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Description
Sabotage was never about destroying what was good. It was about protecting yourself from the devastation of losing it. It follows a familiar, bewildering pattern. Something good arrives - a relationship with genuine potential, an opportunity you have worked toward, a period of stability you have long deserved - and something inside you quietly begins to dismantle it. Not dramatically, not consciously, but persistently. And in the aftermath, the most painful question is rarely about what happened. It is about why you let it.Why You Keep Sabotaging Good Things explores the inner logic of self-sabotage - not as a character flaw or a failure of willpower, but as a deeply intelligent, deeply misaligned protective response. It examines how the nervous system can register safety as unfamiliar and goodness as threatening when your history has taught you, often without words, that positive things tend not to last, that you don't quite deserve them, or that allowing yourself to want something fully only makes its loss more devastating.This book offers insight into the hidden architecture of self-defeating patterns: how unconscious beliefs about worthiness quietly override conscious intentions, why the moment things start going well can paradoxically trigger the most self-destructive impulses, and what it means to gradually build enough inner safety to allow good things to stay. It does not promise that awareness alone will dissolve patterns built over a lifetime. What it offers is something more honest and more grounding - a compassionate examination of the part of you that has been protecting you from disappointment in the only way it ever learned how.For anyone who has watched themselves pull away from precisely what they wanted, who recognizes the pattern but cannot seem to stop it, or who simply needs someone to say: this isn't weakness. It is a wound that learned to look like a choice.



