
Trauma Brain, the internalized voice of our abusers and bullies, very often gives us an enormous amount of sh*t about our relationship struggles.
So many trauma survivors struggle with relationships— so many HUMANS struggle with relationships— and our trauma conditioning just loves, loves, loves to blame and shame us for our relationship issues.
The irony is, it’s often Trauma Brain— our complex trauma programming— that created or significantly contributed to those relationship issues in the fist place.
Relationships can be complicated for CPTSD survivors.
Complex trauma, by definition, is pain that very often wraps itself around our most important connections and relationships.
Complex trauma tends to chip away at our sense of fundamental competence and worthiness— which then often sabotages our attempts to be close with (or tolerate closeness from) anyone else.
One of the most frequently mentioned issues in my comments is how CPTSD does a number on our ability to trust.
Hell, CPTSD ever often does a number on our ability to even see positives in other people— let alone in ourselves, trying to connect and relate to other people.
And as we struggle with it all, Trauma Brain is going to becoming at us, blaming and shaming.
(Blaming and shaming is pretty much what Trauma Brain does best.)
Trauma Brain is going to tell you your relationship struggles happen because you’re “broken.”
Or because you’re “scared.”
Or because you’re fundamentally “undesirable” or “unworthy.”
Trauma Brain is going to tell you that if you weren’t so “broken” or “unworthy,” you’d “obviously” be surrounded by friends and lovers— and you’d find it easy to connect and relate to them.
Here’s the truth: yes, CPTSD makes relationships (and attraction, and sex, and consistency in relationships) complicated— but that’s not about your fundamental worth.
Some of the most amazing people in the world struggle with relationships because of old patterns and old pain— and that does not make them less amazing.
Remember: you are not fundamentally “broken.” You are injured— but your injury is not fundamental to who you are.
Your injury is not your “personality.”
And, importantly: your injury is not permanent.
Your current relationship struggles do not represent your ultimate relationship destiny.
But most importantly: your relationship struggles are not your fault.
Blame and shame, Trauma Brain’s favorite tools, miss the mark on this one.
There’s no denying you are injured, and in need of support and tools to heal— but that’s very different from “your’e just bad.”
Or “you’re just gross.”
Or “you’re just destined to be alone.”
Remember: Trauma Brain is not interested in truth or reality. It just wants you to feel a certain kind of way— and it fully understands that your pain points around relationships are a fast track to getting you to feel that way.
You are not the first, last, or only survivor to struggle with relationships. Ask me how I know.
And your current struggle is not a life sentence. Regardless of what Trauma Brain just whispered in your ear as you read that.
Breathe; blink; focus.









