
When we’re triggered, we need support, not shame.
We certainly don’t need to shame ourselves for struggling.
But— that’s what many of us have been programmed to do.
We’ve been conditioned to lead off with telling ourselves all the reasons why we “shouldn’t” be triggered.
To tell ourselves all the reasons why this trigger “isn’t a big deal.”
We’ve been programmed to invalidate our reactions, our feelings, and our needs— and for that to be our reflexive FIRST take when we get triggered.
Many survivors are profoundly embarrassed that we even get triggered.
We’ve been told over and over again, that we’re “safe now,” that a trigger is “from the past” ad therefore “shouldn’t” be evoking the reaction it is.
Okay— let’s say for a moment that’s true. Maybe we’re having a reaction to something that is NOT right here, right now— what are we supposed to do with this understanding?
The fact is, we’re still reacting.
We’re still being flooded with feelings and memories.
Our nervous system is still melting the f*ck down.
Do we really think all that’s going to halt the minute we accept that we “shouldn’t” be having the reaction?
I’ll tell you what happens far more often: we tell ourselves we “shouldn’t” behaving this reaction— and then not only do we have the ongoing trauma response to contend with, but we have an extra layer of guilt for experiencing something that we’ve decided is invalid.
Don’t do that to yourself.
The truth is, if we’re having a reaction, that reaction IS proportionate to SOMETHING— even if it doesn’t happen to be something right here, right now.
Our triggers reflect our wounds, and our trauma responses reflect our needs.
Both our wounds and needs are valid.
Neither our wounds or needs disappear because we don’t want to deal with them or because we’re embarrassed by them.
If we try to deny or disown our wounds and needs, guess what happens? They grow.
Ignore a wound, it festers. It gets infected. What was a wound that was painful turns into a systemic threat, maybe even to our life.
Ignore a need, it gets more urgent. It becomes harder to ignore. It grows to the point where it WILL commandeer our attention, whether or not we want it to.
Remember: trauma responses are not “choices.”
There is nothing shameful about experiencing trauma responses, any more than it’s “shameful” to experience the reflex of pulling our hand away from a hot stove.
Our nervous system is designed to keep us alive— and if we’re fighting, fleeing, fawning, freezing, or flopping in response to a trigger, it’s because some “part” of us honestly believes that’s what we have to do to keep on keeping on.
We need support in those moments, not judgment.
Just like broken limbs need X-rays and a cast, not to “try harder” to flex.
Easy does it. Breathe; blink; focus.









