
When we fist start paying attention to our self-talk in trauma recovery, it can be kind of shocking.
We can be really f*cking mean to ourselves.
We can be really f*cking mean to ourselves, without intending or trying to.
Very few trauma survivors wake up in the morning and say to ourselves, “I’m going to beat the sh*t out of myself today.”
Most of the time, that’s just how things work out— because we, like most of humanity, navigate most of our days on autopilot.
We let our old programming run how we talk to and behave toward ourselves— and guess how our old programming has us talking to and behaving toward ourselves?
Most of the time our old programming has us talking to and behaving toward ourselves like our bullies and abusers did.
Mind you: this isn’t because we WANT to be like our bullies and abusers.
Most of the survivors reading this would actually do ANYTHING and EVERYTHING to NOT be like our bullies and abusers.
But many of us learned how to relate to ourselves through the example our bullies and abusers set.
We internalized it. Unwittingly “downloaded” it into our nervous system.
That’s why it’s so easy to be so hard on ourselves: we have lots of practice at it.
We experienced it for so long, it kind of sunk in. Became part of our operating system.
Then kicking the sh*t out of ourselves became so second nature, we stopped noticing when we were doing it.
Years and years of that sh*t— is it any wonder that our “parts” and inner child don’t feel safe?
That conditioning is also why it’s so hard to STOP kicking the sh*t out of ourselves— because when we start intentionally trying to talk and relate to ourselves with compassion and kindness, it feels…weird. Wrong. Awkward.
What that feeling ACTUALLY is is, “unfamiliar.”
CPTSD recovery is going to ask us, over and over again, to scramble old patters. Scratch old records.
That starts with our self-talk.
It’s real important we get OUT of the habit of talking to ourselves like our bullies and abusers did— even (especially!) if we’re deep in that habit.
Yeah. Easier said than done.
But real important to do, if we want our trauma recovery to be realistic and sustainable.
Easy does it. Breathe; blink; focus.
Just start by paying attention to your inner monologue.









