
CPTSD is hard to get our arms around. Not everyone has heard of it.
If you asked five random strangers on the street what it is, four of them probably couldn’t tell you.
Many CPTSD survivors themselves have misconceptions about what it is and how it develops.
Because CPTSD isn’t as widely talked about in the culture as PTSD is, it’s easy to miss or misunderstand. (Just ask everyone who has been misdiagnosed with a “personality disorder” instead of CPTSD.)
Add to that the fact that dissociation is an incredibly common occurrence in CPTSD, but also an overwhelmingly misunderstood concept in our culture, and the “what is CPTSD” picture gets even hazier for the average person.
All of this very often leaves CPTSD survivors feeling isolated.
Alone.
Kind of “crazy.”
The thing about CPTSD is that it is an injury— not a “mental illness,” but an injury— that engenders lots of contradictions.
Many CPTSD survivors are real good at convincingly pretending there’s nothing wrong.
Hell, many CPTSD survivors achieve success in their academic or professional lives, leading others to assume that they couldn’t POSSIBLY have a serious psychological or behavioral wound.
There are plenty of people who assume the collection of symptoms and struggles that define CPTSD simply don’t exist. Who believe that survivors can simply “let the past go” if they have enough “character.”
It all makes recovering from CPTSD complicated.
My own view is that CPTSD recovery is as involved and long term as recovery from addiction.
It’s not so much a thing we do, as a lifestyle we live.
Much like healing a broken bone takes time and care, recovery from CPTSD takes time and care— and we’re not going to think, talk, or “willpower” our way out of it.
Realistic recovery from CPTSD almost always involves shifting how we relate to ourselves.
It involves confronting what we were conditioned to believe about ourselves and our lives, and “scratching the record” of that conditioning— again, and again, and again.
The truth is, you are not alone. Though, I get it— you feel alone.
There are other CPTSD survivors out there, who are developing their own recovery routines and rituals and tools, just like you.
No one is having a fun or easy time of this.
This is not fun or easy.
But this is doable.
Yeah. You can do this “trauma recovery” thing.
And, yeah: it’s going to take an open mind and a committed heart— and the willingness to meet each minute of your recovery on its own terms, one minute at a time.
But you can do this.
I swear to you, you can.









