
You are not “lazy.” That’s Trauma Brain f*cking with you.
Trauma Brain, the internalized voices of our abusers and bullies, is real good at giving us pat explanations for our behavior like that— “you’re just lazy”— that chalks what we do up to who or what we ARE.
Oh, and it usually gets us feeling like garbage.
Here’s the thing: Trauma Brain is not interested in reality.
It’s not interested in helping you live a productive, happy life.
Trauma Brain is mostly interested in you feeling exactly like you did when you were being abused: small. Helpless. Hopeless.
It’s true that many trauma survivors struggle with motivation— but that has zero to do with “laziness.”
Often, our struggles with motivation have to do with a “freeze” response.
When we’re triggered, our nervous system might reflexively default to standing still— which, from the outside, might LOOK like a “choice.”
But believe me when I tell you: trauma responses are not choices.
When we’re stuck in a “freeze” response, the very idea of taking action might seem overwhelming— and it’s almost impossible to “think” or “will” our way out.
Trauma survivors can get sh*t for lacking motivation, procrastination, missing deadlines— when the fact is, we’re “frozen” in a state of sympathetic nervous system activation.
And we’re not going to bully ourselves out of it.
Here’s the other thing about Trauma Brain calling us “lazy:” it’s not just sh*tty because it makes us feel like garbage.
It’s also sh*tty because calling ourselves “lazy” doesn’t actually help us solve the problem.
Say we accept Trauma Brain’s label of “lazy.” Okay, what then? What’s the solution? “Quit being lazy?”
That’s about as effective as a therapist responding to a patient’s pain with, “have you considered just not feeling that way?”
Trauma Brain— or anyone else— calling us “lazy” doesn’t help us design a solution.
Considering whether we’re in a functional “freeze” state— perhaps exacerbated by what I call Post Traumatic Exhaustion— actually helps us understand both what’s actually going on and what we actually need to do about it.
Trauma responses only diminish when we feel safer— specifically when we take realistic steps to help our inner child and “parts” feel safe.
There are many ways to approach that, but they all involve self talk, mental focus, and physiology, especially breathing.
Do not accept Trauma Brain’s blithe assertion that you’re “lazy.” You’re not.
Most trauma survivors are among the hardest working humans on the planet. We have to be, just to exist in our skin.
Easy does it. Breathe; blink; focus.









