
The bitch of trauma recovery is, we have to it ourselves.
No one’s going to do it for us.
No one can do it TO us.
We actually have to make choices and endure discomfort to realistically recover from trauma— which, I don’t know about you, pisses me the hell off.
After all, we’re only IN this position because we’re ALREADY enduring a rather HIGH level of discomfort.
For that matter, we’ve been conditioned to believe that it’s often our fault that we’re suffering— which, we understand in recovery, is just BS (Belief Systems— but also, you know bullsh*t), but many survivors still struggle with feelings of shame and self-blame about our symptoms.
To me, it f*cking rankles to be told that the key to recovery is making choices.
The truth is, the choices we have to make in order to realistically recover from trauma are choices that cut against and scramble our trauma conditioning.
We have to become aware of how exactly CPTSD is f*cking with us, and we have to consciously, purposefully, consistently make choices that scratch that old record.
Before someone says it in the comments, let me: “easier said than done.”
OF COURSE it’s “easier said than done.” Literally everything is “easier said than done.”
This is especially true when we’re talking about conditioning.
Conditioning, programming, brainwashing— the way these all work is by making it easy, almost effortless, to think, feel, and act in certain ways.
Trauma conditioning, for example, makes beating the sh*t out of ourselves feel “normal,” “natural.”
Trauma conditioning makes talking sh*t to ourselves and kicking our own ass seem like the easiest, most effortless thing in the world.
Pushing AGAINST trauma conditioning, in how we talk to ourselves, how we direct our mental focus, and how we use our physiology? That seems hard, exhausting, and pointless.
This is exactly how CPTSD traps and tortures us. It makes the old sh*t seem effortless, if painful— and the stuff we need to do to recover, hard.
There is no doubt: doing trauma recovery sh*t IS hard. Especially at first, and especially when we’re triggered.
I will never lie to you and tell you ANY of this is supposed to be easy.
But the realistic way we rewire, recondition, reshape our nervous system, is by noticing when we’re on CPTSD autopilot, and consciously CHOOSE to do something different.
We’re just not going to recover on autopilot.
I know. It sucks exactly as much as it sucks.
Anybody who tells you trauma recovery is without suck, especially when it comes to making new, uncomfortable choices, is selling something.
Selling something that smells, methinks.









