
Trauma survivors know: it is exhausting to constantly feel we have to earn, and re-earn, and re-earn again, love or safety.
In fact, it can be so exhausting that we figure it’s not even worth it.
The belief that love or safety is conditional, that we have to keep earning and re-earning it, often comes from childhood neglect— and it hooks hard into our “fawn” trauma response.
When we’re kids, we’re not wired to understand that what we’re getting— or not getting— is not our fault.
We assume that, if we’re starved for our basic needs (emotional or physical), that it probably has to do with us.
Hell, sometimes we’re basically told as much by our abusers or bullies, especially when the needs in question are emotional.
We don’t grow up believing that our caretakers had blocks of their own or made choices that resulted in us not being loved— we assume it was us who wasn’t “lovable.”
This pattern has lots of variations. For example, if we grew up feeling invisible, we may assume that we simply weren’t attractive or entertaining enough to “deserve” attention— not that our caretakers just didn’t do their job.
There are, of course, some things that are conditional. We choose our playmates, and later our friends, based at least partially on how they make us feel— and we’re not “unconditional” in it. We’re very conditional.
But a parent taking care of a kid and providing for that kid’s needs should be held to a different standard than a kid choosing their playmates or friends.
The bottom line, though, is that may CPTSD survivors arrive in adulthood feeling the crushing weight of what we think is our “failure” to “earn” the love and safety that we should have been entitled to growing up.
Consequently we rarely feel secure or calm when it comes to love or safety, no matter what happens to be going on— because our nervous system is thoroughly convinced that there IS no such thing as “secure” love or safety.
Our traumatized nervous system thinks it can never rest, because to do so would be to risk losing the love and safety we have.
This is how the trauma symptom of “hypervigilance” shows up in CPTSD: never being able to relax, for fear of loss.
The reality is, “love” or “safety” we have to earn, and re-earn, and re-earn again, is not actual “love” or “safety.”
“Love” is not the same as affinity or attraction, both of which can vary. But “love” is a deeper level of investment and commitment, that cannot be “lost” that easily.
Similarly, “safety” should not, cannot be dependent on someone else— we have to create it for ourselves and inside ourselves first and foremost. Otherwise it’s never truly “safe.”
Do not let your early conditioning convince you you have to exhaust yourself “earning” love or safety.
There are plenty of tasks in trauma recovery that require plenty of effort— but if someone says they love you, they don’t get to make you feel like you’re constantly auditioning for their love.
And if someone represents that they’re a “safe” person, that safety should not be contingent upon their attitude toward you today.
Breathe; blink; focus.









