
The “war” is not between us and our triggers.
Our triggers are unpleasant— but they’re not the enemy.
They didn’t ask to be triggers, any more than we asked to be triggered by them.
The reason they are triggers is good old classical and operant conditioning. No more; no less.
No, the real “war” in trauma recovery is between us and our old conditioning, which I like to personify as “Trauma Brain.”
Trauma Brain is not our brain. Nor is Trauma Brain a “part” of us that needs acceptance and understanding.
Trauma Brain is everything we internalized from our abusers and bullies.
Every pattern of vicious self talk, every pattern of toxic mental focus, every pattern of restricted physiology. Every time the voices and priorities of our abusers and bullies seem to be running the show inside— that’s Trauma Brain.
Sometimes “parts” of us collaborate with or amplify Trauma Brain’s bullsh*t— but they are not Trauma Brain, and Trauma Brain is not a “part.”
Some survivors make the mistake of thinking they can negotiate with Trauma Brain.
Some survivors misunderstand Trauma Brain as a “part” that only needs to be listened to and nurtured to change its patterns.
Trust me: nobody reading this needs to be listening to Trauma Brain.
Trauma Brain does not “hold” anything useful for us. It does not “protect” anything inside. Its needs are not our needs.
Trauma survivors can be enormous empathic— and many of us really want to understand and align with what we (mistakenly) believe is a wounded part.
That’s what Trauma Brain is counting on. That’s how it uses our empathy against us.
If you’re going to think of yourself as a “warrior,” and your trauma recovery as a “war,” don’t think of it as you “fighting” against your triggers, or anything else outside of yourself.
Think of yourself as in competition with your old, conditioned patterns.
Those patterns are not our fault.
I said: those patterns are not our fault.
Again, I said: those patterns are not our fault. Trauma symptoms and responses are not “choices.”
(I said: trauma symptoms and responses ARE NOT CHOICES.)
But we are fighting against those old patterns nonetheless.
Trauma recovery is about reformatting our own hard drive. Reconditioning how we feel, what we think, what we believe how we make choices.
None of that will be accomplished by going to “war” with our triggers.
Triggers gonna trigger. And we are going to react.
But after the reaction, once we realize what’s happening— we have some wiggle room. We once again have choices, even if they’re teeny, tiny choices at first, about how to talk to ourselves, what to focus on, and how to breathe and use our body.
That’s where the “war” is fought— in our choices.
And that’s where the “war” is realistically won.









