
CPTSD tries to cut us off from ourselves.
I know that might sound strange, but that’s the bottom line of what it does.
CPTSD tires to drive wedges between the “parts” of us, such that we’re not in touch, we’re not collaborating, and we’re not caring for or about those “parts” of us.
We’re not making a “choice.” It’s programming, conditioning.
This is almost impossible to explain to someone who doesn’t struggle with CPTSD, but many survivors reading this know exactly what I mean.
That sense of self-alienation.
That sense of not feeling like yourself, for no discernible reason.
That sense that there are “parts” of us that hold and need things—but which we can’t quite access, and we’re never sure why.
It can all sound “crazy” to a non-CPTSD survivor.
But for survivors, dissociation, depersonalization, and derealization are often everyday occurrences.
They often occur so regularly that we don’t even register them as particularly unusual or remarkable events.
Dissociation happens when we’re reflexively, involuntarily removed from, cut off from, distanced from, or made unaware of something we feel, need, remember, or otherwise experience.
Depersonalization is when we don’t feel like ourselves. We know we ARE ourselves— but we don’t feel real.
Derealization is when the world around us doesn’t feel real. When we feel floaty, or as if everything is unfamiliar, strange, or overwhelming.
All of these are more common experiences for CPTSD survivors than is commonly acknowledged— even by survivors.
We often don’t acknowledge these things because we don’t love them. They’re disorienting and inconvenient and sometimes scary.
And, not for nothing, we sometimes don’t even realize we’re experiencing them in the moment.
(That’s kind of the problem with symptoms that f*ck with our sense of presence and reality.)
It all comes back to CPTSD trying to alienate us from ourselves— from our memories, our emotions, our needs, and even our physical reality.
Realistic recovery from CPTSD always involves reconnection— first and most importantly, with ourselves.
It always involves rediscovering who we are and what’s authentic and essential to us.
We are simply not recovering while remaining splintered and scattered and floaty. We have a life to live here.
That’s NOT to say recovery from CPTSD (or DID, for that matter) involves “parts” going away— quite the opposite, actually.
What recovery DOES involve is lowering the barriers between “parts.”
It DOES involve giving “parts” opportunities to support each other.
It DOES involve us being as grounded in the current moment as much as possible— not because the current moment is always great (sometimes the current moment absolutely sucks), but because right here, right now, is where we have our power, our autonomy, our wiggle room.
CPTSD must fail to divide and conquer us from within.
We need to have a united internal front— and an internal environment in which “parts” know, without a shadow of a doubt, that they are wanted, needed, listened to, and protected.
Breathe; blink; focus.









