You’re Not Going Crazy—You’re Just Leaving

You know that feeling when you’re in the middle of a stressful conversation and suddenly you’re watching yourself from somewhere near the ceiling? Or when tension rises and the world goes fuzzy, like you’re seeing everything through frosted glass? Maybe you lose chunks of time—ten minutes, an hour—and you can’t quite remember what happened or what you said.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not losing your mind. You’re dissociating. And while that word might sound clinical or scary, it’s actually your nervous system’s oldest, most primal way of saying: “This is too much. I’m getting you out of here.”
What’s Really Happening When You Zone Out

Let’s get clear on something first: dissociation isn’t weakness. It’s actually a brilliant survival mechanism your nervous system created, often when you were very young and had no other way to cope with pain or fear.
Think about it. If you were a child who felt unsafe—maybe emotionally neglected, criticized constantly, or witnessing conflict you couldn’t escape—your brain learned to do something extraordinary. It learned to create distance between “you” and the unbearable moment. You left your body so the pain couldn’t reach you.
That’s dissociation. It’s your system’s emergency exit.
Signs You Might Be Dissociating
- Feeling like you’re watching yourself from outside your body, even just from the corner of your eye
- Losing time and being unable to account for minutes or hours
- Feeling emotionally numb or flat, like nothing can touch you
- Struggling to follow conversations, as if people are speaking a language you don’t understand
- Feeling unreal, like the world is a movie you’re watching rather than living in
- Experiencing memory gaps, especially during stressful moments
9 Grounding Practices to Bring You Back to Your Body
1. Give Yourself a One-Armed Hug
Right now, wrap your right arm across your chest and hold your left shoulder. Squeeze gently. Feel the warmth of your own hand, the pressure of your palm against your body.
When you dissociate, your system believes it’s still in danger. A self-hug activates your vagus nerve and tells your body that the threat has passed. It’s the physical equivalent of a whisper: “It’s okay to come back now.”
2. Find Your Two-Syllable Anchor Word
Your mind needs something to hold onto when it starts to drift. Pick a simple, soothing two-syllable word—something neutral that feels calming to you. It could be “win-dow,” “ap-ple,” “gen-tle,” or even just two sounds you like.
Close your eyes. Let the word bounce softly in your mind, the way a ball bounces slowly across a quiet room. Don’t force it. Just let it float there for sixty seconds.
Research shows that using a personal mantram like this helps your brain interrupt the stress response and anchor you back into the present moment. It gives your racing thoughts something harmless to land on.
3. Speak Affirmations While You Self-Soothe
- “I can take care of myself.”
- “I am safe right now.”
- “I’m allowed to feel what I feel.”
- “I’m perfectly imperfect, and that’s enough.”
The physical sensation of your hand on your arm, combined with the sound of your own voice speaking kindness, creates a double anchor. Your nervous system hears it, feels it, and starts to believe it.
This isn’t about toxic positivity or pretending everything is fine. It’s about reminding your system—which may still be operating as if you’re in danger—that in this moment, you have what you need to survive.
Understanding Your Triggers (So You Can Disarm Them)

Common Triggers Include:
Sounds: Raised voices, doors slamming, even two people having an animated conversation nearby can activate your fight-flight-freeze response if your early life taught you that loud voices meant danger.
Touch: Physical intimacy, even wanted intimacy with someone you trust, can sometimes trigger dissociation if your body learned long ago to “leave” during touch.
Sights: Certain settings—a crowded room, a specific street corner, someone’s facial expression—can pull up old memories your body hasn’t fully processed.
4. Practice Walking Meditation for On-the-Go Grounding
- Left foot: “I’m safe.”
- Right foot: “I’m home.”
“Home” doesn’t mean a physical place. It means home in your body, home in yourself, home in this present moment. You’re teaching your nervous system that you can be both safe and present at the same time.
5. Use Ice to Shock Your System Awake
Sometimes you need something more intense to snap you back into your body. Keep a few ice cubes in the freezer or an ice pack in your bag.
When you feel yourself starting to drift, grab an ice cube and hold it in your hand. Or pop it in your mouth and let the cold jolt your senses. Crunch it slowly, focusing on the sensation, the temperature, the sound.
This works because dissociation thrives on numbness, and intense physical sensation pierces through that fog. The cold is undeniable—your body has to pay attention to it.
More Tools to Keep You Anchored
6. Name Five Things You Can See Right Now
This is the simplest grounding technique, and it’s wildly effective. When you feel yourself leaving, stop and slowly name five things you can see in the room.
“Blue coffee mug. Wooden table. Crack in the ceiling. Red jacket on the chair. The tree outside the window.”
Say them out loud if you can, or in your mind if you’re in public. This pulls your awareness out of the fog and into the tangible, real world around you.
7. Carry a Grounding Object
Find a small object with texture—a smooth stone, a piece of velvet ribbon, a worry bead—and keep it in your pocket. When stress starts to rise, reach for it. Rub your thumb across its surface. Let the physical sensation be your tether.
Some people use a specific scent—a dab of essential oil on their wrist, a certain hand cream—anything that gives their brain a clear sensory signal: “You are here. This is now.”
8. Create a “Before and After” Ritual
If you know you’re heading into a situation that might trigger dissociation—a difficult conversation, a crowded event, visiting a place that holds old memories—create bookend rituals.
Before: Set an intention. Say out loud, “I’m going into this meeting, and I’m staying present in my body. I can feel my feet on the ground.”
After: When it’s over, do a quick body scan. Wiggle your toes. Roll your shoulders. Take three deep breaths. This signals to your nervous system that the potentially threatening situation has ended and it’s safe to relax.
9. Find Your “Coming Home” Playlist
Music is a powerful anchor. Create a playlist of 3-5 songs that make you feel present, grounded, and alive in your body. Not sad songs, not numbing songs, but songs that make you feel something real.
When you notice yourself drifting, put in your earbuds and press play. Let the rhythm, the melody, the lyrics pull you back.
When to Seek Professional Support
These tools are gentle and powerful, but I want to be honest with you: if dissociation is significantly interfering with your relationships, your work, or your ability to function day-to-day, please reach out to a trauma-informed therapist.
Dissociation is often connected to anxiety, PTSD, and sometimes more complex trauma histories. There are evidence-based therapies—like EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), somatic experiencing, and Internal Family Systems—that can help you process the root memories so your nervous system doesn’t have to keep protecting you from ghosts.
A good therapist will help you build a relationship with your body again, teaching you how to stay present with difficult emotions without needing to disappear.
Your 7-Day Coming Home Practice
You’re Already Brave for Being Here
I know it takes courage to read an article like this, to look honestly at the ways you’ve learned to disappear. But the fact that you’re here, reading these words, looking for tools—that tells me you’re ready to stay.
Your body is not your enemy. It never was. It was doing its very best to keep you safe with the resources it had. Now you’re teaching it new ways, gentler ways, to move through hard moments without having to leave.