When trust is damaged, the brain doesn’t heal through logic alone. Even after apologies and better behavior, her nervous system may still be on alert, constantly scanning for danger. That shows up as overthinking, replaying the past, sudden sadness, and bringing old events into new arguments. It isn’t that she wants to punish you it’s that part of her still doesn’t feel safe yet. Emotional memory lasts longer than intellectual forgiveness. The fact that she says she wants to trust you again is important. That means she isn’t trying to stay stuck; she just doesn’t know how to move forward without feeling overwhelmed. About the break she’s asking for: people sometimes request distance when their emotions feel unmanageable, not because they don’t care, but because they’re flooded and trying to breathe. You wanting to work through things together is also very understandable. Neither position is wrong what matters is whether the break becomes a way to heal, not avoid, and whether staying together includes real emotional repair, not just endurance.
Next Steps
First, validation matters more than repetition of apologies.
Instead of focusing only on how sorry you are, try naming what the experience was like for her:
“I understand why that hurt you so deeply.”
“I can see why it made you question my honesty.”
“You didn’t imagine that pain.”
Feeling emotionally understood often calms the mind more than hearing “I’m sorry” again.
Second, consistency over time is what rewires trust.
Trust rebuilds through hundreds of small, predictable moments: doing what you say you’ll do, being transparent, staying calm when she’s triggered, not getting defensive when the past comes up even though it’s tiring. Each steady response teaches her nervous system something new.
Third, when she spirals into overthinking, don’t debate the facts of the past in that moment.
Overthinking usually comes from fear, not logic. Ask what she’s feeling right now—scared, insecure, abandoned, foolish, angry and respond to that emotion rather than the details of the old event.
Fourth, boundaries are still important for you.
It’s okay, gently, to say:
“I want to support you when the past comes up, but I also feel discouraged when it’s used in every argument. Can we find a way to talk about it that helps us heal instead of hurting again?”
That’s not rejection, that’s honesty.
Health Tips
What she seems to be struggling with is unresolved relational trauma and anxiety around trust. Therapies that often help with this include:
– Individual therapy with a psychologist or licensed counselor, especially one who works with trauma, attachment issues, or anxiety.
– Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) can help her notice and interrupt overthinking loops and catastrophic thoughts.
– Trauma-informed therapy or EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) can help the brain process old emotional memories so they stop feeling so present.
– Couples therapy can be extremely powerful here—not to decide who was right or wrong, but to create safer conversations, rebuild trust, and learn how to respond when triggers appear.