women — especially those recovering from emotionally abusive or manipulative relationships — are often conditioned to abandon their original point in order to manage someone else’s reactions.
In this episode:
- Why women often start clear but end conversations confused
- What gaslighting, deflection, and DARVO actually look like in real life
- Why overthinking is often a trauma response
- How emotional abuse chips away at self-trust
- Real-world examples involving co-parenting, boundaries, divorce, and difficult conversations
- Practical tools to stop spiraling and reconnect with your own clarity
This episode is for women who constantly second-guess themselves, replay conversations in their heads, struggle with boundaries, or feel emotionally exhausted trying to explain themselves to people committed to misunderstanding them.
Because not every accusation deserves your attention.
Not every detour deserves your energy.
And sometimes healing starts with coming back to the first thing you knew was true.
If this episode resonates with you, share it with someone who needs it and leave a review wherever you listen to podcasts — it helps more women find the show and begin breaking the patterns that were never theirs to carry.
When Marriage Slowly Erases You
lundi 4 mai 2026 • Durée 44:20
There is a particular kind of loneliness that doesn't get talked about enough. It's not the loneliness of being single. It's the loneliness of being married and still feeling like you're doing all of it alone.
In this episode, Lisa of the Pattern Breakers Collective goes deep on the experience of being slowly erased inside a marriage, through neglect, through the relentless grind of emotional and physical labor, through the gap between what women were promised and what they actually got. She also talks about the cultural shift that is happening right now: women are done. They are raising their standards, using their voices, and walking away from what they've been tolerating for too long, and the reaction from some men is absolutely telling.
This episode covers the mental load, career sacrifice, financial dynamics, sexuality, emotional labor, the choice of whether to leave (including faith, culture, kids, and safety), and, most importantly, ten concrete, everyday things women can do right now to start feeling better and finding themselves again, whether they leave today or not.
If something in your marriage has been saying "this isn't right" for a long time, this episode is for you.
If anything in today's episode brought up something you're still living inside, support is available.
National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-7233 or text START to 88788 or thehotline.org. Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Confidential.
National Sexual Assault Hotline: 1-800-656-4673 or RAINN.org. Also 24/7, also confidential.
If your internet use may be monitored, use a private browser window or call from a safe phone. Your safety comes first.
Who Will You Be When History Calls?
lundi 27 avril 2026 • Durée 38:00
Inspired by a question from Trevor Noah's Netflix special, this episode asks the one question that matters most right now: Who will you be when history calls?
Lisa of the Pattern Breakers Collective takes the show outside its usual territory, beyond individual relationships and into the cultural moment we are all living through. Because the patterns that show up in abusive relationships, gaslighting, isolation, the silencing of anyone who names harm, the normalization of cruelty are showing up in the world. And the women who have survived those patterns in their personal lives are, in many ways, the most prepared people alive to recognize and respond to them.
This episode is about courage. What it actually looks like in ordinary life. Why silence is never neutral. Why discomfort is the price of growth rather than evidence of injustice. What is being asked of us right now, and why the women who have done the hardest personal work are more equipped than they know to answer that call.
This episode is meant to inspire. To stir something. To leave you with purpose, not just pain. Share it with someone who needs to hear it.
Gaslighting: When He Makes You the Problem
lundi 20 avril 2026 • Durée 34:40
"Gaslighting" was Merriam-Webster's word of the year in 2022, after searches for the term increased 1,740 percent. But as it became a buzzword, applied to everything from political disagreements to arguments between coworkers, something important got lost. The word stopped describing the specific, sustained, psychologically devastating thing that actually happens when someone you love uses your own mind against you.
This episode gives it back.
Lisa of the Pattern Breakers Collective walks through what gaslighting actually is (the clinical definition, not the diluted internet version), how it's different from ordinary defensiveness, the most common phrases gaslighters use and exactly what each one is designed to do, why intelligent self-aware women are often the most susceptible, how the body signals what the mind is being argued out of, why narcissistic personalities are master gaslighters, and five concrete tools for recognizing and combating it.
If you have ever ended a conversation and wondered why you were apologizing, this episode is for you.
Not All Narcissists Look the Same
lundi 13 avril 2026 • Durée 39:56
Why does one woman describe love bombing and public humiliation, another describes being needed to death, another describes genuine fear, and they're all wondering if they experienced the same kind of abuse? They did. The presentation just looks different.
In this episode, Lisa of the Pattern Breakers Collective breaks down six distinct narcissistic presentations: grandiose, vulnerable, malignant, communal, self-righteous, and neglectful, and explains exactly how each one creates a different hook, a different kind of confusion, and a different reason women don't recognize or name what happened to them.
This is not about diagnosing your ex from the internet. It is about giving you the psychological framework to finally understand your own experience, and to stop comparing your story to someone else's and deciding yours doesn't count.
Because different presentations create different confusion. But the damage, the self-doubt, the self-blame, the loss of reality, the shrinking, is consistent across all of them.
Your experience is real. It counts. And it deserves to be taken seriously.
When “No” Isn’t Respected: Sexual Coercion in Relationships
lundi 6 avril 2026 • Durée 36:12
This episode contains discussion of sexual coercion, reproductive coercion, and intimate partner abuse. Please take care of yourself as you listen.
There are experiences that don’t always get named.
They don’t always look like what we’ve been taught to recognize as sexual violence.
They don’t always happen with force.
And they often exist inside relationships that, from the outside, look completely normal.
But they leave a mark.
In this episode, we’re talking about sexual coercion inside of relationships—what it is, how it happens, and why so many women struggle to name it, even while it’s happening to them.
This is not a surface-level conversation.
This is a grounded, honest look at what it means to have your boundaries ignored, your “no” negotiated, and your body treated as something that doesn’t fully belong to you.
Inside this episode, we explore:
- What sexual coercion actually is (and what it isn’t)
- Why consent is more than just the absence of a “no”
- How coercion shows up in real relationships (including subtle forms)
- Reproductive coercion and the control of pregnancy and birth control
- Why so many women question themselves instead of the behavior
- The psychological impact of repeated coercion, including trauma responses
- The role of gaslighting, manipulation, and coercive control
- What this does to your sense of safety, identity, and connection to your own body
- How to begin recognizing, naming, and responding to what’s happening
This episode also includes personal experiences shared by the host to help break the silence around what many women live through but rarely talk about out loud.
If you’ve ever found yourself thinking:
“Maybe I’m overreacting…”
“I didn’t say no clearly enough…”
“It wasn’t violent, so maybe it doesn’t count…”
This conversation is for you.
You are not alone in this.
And what you felt—what your body knew—matters.
If you are experiencing sexual coercion or sexual violence, confidential support is available:
- RAINN
📞 800-656-HOPE (24/7)
💬 Online chat available - National Domestic Violence Hotline
📞 1-800-799-7233
💬 thehotline.org
📱 Text START to 88788
The In-Between Space (When you see it clearly… but haven’t left yet)
lundi 30 mars 2026 • Durée 34:01
There’s a phase in this process that almost no one talks about.
The part where you’re no longer in denial… but you’re not fully out either.
Where you can see the patterns clearly.
You recognize the cycle.
You know something isn’t right.
And yet… you’re still there.
In this episode, we talk about that space - the in-between.
Not as a place of weakness… but as a place of quiet strength, preparation, and internal change.
Because this phase is often misunderstood.
From the outside, it can look like nothing is happening.
But internally, everything is shifting.
In this episode, we explore:
• What the “in-between” actually is and why so many women live here for a while
• Why awareness doesn’t automatically mean you’re ready to leave
• The difference between preparation and betrayal
• What emotional preparation really looks like (and why it matters)
• How self-trust begins to rebuild after being worn down
• Why your nervous system has to stabilize before you can make grounded decisions
• What practical preparation can look like—without escalating risk
• How to quietly create options, safety, and support
• What it means to start reclaiming yourself before you leave
• The internal shifts that happen before someone is truly ready to go
This episode is for you if you’ve ever thought:
“I’m not ready to leave… but I can’t keep living like this.”
“I see it now, and I can’t unsee it.”
“I just need time to figure this out.”
You are not stuck.
You are not failing.
You are in the middle of something that is already changing—even if it doesn’t look like it yet.
And this phase… matters more than you think.
Why Leaving Is So Hard (Understanding Trauma Bonds)
lundi 23 mars 2026 • Durée 46:58
If you’ve ever found yourself asking, “If I know this relationship isn’t healthy… why is it so hard to leave?”, you are not alone.
In this episode, we explore one of the most confusing and painful dynamics survivors experience: trauma bonds.
Many people assume that once someone recognizes abuse or unhealthy patterns, leaving should be straightforward. But the reality is much more complicated. Emotional attachment, fear, hope, identity, and powerful nervous system responses can all make it incredibly difficult to walk away, even when someone clearly understands the harm that’s happening.
In this episode, we talk about:
• Why awareness doesn’t automatically lead to leaving
• How trauma bonds actually form in relationships
• The role of stress, relief, and brain chemistry in strengthening attachment
• Why leaving can sometimes feel like withdrawal instead of freedom
• The emotional confusion that often happens after creating distance
• How trauma bonds begin to weaken over time
• What it looks like to reclaim your sense of self while the bond unwinds
This conversation is not about blame or judgment. It’s about understanding the deeper psychological patterns that keep people stuck in painful relationship cycles, and learning how compassion and awareness can help break them.
If you’ve ever questioned your own strength, your clarity, or your ability to walk away from something that was hurting you, this episode is for you.
Because struggling to leave doesn’t mean you’re weak.
It often means your nervous system adapted to survive something intense.
And understanding that is often the first step toward freedom.
If It Were Really Abuse, I’d Know… Right? | Understanding Abuse Beyond Bruises
Saison 1 · Épisode 1
dimanche 15 mars 2026 • Durée 34:28
Many people believe abuse is obvious.
Bruises. Police reports. Something unmistakable.
But most abusive relationships don’t start that way.
In this first episode of Pattern Breakers Collective, we explore one of the most common thoughts survivors have:
“If it were really abuse, I’d know.”
Drawing from years of working alongside survivors and my own lived experience, we unpack why abuse is often difficult to recognize in real time. This episode breaks down the forms of harm that don’t leave visible marks, including emotional abuse, psychological manipulation, financial control, and coercive control.
We also talk about why loving moments can exist alongside harmful behavior, why that creates powerful attachment, and why leaving abusive relationships is far more complicated than people realize.
This conversation isn’t about pressure or judgment.
It’s about clarity.
If you’ve ever questioned your reality, minimized your own experience, or wondered why something in your relationship feels confusing, this episode is for you.
In this episode, we discuss:
• Why abuse rarely begins with obvious red flags
• Emotional and psychological abuse that doesn’t leave bruises
• How love and harm can coexist in the same relationship
• Why leaving abusive relationships is complex and layered
• Gentle first steps toward clarity, safety, and rebuilding self-trust
You deserve relationships where you don’t have to shrink to survive.
In the next episode, we’ll explore trauma bonds: what they are, why they form, and why they make unhealthy relationships so difficult to leave.
The Day She Stops Arguing | Why Women Emotionally Leave Long Before They Physically Leave
lundi 1 juin 2026 • Durée 34:31
What happens when a woman stops fighting for the relationship?
Not because she no longer cares.
But because she no longer believes being heard is possible.
In this episode of Pattern Breakers Collective, Lisa explores the quiet moment many relationships actually begin to end: the day she stops arguing.
Not the screaming match.
Not the divorce papers.
Not the dramatic exit.
The silence.
This episode dives into the emotional exhaustion, loneliness, resentment, emotional neglect, trauma responses, and nervous system shutdown that many women experience inside long-term relationships and marriages — especially when they have spent years feeling unheard, unseen, emotionally disconnected, or forced to shrink themselves to keep the peace.
Lisa breaks down:
- Why women emotionally leave relationships long before physically leaving
- The stages of emotional withdrawal in marriage
- What emotional neglect actually feels like
- Why women stop bringing things up
- The connection between emotional safety and physical intimacy
- How resentment quietly builds over years
- Why so many women blame themselves instead of recognizing unmet needs
- The difference between emotional immaturity and abusive dynamics
- Why couples counseling can be harmful in coercive or abusive relationships
- What “pattern breaking” actually looks like in everyday life
- How women begin rebuilding self-trust after years of self-silencing
This episode also speaks directly to women navigating:
- narcissistic relationships
- emotionally unavailable partners
- trauma bonds
- coercive control
- emotionally abusive marriages
- high-conflict relationships
- people-pleasing
- chronic emotional loneliness
- loss of identity inside marriage
If you’ve ever thought:
“I stopped bringing things up because it never changed anything,”
or
“I checked out emotionally long before I ever considered leaving,”
this episode is for you.
Resources
National Domestic Violence Hotline (24/7):
1-800-799-7233
https://www.thehotline.org
If your internet use may be monitored, use a private browser or safe device.
Connect + Work With Lisa
If this episode resonated with you and you’re ready to start breaking these patterns in your own life, Lisa’s 12-week Pattern Breakers Collective program is designed to help women rebuild self-trust, recognize unhealthy relationship dynamics, heal trauma patterns, and stop disappearing inside relationships.
Please share this episode with someone who may need it.
And if this conversation mattered to you, leaving a review helps more women find the show.









