You stopped. That took more than people know. It took more than most people in your life will ever fully understand, and it is not a small thing that you did it. And yet something remains. Not the behavior, but what the behavior was managing. The weight it was lifting, the feeling it was regulating, the function it was serving in moments when nothing else felt available did not go away when the behavior did.
This workbook is for that unfinished place. It is for adults who did the hardest thing and who are still waiting to feel free, who know on some level that stopping was the beginning of something rather than the end of it, and who have a sense that there is a version of themselves they have not reached yet and that getting there requires something more than abstinence.
What Stopping Didn't Fix looks honestly at what the self-harm was doing. It traces the function the behavior served, the emotions it was managing, and the needs it was meeting in the absence of other tools. It maps what the behavior cost, in the body, in relationships, and in the sense of self, without judgment and without requiring you to minimize what it provided. It then builds, step by step, the practice of addressing what was underneath, moving through the pain, the pattern, and toward something that actually feels like freedom.
This is not a workbook about reliving the past. It is a workbook about finishing the work that stopping began, because stopping was the first act and you deserve to know what comes next.