
Highly sensitive humans are more vulnerable to trauma than less sensitive humans, it’s true.
But that doesn’t mean our sensitivity “attracted” or “allowed” our abuse to happen.
It’s true that sometimes sensitive people— not just kids— are targeted by those who would hurt us.
But that doesn’t make our trauma or “fault.”
That rather explicitly makes it “their” fault, actually— they’re the ones who did the targeting and the abusing.
Don’t get it twisted.
Trauma Brain is going to give you extensive lists of why some characteristic of yours drew traumatic experiences to you— but that’s not, actually, how that works.
Abusers are responsible for abuse. Full stop.
(Notice how Trauma Brain is right now in your ear, trying to argue with that statement— that “abusers are responsible for abuse. Trauma Brain, the internalized voices of our abusers and bullies, is heavily invested in you believing you “played a part” in your trauma— even if that “part” you supposedly “played” was just you being you.)
Being highly sensitive can be a real pain in the ass.
It can also be beautiful and useful and even profitable— but most of the time we’re mainly aware of how much it sucks to feel everything so overwhelmingly.
It can get real easy to get down on ourselves for our sensitivity.
Meeting our sensitivity with compassion and curiosity and grace can sound like a tall order some days, especially when our nervous system feels like it’s ready to physically jump out of our goddamn body.
How we relate to our sensitivity matters in trauma recovery, because how we relate to everything about ourselves matters.
CPTSD is going to try, hard, to get us to hate on ourselves— everything about ourselves.
Our appearance. Our intelligence. Our choices. How sensitive we are or aren’t.
You need to remember: the sh*t that CPTSD gives us about being highly sensitive— or anything else— is not about reality.
It’s about making us feel a certain kind of way. Notably, like garbage.
You don’t have to love being highly sensitive all the time. I don’t.
But you and I do have to accept we are exactly as sensitive as we are— and that’s not evidence of anything “bad,” “weak,” or “immature.”
We also have accept that there is nothing a victim can do that can “make” someone abuse them.
No matter what Trauma Brain is whispering in your ear right now.
Breathe; blink; focus.









