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Showing posts with label Internal Family System Therapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internal Family System Therapy. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

How Can IFS Parts Work Therapy Help You Discover Your True Self?

In prior articles, I have been discussing how an individual's social media self can create confusion between the carefully curated self and the True Self.

Discovering Your True Self in IFS Parts Work Therapy 

If you haven't read those articles, here are the links:
Confusion About the Real You
Aside from social media, there are many ways you can get confused about your True Self.

Confusion about the True Self often occurs when external pressure, mental habits, or trauma disconnect you from your core feelings, values and desires:
  • Social Masking (Persona Confusion)
    • The Problem: Confusing your public role with your personal identity
    • The Cause: Over-identifying with a job title, social status or family role
    • The Result: Feeling empty when you step away from a specific role
  • People Pleasing (Fawn Response)
    • The Problem: Adopting the opinions or desires of others to feel safe or liked
    • The Cause: Chronic seeking of external validation or childhood conditioning
    • The Result: An inability to identify your own preferences when you are on your own
  • Internalization of Parental and/or Societal Values
    • The Problem: Mistaking internalized voices of your parents or society for your own
    • The Cause: Growing up in a rigid, judgmental or dogmatic environment
    • The Result: Pursuing goals you don't really care about, which can result in burnout, anxiety or depression
  • Over-Identification With Your Passing Thoughts and Emotions
    • The Problem: Believing you are your passing moods, anxiety or critical thoughts
    • The Cause: Lack of mindfulness or psychological detachment
    • The Result: A chaotic sense of identity that changes with shifting thoughts and emotions
  • Trauma-Based Emotional Numbing
    • The Problem: Numbing or disconnection from your body and emotional core
    • The Cause: Survival strategies developed to survive overwhelming past experiences 
    • The Result: Feeling like a detached observer of your own life rather than a participant
  • The "Ego Ideal" Narrative
    • The Problem: A preference for an idealized, "perfect" version of who you think you should be
    • The Cause: Perfectionism and a refusal to accept your own flaws
    • The Result: Rejecting your actual traits, talents and limitations
How Can IFS Parts Work Therapy Help You to Discover Your True Self?
IFS stands for Internal Family Systems (see my article: How Does IFS Therapy Help You to Understand Yourself?).

Discovering Your True Self in IFS Parts Work Therapy

IFS is considered an Experiential Therapy that is different from traditional talk therapy (see my articles: Why Experiential Therapy is More Effective Than Traditional Talk Therapy).

IFS can help you to discover your True Self (also known as Core Self in IFS) by identifying the protective "parts" of your personality that act as a shield to "protect" you from seeing yourself as you truly are in real life.

Understanding the IFS Parts Work Therapy Framework
In IFS "parts" are metaphors for internal aspects that make up your inner world.

IFS views your mind as having subpersonalities (or parts) that are, ideally, led by your Core Self with Core Self being the authentic essence who you are (see below).

With regard to the protector parts, you can think of them as defense mechanisms whose aim is to protect you, but who can get in the way of knowing your True Self (see my article: What Are the Similarities and Differences Between IFS and Contemporary Psychodynamic Psychotherapy?).

Core Self (also called "Self" in IFS): Your true essence characterized by the 8 Cs of IFS:
  • Compassion:A warm, caring non-judgmental attitude toward yourself and others.
Discovering Your Tue Self in IFS Parts Work Therapy
  • Curiosity: A desire to understand your thoughts and emotions (as well as the thoughts and emotions of others) which replaces judgment with an open, inquiring mindset
  • Clarity: The ability to perceive situations, thoughts and emotions without distortion or mental fog
  • Confidence: An internal sense of trust and capability rather than arrogance or a need to depend solely on external validation
  • Courage: The inner strength to face difficult emotions, take risks and navigate vulnerable truths
The parts include:
  • Managers: Proactive parts of you that protect you in the same way that defense mechanisms do.
  • Firefighters: Reactive parts that act out when the manager parts aren't enough. Firefighters act out when you feel judged, rejected, ignored or experience other triggers. Examples of firefighter reactions might include drinking, drugging, gambling and other compulsive and impulsive maladaptive behaviors as a way to blunt emotional pain.
  • Exiles: Hidden parts of yourself that hold pain and trauma, loneliness, feelings of inadequacy and other painful feelings. 
How Can IFS Parts Work Help You to Discover Your True Self?
With regard to confusing your social media self with your True Self:
  • Identifies the "Influencer" Manager Part: IFS helps you notice the specific part of your mind that curates your social media feed. This part strives for perfection, edits your life and seeks mostly external validation to protect you from criticism and other unpleasant feelings.
  • Uncovers the Vulnerable Exile: Behind the polished online persona is usually an exiled part that feels lonely, invisible and "not enough". Your curated self on social media exists to prevent you from feeling this deep pain that is held by the exile part, but it comes at the expense of recognizing your True Self.
  • Fosters "Unblending": In IFS Parts Work Therapy, you learn to step back from the anxious, image-conscious parts. This process is called "unblending" and it allows your authentic self, also known as your Core Self (or True Self) to emerge.
  • Transitions From Only External Validation to Connection: Everyone needs external validation from time to time, but there are some people who rely mostly on external validation from social media. Once you unblend from your manager parts in IFS Therapy, your Core Self can offer validation to your hurt or traumatized exile parts. This reduces your reliance on "likes", comments, views and shares on social media.
What Steps Can You Take on Your Own?
If you don't have access to an IFS therapist, there are some steps you can take on your own:
  • Notice the Impulse: When you feel an urgent need to post on social media, ask yourself, "Which part of me is driving this?"
  • Extend Compassion: Don't get angry or judgmental with your image-conscious part. Acknowledge that it is just trying to protect you from rejection, hurt and emotional pain and extend compassion to it (see my article: Compassionate Self Acceptance).
  • Check Your Energy: Notice if your online sharing comes from a place within you of anxiety, which is a part, or a place of calm and genuine connection (Core Self or True Self).
Conclusion
One short article can't give a complete picture of IFS, but I hope this article provides a sense of how IFS can help you discover and understand the various parts of your inner world.

Getting Help in IFS Therapy
IFS Therapy can help you to discover your True Self and distinguish your core identity from your protective and wounded inner parts.

Rather than struggling on your own, seek help from an IFS therapist so you can lead a more fulfilled life.

About Me
I am a licensed New York psychotherapist, hypnotherapist, EMDR, AEDP, Parts Work (IFS and Ego States Therapy), EFT (for couples), Somatic Experiencing and Certified Sex Therapist.

I have helped many individual adults and couples over the years.

To find out more about me, visit my website: Josephine Ferraro, LCSW - NYC Psychotherapist.

To set up a consultation, call me at (917) 742-2624 during business hours or email me.