
You’re going to be told to “reach out,” that trauma “only” heals in “safe relationships.”
I understand why this is said.
And, I think that dramatically oversimplifies things for many trauma survivors.
It’s true that safe, stable relationships can help us regulate our nervous system.
It’s true that safe relationships now can support us in healing the damage done by unsafe relationships in the past.
But it’s also true that “reaching out” is not simple or easy for many trauma survivors.
The truth about trauma recovery that many people dislike talking about is, many survivors are STILL not in safe situations.
Many survivors reading this don’t actually HAVE safe connections they can realistically reach out to today, even if they wanted to.
The world often treats survivors’ reluctance to “reach out” as a manifestation of their trauma symptoms, and sometimes it is— but very often “reaching out” is just not that straightforward.
When therapists and others state that “trauma only heals in safe relationships,” that can lead survivors to whom safe relationships are not currently accessible to believe there’s no point in even trying to develop trauma recovery tools.
The trauma recovery community is not good at supporting survivors who are not in a position to “reach out” or who have legitimate reasons to limit their reliance on other people right now.
Of course I’d prefer every survivor feel realistically able to reach out— and I’d prefer if safe relationships were realistically available to every survivor reading this.
And, I know that’s a fantasy.
We, the trauma recovery community, need to get better at supporting survivors whose healing for whatever reason right now isn’t going to involve many other people.
If you’re in the position where you simply can’t safely or reliably involve other people in your healing, you need to know you’re not screwed.
You can still develop recovery tools that help soothe, ground, and regulate your brain, nervous system, endocrine system, and your physical body.
You can still do trauma processing work— though doing it on your own is obviously going to require you to be realistic about risks, safety, and pacing.
I want everyone to have safe relationships available to them as a healing tool, including a safe therapy relationship with a competent, trauma informed therapist. That would be my ideal world.
We do not live in that world.
So don’t feel bad if “reach out” is advice that makes you despair— or infuriates you.
Some of us understand it’s not that simple— and that it’s not your fault that it’s not that simple.
Just do what you can with what you have, today.
Easy does it.
Breathe; blink; focus.









