Understanding the Autonomy Survival Style

A NARM® Perspective

Within NARM®, the Autonomy Survival Style develops when a child’s emerging sense of independence is restricted, criticized, controlled, or unsafe.

Autonomy is the developmental need to express “No,” to assert personal will, and to experience oneself as a separate individual. When this natural impulse is blocked or punished, the nervous system adapts.

The adaptation is not rebellion.
It is protection.


The Core Dilemma: “If I Assert Myself, I Will Lose Connection”

Children who organize around this style often grow up in environments where:

  • Boundaries were not respected

  • Anger was shamed or punished

  • Independence was discouraged

  • Caregivers were controlling or intrusive

The child may suppress anger and personal will in order to preserve connection.

Over time, this can lead to:

  • Difficulty saying no

  • Chronic self-doubt

  • Passivity or compliance

  • Resentment that cannot be expressed

Or, conversely, a rigid defensive independence that hides underlying fear.


Nervous System Organization

From a regulation perspective, this style often involves:

  • Suppressed activation

  • Inhibited fight response

  • Tension held in the jaw, shoulders, or diaphragm

  • Difficulty accessing healthy anger

Autonomy is closely linked to the healthy expression of aggression — not violence, but life force. When aggression is inhibited, vitality is diminished.


In Therapy

Clients organized around the Autonomy Survival Style may:

  • Minimize their needs

  • Struggle to set boundaries

  • Fear conflict

  • Avoid expressing disagreement

Therapeutic work supports:

  • Access to healthy assertiveness

  • Differentiation from others’ expectations

  • Reconnection with personal desire

  • Regulation of anger as life energy

Healing occurs when autonomy no longer threatens connection

Karima Reisinger
Emotion Institute

First edited in 2020, revised

Sources:
Healing Developmental Trauma
The Practical Guide for Healing Developmental Trauma