
CPTSD will have us trying to do all the things all the time— not because it’s a good idea or we’re up to that impossible “challenge,” but because we don’t feel safe if we try to slow down or do less.
Many of us grew up believing that we “have” to do it all— or else we’re worthless.
(Hell, many of us were TOLD as much.)
Many CPTSD survivors grow up believing that our worth is primarily, maybe exclusively, tied to our ability to not just perform, but to overperform.
After all, who even WERE we if we weren’t The Best At The Thing??
It’s a byproduct of the fact that we weren’t taught how to develop authentic self-esteem.
Since we have no context for creating realistic, sustainable feelings of self worth that endure regardless of how we perform, we get very, very attached to our performance metrics.
Which is great— as long as we’re performing “well.”
And which creates all the problems you think it creates when we’re not performing “well”— or when life asks us to be someone beyond a performing robot.
Trauma recovery is going to ask us to get real about who we are and what we’re all about, above and beyond anything we can do— or can do for people.
It’s going to ask us to be a person who is more than entertaining, or attractive, or useful.
It’s going to ask us to be, well, us.
Which can be a problem, when we’re not sure who the hell “we” could possibly even be.
That’s okay if you have that “who the hell even am I?” problem right now. Almost every survivor working our recovery has that— and at usually more than one point in our recovery, for that matter.
For now, be clear about the fact that you don’t have to do it all.
You don’t have to do it perfectly.
And you don’t have to be anyone other than who you are— I mean who you are right here, right now, as you read this— in order to “deserve” safety, support, recovery…or love.
Yes, yes— Trauma Brain didn’t like reading that last part, did it?
That’s a pretty good indicator that last part’s real important to your recovery.









