
Trauma recovery is going to ask us to do some hard things— no all of which have to do with confronting trauma memories & feelings.
Some of the hardest things trauma recovery asks us to do, are the things it asks us to not do.
For example: trauma recovery is going to ask us to not harm ourselves.
That’s harder than it seems for a lot of survivors.
For a lot of survivors, harming ourselves is what we’ve been trained to do. It’s what we’re used to doing.
For some survivors, harming ourselves is the only way we’ve found— yet— to change how we feel.
For many survivors, self-harm is what we’ve been conditioned to believe we “deserve.”
Yet: trauma recovery is going to ask us to not do that.
Why? Not because we’re “bad” for doing it.
It’s because trauma recovery is fundamentally about reshaping our relationship with ourselves to be safe and sustainable— and it’s hard to build a safe, sustainable relationship with someone you’re harming.
It’s also because, as we get deeper into trauma recovery, we start to understand that we’re still carrying around younger versions of who we once were — “parts” of us— in our head and heart, and it very frequently scares and hurts them if we harm ourselves, even as a self regulatory strategy.
I know better than most that not harming ourselves is sometimes not so simple or easy, any more than giving up other addictions are simple or easy.
Self harm can be a deeply ingrained behavior pattern that we’ve come to rely on. I’ve known people who have considered self harm their only “friend,” in exactly the way I once considered my substances and behaviors of addiction as “friendly” and familiar.
But self harm is something we just cannot take with us into recovery. Not if we want it to be realistic, not if we want it to be sustainable.
Trust me, I know what Trauma Brain is saying to you right now.
“He just doesn’t get it.”
“He’s just saying that because it’s what therapists are supposed to say.”
“He doesn’t know you, maybe you’re the exception, the one survivor who can recover while hiding your self harm. F*ck that guy.”
(Believe me: you’re not going to be the one survivor who figures out how to drag their self harm habit into recovery. You’re not The Exception, any more than I am.)
Trauma recovery is about thinking, believing, feeing, and doing unfamiliar stuff— and also giving up some stuff that is familiar, but which communicates to our “parts” and inner child that we are “deserving” of pain.
Ultimately, self harm imitates our bullies and abusers.
And we’re done with that noise.
We need to sacrifice self harm— so our recovery does not become the sacrifice.









