
Positive thinking isn’t going to save you or me from CPTSD.
I wish it would.
I wish I could tell you that all this CPTSD bullsh*t was a bad dream, that we could think our way out of.
I wish I could tell you that all you or I had to do to recover from CPTSD is to fix our attitude. Because attitude is everything, and everything is attitude…right?
Well. Not quite.
Positive thinking doesn’t save anyone from anything.
That said, what we think does matter.
I’m not saying that we can think our way out of CPTSD, or that the only reason anyone suffers from CPTSD is because they’re “choosing” the “wrong” thoughts.
(Though I’m sure someone in the comments who didn’t read this far into the post is probably going to say that. Stay toxic.)
What I am saying is, we have a little bit of wiggle room in our thoughts.
We have a little bit of wiggle room with how we talk to ourselves.
We have a little bit of wiggle room in how we direct our mental focus.
Mind you, that wiggle room may seem impossible tiny some days.
Some days it may very much feel like CPTSD is hijacking every goddamn thought in our goddamn head.
(By the way, shout out to everyone who has ever asked if, strictly speaking, I “need” to use profanity on my posts. It’s a very f*cking good question that I will f*cking think about very f*cking hard, and get back to you. Thanks for reading.)
I’m not saying we we have complete freedom inside our head or heart.
I’m saying we have wiggle room— and, if we’re serious about trauma recovery, we need to take advantage of that wiggle room.
If we use that wiggle room to focus on and amplify our limitations and our deficits— that’s going to have consequences in how we feel and function.
Understand: negative thinking doesn’t CREATE CPTSD— but it can sure as hell be its biggest cheerleader and benefactor.
Conversely, if we use that wiggle room to focus on and amplify our strengths and resources— that’s going to have consequences in how we feel and function as well.
It will not “solve” all, or probably any, of our problems, and it will definitely not “cure” our PTSD.
Positive thinking will not save us.
But it will support our recovery a hell of a lot more realistically than negative thinking.
I’m not saying bullsh*t yourself.
I’m not saying “good vibes only.”
I’m not saying your habitual thinking is your fault, or the “cause” of your pain.
I’m just saying, get mindful and intentional about how you use your cognitive “wiggle room.”
I’m saying that, for all the choices we DON’T have when it comes to self talk and mental focus, there are absolutely some choices we DO have.
And I don’t believe in throwing away ANY tool that could potentially help us crawl out of this pit called CPTSD.









