
So much of trauma recovery is about control.
Turns out: we do not “control” sh*t.
But Trauma Brain is going to tell us we “have” to “control”…like, everything, basically.
It’ll tell us we “have” to “control” our feelings.
It’ll tell us we “have” to “control” our environment.
It’ll tell us we “have” to “control” other people’s perceptions of us.
Turns out: there is no “controlling” any of that.
And we, being smart, eventually figure that out— and it freaks us out.
After all: if you’re reading this, chances are very good you’ve been hurt by uncontrollable situations and/or uncontrolled people.
It makes sense we’d freak out when we get a taste of truly how powerless we are over certain things.
It’s that sense of powerless that can drive depression, overwhelming anxiety— and, not infrequently, the urge to hurt or even kill ourslves.
Lack of control is no small thing to trauma survivors.
And, lack of control is something we have to wrap our head around if we’re going to meaningfully recover from trauma.
Turns out: because we can’t “control” something, doesn’t mean we can’t influence it.
I’m not a fan of trying to “control” our feelings. That’s a recipe for frustration and shame.
But I do believe in doing what we can to influence our feelings.
Our self talk does not control our feelings— but you’d better believe how we talk to ourselves influences how we feel.
Our mental focus does not control our feelings (and we don’t even “control” 100% of our mental focus)— but what we choose to mental turn toward or turn away from absolutely influences our feelings.
How we breathe and use our body does not control our feelings— but it absolutely influences what feeling states are relatively easier or harder to access.
The same is true for how other people perceive us. The same is true for our environment. We cannot directly “control” any of it— but we can influence them.
Some days that influence is going to be a little, some days it’ll be a little more— but, even though influence is not “control,” it’s also not nothing.
Our trauma conditioning is going to try, hard to get us up in our head about control. It’s going to tell us that if we can’t “control” something, then we’re completely powerless, completely at its mercy, and there’s no point trying to change it.
That’s a thinking distortion we psychologist types call “black and white thinking”— and it’s one of Trauma Brain’s favorite, most effective tools to f*ck us up.
Realistic trauma recovery acknowledges that “control” is an illusion and a trap. And that preoccupation with “control” will keep us sick.
One of the first, most important, philosophical tools you can use to move your trauma recovery forward is replacing “control” in your vocabulary with “influence.”
It’s a baby step and it may seem like semantics— but try it out.









