I didn't first understand my "parts" just through therapy — I learned them through my own journey with alcoholism… and the damage it caused in my relationships, including the one I had with myself.
When I drank, I thought I was becoming a completely different person. But in reality, alcohol was revealing the suppressed parts of myself that I had learned to hide growing up.
In this episode, I walk through how my childhood shaped the way I show up in relationships — from growing up in an unpredictable environment, to becoming the "strong one," to learning how to suppress parts of myself just to feel safe and loved.
We then connect that to:
- why you act like a different person when you're drunk
- how alcohol lowers your emotional filter
- parts work (IFS) and fragmentation
- attachment styles and relationship patterns
- Carl Jung's concept of shadow work and the unconscious mind
- inner child healing and emotional suppression
- why the parts of you you reject don't disappear — they come out when you can't control them
Through my own experience, I realized alcohol didn't create a different version of me — it revealed the parts of me that never felt safe to exist.
If you've ever wondered:
- "Why do I act like a different person sometimes?"
- "Why do I lose control of my emotions?"
- "Why do I overgive, shut down, or push people away?"
- "Where do these patterns come from?"
This episode will help you understand that nothing about you is random — your patterns, your reactions, and even your "out of control" moments all have roots.
🌿 All my links → https://bio.site/queerlydivine
☕ Support the podcast → https://ko-fi.com/queerlydivine
Timestamps:
00:00 Intro - Why You Act Different When You're Drunk
00:52 Personal Story & How I Learned My Patterns
00:52:20 Childhood Background & Family Dynamics
07:39:18 Understanding Attachment Styles
09:19:00 Covert Incest & Emotional Parentification
10:31:03 Soul Fragmentation, Alcohol & Parts Work
22:32:00 Types of Drunk Personalities & What They Mean
26:15:08 Questions for Healing & Self-Reflection
34:57:08 Outro