
You are vulnerable. So am I.
We don’t have to love it. I don’t.
But we do have to accept it. We do have to be realistic about it.
Maybe you and I are not vulnerable in the same ways we were back then— or, maybe we are.
We want to imagine that growing up negates our vulnerability, but it doesn’t. Not totally.
Personally, I’ve come to understand that far more and bigger problems are created by denying our vulnerability than the fact of our vulnerability.
If we deny and disown our vulnerability, we cannot manage it.
If we deny and disown our vulnerability, we cannot realistically reduce it.
After all, are we going to manage or reduce something we don’t even acknowledge? No, we’re not.
Accepting the fact of our vulnerability doesn’t mean liking it. It doesn’t mean just letting it exist without trying to change it.
It’s not good to wander around out there with our vulnerability on full display.
It’s also not good to pretend we’re invulnerable.
You are not from Krypton.
(And even if you were, you’d be vulnerable to Kryptonite and magic.)
So we’re vulnerable. And?
It’s not our fault or failing that we’re vulnerable. Vulnerability is the human condition.
It’s also not our fault that some people habitually try to exploit our vulnerability. That’s always going to happen, and it has nothing to do with what we’re wearing (metaphorically or literally).
We are more than our vulnerability, by the way.
And our vulnerability is also key to our authenticity— which is key to our realistic trauma recovery.
(Seriously: no one in the history of humanity has been able to be authentic without also being vulnerable. Vulnerability is kind of the price of admission to authenticity.)
We are vulnerable.
And the sooner we accept that fact— as well as what it does and doesn’t mean about our “character’— the sooner we can design a realistic recovery blueprint around it.









