
You’re not being “punished” for anything you did or anything you are. Really.
I know: sometimes it can feel like that.
And I know there are people reading this who vehemently disagree: they truly believe their pain IS “punishment” for something. Maybe just for existing.
I promise: reality doesn’t work like that.
It’s true that some people will try to control our behavior through threatened punishment. But that’s not what I’m talking about here.
I’m talking about the fact that we can get it in our head that we “deserve” the pain we’re experiencing.
Or that we “created” that pain.
Or that we “allowed” that pain.
Listen to me: you did not “deserve” to be traumatized, and you do not “deserve” to suffer now.
The fact that Trauma Brain is insisting otherwise is an artifact of your conditioning— not reality.
Why are we so vulnerable to that idea, that we’re being “punished” for something we did or something we are?
Sometimes it’s because we were literally told that.
We might have been directly told that by our bullies and abusers— but we might have also been indirectly “told” that by a culture that loves its fantasies of “nothing bad can happen to people who don’t ‘deserve’ it.”
Our culture LOVES that particular fantasy.
The idea that terrible things can happen to people who don’t “deserve” it, that bad things can happen to good people, leaves us feeling INCREDIBLY vulnerable. We hate it.
So we, as a culture, invent this fantasy of somehow having “caused” or “allowed” our own pain, mostly as a way to feel less powerless.
After all: if there actually IS rhyme or reason to this pain, if it’s our “fault,” then we’re kind of in “control” of it in a way, aren’t we?
CPTSD survivors are particularly vulnerable to this line of bullsh*t, specifically because we hate, we hate, we HATE feeling powerless.
We’d rather feel guilty than powerless.
Realistic recovery asks us to give that fantasy up— which is harder than it sounds.
Realistic recovery asks us to give up the idea that “everything happens for a reason.”
Realistic recovery asks us to give up the idea hat we could have somehow avoided or controlled the trauma we experienced.
Realistic recovery asks us to give up the idea that we’re being “punished.”
Understand: we have been deeply, deeply programmed and conditioned to believe these things. Giving them up is not a one time decision.
Rather: giving up those self-blaming ideas and fantasies is a process.
It’s a process of notching when our old programming is activated— and intentionally, consistently scrambling it. Talking back to it. Swapping in new beliefs and self talk for the old.
It’s a massive pain in the ass.
And: it’s worth it.
It’s worth it to liberate ourselves from the vicious fallacy that this is all our fault.
No one reading this “deservers” to suffer for anything that happened TO them, or for what they didn’t know or couldn’t do in the past.
You deserve recovery.
You deserve support.
You deserve to live.
Breathe; blink; focus; and do the next recovery supporting thing.









