
One way I think about trauma recovery is, it’s the process of becoming unrecognizable to our abusers, our bullies, and people who knew us when we were going through the worst of it.
It’s not that there’s anything wrong with who we were.
It’s that this project, trauma recovery, is about rebuilding ourselves, from the ground up, at the level of identity.
We can have all the empathy in the world for who we were then.
In fact, it’s really important we not blame or shame the person we were then.
And but also, we need to move on from them.
Not “abandon” our past self— but evolve beyond them.
The psychological research tells us over and over again that change “sticks” when we incorporate it into our identity.
It also tells us over and over again that change does NOT stick when we hold on to our old identity.
For example: quitting an addiction, like smoking, tends not to “take” as long as one thinks of oneself as a smoker who is trying not to.
But when one shifts their identity, so one does not think of oneself as any kind of smoker anymore, when smoking becomes something so foreign to their identity that they wouldn’t even think about picking up? That’s when quitting “takes.”
The same can be said of any time we try to significantly change what we believe, what we feel, and what we do. We can’t think of ourselves as the same-old-person-who-is-trying-to-change.
We need to shift our identity.
And then we need to talk to and behave toward ourselves as if our new identity is set in stone.
All of which is to say: trauma recovery is not about staying the same person and trying to make some tweaks.
It’s about reformatting our own hard drive.
The reality is, trauma has ALREADY reformatted our hard drive. It’s ALREADY shaped and shifted who we are, on the identity level.
Trauma recovery is about us taking that power and autonomy back.
It’s about “brainwashing ourselves”— with ideas and beliefs that we choose, in the service of an identity that feels chosen and authentic to us.
That is to say: becoming unrecognizable.
Understand, your mileage may vary. All I can speak to is the ideas and frameworks that motivate me, focus me, speak to me, in my trauma recovery.
I don’t get all that motivated by the idea of making some minor tweaks in how I feel or behave.
I do get motivated by becoming someone my bullies and abusers would not recognize.
I get motivated by the idea of reshaping myself so completely that, while I love and accept and forgive my past self, it would be hard to believe I grew into the powerful, autonomous, self-responsible “recovery me” I did.
Don’t play small.
Become unrecognizable— and more authentic than you’ve ever been.
Breathe; blink; focus.









