
There are going to be things that cause us pain, that aren’t directly related to what we consider our “trauma.”
Those things can be easy to overlook or minimize.
We can fall into the trap of believing that, because these pain points aren’t the ones we’re “working on” in our trauma recovery, that they don’t “count.” That they can wait.
I’m going to tell you that all of your pain points, matter.
I’m also going to tell you that a significant part of this trauma recovery process is about respecting your pain and your needs, regardless of their origin.
Yes, recovery from trauma often involves processing the specific pain from identifiable moments in our past.
But just as often, it is about healing and developing our relationship with ourselves, day to day, minute to minute— and that task often doesn’t directly involve engaging our past. Not consciously, anyway.
Part of developing our relationship with ourselves is taking our pain seriously.
That can be hard, when we don’t even understand or pain, or have trouble putting words to our pain.
We survivors like to feel in “control.” We like being able to draw nice, straight lines between our past trauma and our current pain and needs.
When we can’t do that, we get squirrely. And when we get squirrely, we get avoidant.
And when we get avoidant, trauma recovery stalls. Every time.
For my money, self-care is the backbone of realistic trauma recovery.
I know, I know, a lot of people think the term “self care,” alongside the term “trigger,” is overused— but whether or not the term “self care” is actually overused, I can tell you it is definitely under-PRACTICED.
The kind of self care that is the foundation of realstic trauma recovery means doing what we need to do every day to minimize and resolve pain points in our life— that is, attending to and developing our actual quality of life.
Put another way: pain in your life that is not directly related to the events and relationships that evoked your CPTSD is STILL valid, still deserves attention and care and self-compassion.
You are not taking away from your trauma recovery by attending to those pain points.
To the contrary: every time you take care of yourself, every time you do something concrete to feel less pain and more lasting, authentic pleasure in your life, you are working your recovery.
I’ve said it before: so much of real world trauma recovery doesn’t even involve engaging with our trauma feelings or memories.
But it ALWAYS involves treating our relationship with ourselves as the most important bond we have— and a relationship that absolutely must be nurtured and protected at every opportunity.









