
The irony of trauma recovery, and the thing a lot of people don’t understand, is that it doesn’t, actually, mean thinking about the past every day.
It means thinking about the future— every day.
That’s harder than it seems for trauma survivors.
We’ve often been conditioned to explicitly NOT think about the future.
Why would we, after all? We’ve had experience with that “hope” thing— and our experience is that the universe, or at least our bullies and abusers, happy wield that “hope” thing to hurt us.
We know better than to get our hopes up.
At least, that’s what our conditioning has us thinking, repeating to ourselves.
The truth of the matter is, in trauma recovery we often have to learn new ways of thinking and talking to ourselves about the future.
Because it’s true that blind, generalized “hope” isn’t much help to us in trauma recovery.
What is helpful to us is thinking about our values and specific goals— and when it comes to goals, the shorter term and more realistically achievable, the better.
Part of what trauma steals from us is our sense of self-efficacy— our feeling and belief that we can actually do things in the world. That we are up to what the world asks of us every day.
How do we take our self efficacy back?
By setting and achieving goals— notably teeny, tiny, steppingstone goals.
Realistic, practical self-care goals.
Realistic, practical personal development goals.
And when I say “teeny tiny,” I very much mean it: I mean start out with your personal development goal being a page— MAYBE two— of a book today.
THAT’S the kind of future thinking I’m talking about. Not climbing Everest.
Maybe your self care goal today is washing your face or brushing your teeth. Maybe.
Teeny, tiny. Baby steps.
Remember: in sustainable trauma recovery, trajectory matters more than speed. I want you heading in a healing direction, even if the steps you are taking are teeny tiny.
Teeny tiny steps, baby steps, add up.
In your trauma recovery today, you may or may not think about your past, or your abuse, or your abusers.
But you WILL think about the next baby step you need to take.
I want you thinking about baby stepping to the end of today, to the end of this week. Not really any further than that.
I want you thinking about self-care— not so much in the “spa day” sense, but in the sense of little gestures that communicate to your nervous system that you are in the business of valuing and protecting yourself today.
Even if it is just in teeny, tiny gestures.
Take it from a marathon runner: distance races are completed one step at a time.
Focus on the future— but not the distant future or the ultimate future. Not the future that trauma has conditioned you to fear and doubt.
Focus on the rest of this hour. Then the rest of this day. Then the rest of this week.
This is realistically how we recover.
This is realistically how we win.









