Internal family systems is a great lens or model for when we are in relationship challenges. You might be getting into high conflict fights with your spouse. Or, you might be dating, and really struggling to figure out if the person you are with is the right match for you. Maybe, you are struggling with memories of childhood trauma, having narcissistic parents, and not knowing what to do. Perhaps, you are a workaholic, focused way too much on work, at the expense of your romantic relationships, destroying your marriage. IFS therapy at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching supports you in connecting to your true Self. You can learn to identify and let go of protector parts and self-sabotaging parts.
Or, you’re an alcoholic, take part in numbing behaviors, avoidance techniques, and find yourself lonely at the end of the day. Internal family systems is a model in therapy that we use to help you bring in self compassion. From there, we can look at the parts of you that have been causing problems and self sabotaging. And, with a basis of self compassion, you can start to step more into your True self – the kind, creative, comforting self within you. Through trauma, experiences that make you feel powerless, and abusive relationships, your protective parts surface.
IFS therapy can help when you are tired all the time.
Feeling tired all the time is very common when your nervous system is constantly regulating, anticipating chaos, in relationships with narcissists, and managing multiple wounded parts. Somatic therapies at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching alongside IFS therapy can help you release tension, restore energy, and train your nervous system to feel safe, even when relational triggers happen. Fatigue is a sign of chronic nervous system activation and adrenal fatigue.
Start building self-worth and confidence through IFS therapy at Wisdom within Counseling and Coaching.
In IFS therapy, let’s first discuss your protector parts.
Managers
Firefighters
Exiles
Managers and firefights are protecting the exiles. But, all are self-sabotaging and sabotage good relationships. The True Self wants to lead – the calm, confident, centered, compassionate, caring part of you. Your protector parts need your help learning your True Self can take the lead.
What are some examples of manager parts?
Managers are the parts that try to prevent pain before it happens. They’re planners, controllers, achievers, perfectionists, people-pleasers, over-functioners, or caretakers. Caretakers and managers put everyone else first, and self-abandon your own needs and wants.

Do You Have A Hyper-Independent High-Achiever Protector Part?
This is the part that works 12+ hour days, overtime shifts, loves achieving, keeps going, making money, keeps producing, keeps helping. You want to please your boss, so the people-pleasing part pops up. Over-giving is a manager part.
Your manager part in IFS whispers:
- “Don’t rely on anyone.”
- “Just handle it yourself.”
- “You’re strong, keep going.”
Your hyper independent part formed from:
- needing to emotionally handle things alone
- having to grow up too quickly
- being parentified
- a childhood belief of “If I stop, I will feel too much”
The hyper independent part protects the exile by keeping you so busy that you don’t risk the vulnerability of needing others.
Hyper Independent Protector: keeps life full and busy, and avoids total dependence. This manager protects you from disappointment by staying in control, capable, and hyper independent. Sadly, being hyper independent and a work-a-holic doesn’t leave time for your spouse and children. You end up pushing away those who love you and avoiding intimate relationships.
Being hyper independent also leaves your exiles lonely.
- stays calm for everyone
- reads emotions with laser precision
- anticipates blow-ups before they happen
- tries to “fix the problem” in the relationship
- steps in to soothe your partner when they are dysregulated
- makes excuses for abusive behavior in relationships
- is “too forgiving”
This manager developed because as a child, you had to be emotionally attuned to unpredictable adults.
Maybe, you had a narcissistic, guilt-tripping, gaslighting father or mother. Perhaps, you had an angry, emotionally explosive, often irritable, type A mother or father. These types of parents teach children to walk on eggshells.
Your manager part tries to keep you safe by being:
- overly responsible
- emotionally generous to others at the expense of your own needs
- endlessly patient and overly accommodating to others who treat you poorly
- the one who initiates repairs after every rupture or conflict in a romantic relationship
Its core fear:
“If I am not perfect and patient, they will leave or explode.”
Often, this pertains to emotionally abusive romantic relationships.
In IFS therapy, let’s talk about the People-Pleaser/Appeaser Manager Part
This people-pleaser part works overtime with narcissistic, abusive romantic partners.
Your people-pleaser part:
- makes your needs smaller
- accepts crumbs
- lets them cancel plans last minute and disappoint you
- avoids conflict so they doesn’t get volatile
- apologizes first
- tries to “keep the peace”
This part learned early:
“If I am low-maintenance, calm, and grateful, I’ll be safe.”
It mistakes survival strategies for love in romantic relationships.
The Organizer/Planner Part
This part:
- plans
- coordinates
- makes everything smooth
- takes care of the kids
- anticipates needs
- puts in all the labor
Its mission is to create predictability in unpredictable environments.
Its fear:
“If I don’t handle everything, things will fall apart and I’ll be blamed or abandoned.”
The negative childhood belief: “Emotional unpredictability is normal. My job is to stay and stabilize it.” This can keep you trapped in emotionally abusive romantic relationships. Emotional abuse from a spouse feels familiar to the roles you had in childhood.
Start IFS therapy at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching.
In IFS therapy, let’s talk about the Good-Girl or Good-Boy/Not-Too-Much Part
This one is huge in abusive romantic relationships.
It tries to:
- not be “needy”
- not ask for too much touch or affirmation
- adjust your emotions to fit your partner’s capacity
- shrink your needs so he/she doesn’t get irritated
- regulate yourself so he/she doesn’t blow up
Its fear:
“If I show my real needs, I will be punished, mocked, or abandoned.”
This part was trained in childhood.
IFS therapy at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching supports compassion, confidence, self-worth, and mental clarity.

What Is The Helper/Caretaker Manager Part In IFS?
This part feels responsible for:
- your spouse’s stress
- their unpredictable moods
- their explosive outbursts
- their parenting overwhelm
- their irritability
It automatically jumps in to soften, soothe, and support your spouse or romantic partner.
This part learned:
“If I take care of them, they won’t hurt me.”
All Your Managers Have Certain Things in Common
They’re trying to:
- prevent rejection
- prevent chaos
- prevent abandonment
- keep you safe
- predict danger
- manage other people’s moods
- keep the relationship intact even if you’re suffering
Managers act before anything gets “bad.”
They shield the exiles—the young parts who carry:
- the terror of being alone
- the grief of emotional neglect
- the fear of being “too much”
- the belief that you have to earn love
At Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching, our therapists specialize in IFS therapy.
Let’s talk about the firefighter parts within you.
In IFS, firefighter parts are the parts of you that rush in after you feel triggered, overwhelmed, abandoned, or hurt. Their job is to put out the emotional fire as fast as possible—even if their methods aren’t always healthy or sustainable.
They activate when a deeper, vulnerable exile part has been stirred up.
Firefighters act fast, impulsively, and intensely.
They are reactive, urgent protectors.
Firefighters try to:
- numb you
- distract you
- soothe you
- shut down feelings
- create distance from pain
They say, essentially:
“Nope. We’re not feeling that. Shut it down.”
They take over when you feel:
- abandoned
- dismissed
- unseen
- criticized
- unimportant
- too vulnerable
Examples of Firefighter Behaviors
These can be benign, self-soothing, or destructive, depending on the person.
Firefighters commonly use:
Numbing behaviors:
- overeating
- scrolling endlessly
- zoning out
- binge watching
- compulsive work
Soothing behaviors:
- reaching for a different person for comfort
- sexual intimacy for grounding
- seeking cuddles or texting someone else
- impulsive decisions for closeness

Intense coping behaviors:
- drinking
- smoking
- overspending
- picking fights
- shutting down completely
- running away
- hooking up impulsively
Relationship firefighters might:
- call someone else immediately after feeling let down
- fantasize about another partner
- pull energy away from one person and give it to another
- detach emotionally
- go to someone more available
Why Are They Called “Firefighters”?
Because they act like firefighters during a crisis:
🔥 Exile gets triggered →
you feel unworthy / abandoned / unloved / unsafe.
🔥 Managers can’t control the situation →
you couldn’t prevent the pain.
🚒 Firefighter rushes in
and dumps a bucket of water on the flames—using ANY strategy available.
A narcissistic partner triggers most wounded exiles — the ones shaped by chaos, inconsistency, and emotional unpredictability.
That is why, in high conflict marriages, we see alcoholism, numbing, porn addiction, ect.
Firefighters Are NOT the Problem
They’re trying to help you survive.
Really, they formed when you were young and had no other tools.
Firefighters only show up when:
- a young exile is hurting
- a situation feels too similar to childhood pain
- you’ve been triggered into feeling alone or unsafe
They act quickly because your inner child pain part feels life-or-death. This is because your system is trying to regulate dysregulation.
In IFS therapy, what are the exiles about?
Your Young Exile Part
This is often a much younger version of you—maybe ages 4–10.
This part holds:
- longing
- tenderness
- abandonment
- rejection
- unwantedness
- unimportance
- the ache of wanting steady, soft, reliable comfort
- the pain of being overwhelmed or emotionally alone
Growing up, you felt:
unheard
unseen
alone
dismissed
invalidated
unimportant
abused
powerless
overstimulated
responsible for her own emotional survival
This part of you learned:
- Love is unpredictable
- You have to earn affection
- You must be “good enough” to get closeness
- You must regulate the other person’s moods
- Connection can disappear at any moment
- Your needs are “too much” for people you love
- Safety comes after you calm the other person
- Crumbs of tenderness feel huge
And, this part:
tolerates yelling
internalizes blame
walks on eggshells
begs for repair
over-functions
thinks “If I just try hard enough, she’ll/he’ll be consistent”
confuses intensity with intimacy
believes love must hurt a little
believes losing him = losing emotional safety
This is the core of why painful pattern keeps repeating: because you never fully got steady, regulated, warm connection from a parent or caregiver in childhood.
IFS therapy at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching supports compassion, confidence, self-worth, and mental clarity.

The Little Girl or Boy Who Learned They Were “Too Much”
This is the part who:
- had emotional needs
- wanted softness and reassurance
- wanted safety and predictability
- wanted someone calm to hold your feelings
But you learned early:
“My needs overwhelm people. I get yelled at if I ask for more.”
So you learned to:
- shrink
- be good
- be quiet
- self-regulate
- anticipate explosions
Let’s talk about your True Self, and self-leadership in IFS therapy.
🌿 The 8 C’s of the True Self
1. Calm
You feel regulated, your breath slows. And, your mind isn’t spinning.
2. Curiosity
You want to understand, not judge.
“Why am I feeling this? What is this part trying to protect?”
3. Compassion
You feel warmth toward your hurting parts.
Even the ones that act out. There are no bad parts of you.
4. Clarity
You can see the situation cleanly, without distortion.
As well, you’re not merged with panic or shame.
5. Confidence
Not ego confidence — but a deep knowing:
“I can handle this and I’m steady.”
6. Courage
You can face hard truths.
And, you can speak boundaries with a steady voice.
7. Creativity
You can imagine new possibilities — you’re not trapped in old trauma mechanisms or self-sabotage patterns.
8. Connectedness
You feel connected to yourself, others, and are living in the present moment.
🌱 The 5 P’s of the True Self
1. Presence
You are in your body, here, now.
Not replaying the past or bracing for the future.
2. Patience
You don’t rush your parts or force change.
With patience and grace, you let them open when they are ready.
3. Perspective
You see the bigger story.
And, you can hold multiple truths at once.
4. Persistence
You stay with your healing and you don’t abandon yourself.
5. Playfulness
You access joy, humor, lightness.
With playfulness, you’re not trapped in fear or hypervigilance.
💛 And the big one: Love
Not romantic love — but the natural, steady, bottomless love that Self has for all your parts, no matter what they’ve had to do to protect you.
🌟 When you’re in Self Leadership in IFS therapy, you feel:
- Soft but strong
- Kind but firm
- Clear in your mind but not rigid
- Open but not boundary-less
- Warm but not self-sacrificing
- Connected but not dependent
Self is the inner adult (the solid caretaker) your exiles always needed.
It’s the part of you that knows how to love yourself and others without fear.
When you’re in Self, you feel:
- Calm
- Wise
- Steady
- Clear
- Loving
- Boundaried without fear
- Compassionate toward yourself
- Not rushed, not small
IFS therapy at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching helps you know that you deserve:
Kindness
Consistency
Someone who shows up for your romantically
To have emotional needs
Love can actually feel calm, not chaotic or explosive
You don’t have to earn affection
A romantic partner can be a source of safety, even when past relationships have been unsafe
You don’t need to shrink to be loved and you can be met
What Real, Secure, Romantic Love Feels Like
It’s not:
intensity.
fear.
collapse and repair cycles.
begging for hugs, back rubs or tenderness.
managing someone’s anger.
Real love feels like:
- consistent interest
- gentle tone
- emotional support when you’ve had a long day
- no yelling
- warmth doesn’t disappear
- needs aren’t mocked
- no high-stakes power dynamic
- conflict repair is natural
- conflict never becomes cruelty or verbal abuse
- you feel safe enough to exhale
You KNOW what secure love feels like when you are in self-leadership.
Start in IFS therapy at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching to build confidence, compassion, and self-worth after trauma.
Unblend Your IFS Parts at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching
Before you start in IFS therapy at at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching, you can do some work on yourself now. Sit somewhere quiet and put your attention on your body.
Take a few deep, slow breaths. Feel your clothing resting on your skin. Notice your inhale and slowly exhale. Connect to your breath.
Notice your calm, curious, clear, compassionate Self inside you. You are the leader, not the exiles, firefighters, numbing parts, or managers.
Say internally:
- “I see you, I’m here.”
- “You don’t have to manage everything.”
- Speaking to your parts: “I know all of you you’re trying to help me survive.”
This helps Self energy—calm, clarity, compassion—come forward.
Get curious about your protector parts.
Ask them about how long they have been “on the job,” protecting you.
“What are you afraid would happen if you didn’t step in to protect me?”
Usually the protector parts are trying to help your inner child part who felt alone, unseen, hurt, or emotionally neglected.
From IFS therapy at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching, you can stop abandoning yourself.
Now, imagine bringing your Self to comfort your wounded exile. Let your Self hold and comfort your wounded exiles. Breathe, and allow tension or fear to soften.
You can visualize:
- holding the hurt parts
- comforting all parts, even the ones who have hurt others
- putting a hand on its shoulder or offering a hug
- speaking softly to it, coaxing it to trust you
Tell your inner child:
- “You were never too much.”
- “I won’t abandon you.”
- “Your needs are human.”
- “It’s okay to feel calm and seen.”
- “You deserved softness and calm from the beginning.”
- “I am here now, and I will not shame you for wanting love.”
- “You don’t have to earn love anymore.”
- “Rest is healing. You don’t have to work so hard.”
- “You are chosen even when you rest.”
- “I won’t make you beg, I hear you on the first ask.”
- “Sweetheart, calm love is not dangerous.”
- “Your body learned chaos as home, but we can learn something new.”
- “You do not have to brace for impact anymore.”
- “I am here for you. You don’t have to run.”
- “You deserve attunement.”
- “It is not wrong to want tenderness.”
- “You are not betraying anyone by wanting to be seen.”
- “I will not let you starve for love ever again.”
Let your inner child feel your true Self leading.
Reparent the exile, firefighter, and manager parts within you
Let Self-energy lead. Allow the protective parts to feel that your Self is protecting all parts without needing to control, chase, or manage.
Your inner child can learn to express what they have longed for. You can then allow a secure romantic partner to offer you:
- gentleness
- kind guidance
- emotional support
- considering you
- putting you first
- staying consistent
- reading aloud
- cooking for you
You can visualize yourself giving your inner child what you always needed. Then, you can allow another person, a secure romantic partner, to do that for you too.
Re-negotiate with all your protector parts when they resurface
Your managers and firefighters will try to take charge again. In high conflict fights and when you feel rejected or abandoned, for example. Let the parts of you know:
- “Thank you, you’ve kept me safe for a long time.”
- “You don’t need to manage connection through protective roles anymore.”
- “I’m here now. You don’t have to do this alone. My True Self is here.”
You’re not forcing them to change. Just letting them know you true Self is available to lead.
IFS therapy at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching supports compassion, confidence, self-worth, and mental clarity.

Let’s talk about somatic therapies we offer at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching alongside IFS therapy
When you have been through trauma, experiences of intense conflict, and powerlessness, you need more than just talk therapy. Somatic therapies allow your body, where trauma is stored, to release painful memories. Here are some examples of somatic trauma therapies.
🌿 1. Somatic Experiencing (SE)
- Focuses on tracking bodily sensations to release trauma held in the body.
- You can start by noticing tightness, heaviness, or fluttering in your body when thinking about the conflict in your life, or the narcissist.
- Gently “track” the sensation without trying to fix it. Let it move or dissipate.
- Example: Tight shoulders → notice → imagine softening, letting tension melt with breath.
Why it helps: Trauma isn’t only in your mind — trauma lives in your body. Somatic therapies at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching help you release the chronic tension that keeps you exhausted.
🌿 2. Polyvagal-Informed Practices
- Your vagus nerve regulates safety and calm.
- Practices that activate the parasympathetic nervous system help you rest and recover:
- Slow, deep diaphragmatic breathing (4 counts in, 6 counts out)
- Gentle humming or chanting
- Cold water on your face or wrists to stimulate the “safe” branch of your vagus
- Gentle rocking or swaying
- Idea: When you feel triggered by your partner, pause and engage a vagal reset before reacting.
🌿 3. TRE (Tension & Trauma Release Exercises)
- Small, simple exercises that activate natural tremors in the body to release stress.
- You can do 10–15 minutes a day: lying down, legs up, letting your body shake lightly.
- Helps discharge residual fight-or-flight energy stored in muscles.
Why it helps: Reduces adrenal fatigue, nervous system hypervigilance, and chronic tension.
🌿 4. Somatic Yoga Therapy
- At Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching, our IFS therapists integrate mindful movement, breath, and body awareness.
- Focus on slow, restorative poses (child’s pose, legs up the wall, gentle twists) rather than vigorous flow.
- Add awareness to how your body feels in each pose — notice tight areas, soft areas, warmth, tingling.
Why it helps: Moves energy safely, helps you connect with your Self energy, and provides nervous system regulation.
🌿 5. Body Scan & Grounding Practices
- Lie down or sit comfortably. Scan your body head to toe, noticing tension or discomfort.
- Breathe into areas that feel tight, imagining a softening wave moving through your body.
- Pair with affirmations for your exiles:
- “You are safe in your body.”
- “I can rest here.”
- “This moment is exactly where I need to be. You are supported and protected.”
Why it helps: Brings awareness to where your nervous system is holding trauma, helps you release old survival tension, and increases energy.
🌿 6. Mindful Touch or Self-Soothing
- Gentle massage, back rubs, warm showers, or hugging yourself.
- Focus on where you feel safe and held, not just on relaxation.
- Can also use weighted blankets for nervous system regulation.
Why it helps: Signals safety to your nervous system and helps firefighter and exile parts calm down.
🌿 7. Micro-Breaks During Your Workday
- Even 1–3 minutes can reset your nervous system:
- Hand on heart, slow breath
- Neck rolls, shoulder shrugs
- Standing up, grounding feet into the floor, noticing weight shift
- These short resets prevent exhaustion from overmanaging, caretaking, and surviving relational tension.
🔹 Integration Tips
At Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching, our IFS therapists pair somatic work with IFS awareness. You learn to notice which IFS parts of yourself are active while doing each exercise.
Pick 1–2 practices at a time. Don’t overwhelm yourself.
Do them before and after relational contact, especially around conflict in your life, or the narcissist.
IFS therapy at Wisdom Within Counseling and Coaching supports compassion, confidence, self-worth, and mental clarity.


