
There are lots of things CPTSD tries to take away from us— notably humor and laughter.
Our CPTSD conditioning often makes it complicated to laugh.
Sometimes when we survivors laugh, we get the thought in our head: if our trauma was ACTUALLY legitimate, ACTUALLY “trauma,” how on earth could we possibly smile or laugh?
That can often snowball into: “I must not be REALLY traumatized. I must just be making it up. Faking it. Exaggerating. Otherwise, how could I POSSIBLY smile or laugh?”
Sound familiar?
It goes had in hand with that gaslighting bullsh*t our abusers and bullies pulled on us to weasel out of taking accountability for their behavior.
“Was it REALLY that bad? Or are you just being dramatic?”
“Was it REALLY that bad? Or are you just attention seeking?”
“If it was REALLY that bad, how can you possibly joke or laugh about it? Faker.”
On, and on, and on. You know how Trauma Brain is.
The thing is: it is not only entirely normal for trauma survivors to be able to joke and laugh about our experiences— sometimes humor is one of our most important survival tools.
When trauma survivors joke about our experiences, we’re not denying or disowning how serious or painful they were.
We’re actually joking about them BECAUSE they were so serious and painful.
Humor gives us a tool to process and engage with those painful experiences in a way that doesn’t have us drowning in sadness or horror.
Humor gives us a way to markedly change our physiology as we engage with those traumatic experiences— it’s well documented that laugher can “goose” the production of endorphins, serotonin, and dopamine, “feel good” chemicals in the body.
Humor can give us a way to engage with our pain while kind of stepping outside of our memory of it all— because jokes, by definition, require us to see ourselves as a character in a little story, at last for a second.
All of which is to say: it’s perfectly okay to joke and laugh, even amidst the sh*t show of having survived trauma.
It doesn’t mean you weren’t “really” hurt. It doesn’t mean you’re “over” that hurt now.
All it means is that your nervous system has found a tool to cope and create a little snatch of “feel good”— which, when we’re in pain or a suicidal crisis, can be literally life saving.
Here’s the catch, though: when we use humor to cope with or process CPTSD, we don’t want to fall into the trap of turning that tool against ourselves.
Humor is like any tool. It’s like a hammer. A hammer can help build a house— in fact, it’s pretty difficult to build a house WITHOUT a hammer— but it can also mash our fingers if we use it carelessly.
So— use humor as a CPTSD recovery tool, if it resonates with you.
Just be mindful that Trauma Brain doesn’t hijack that ver useful tool and turn it against you.
Breathe; blink; focus.









