
What “they” often don’t understand is, the damage CPTSD does isn’t limited to “back then.”
Even if the abuse ended long ago, survivors have been taking hits every day since.
Put another way: trying to function and live life with CPTSD is, itself, a complex trauma.
Living with CPTSD checks all the boxes of what makes for a complex trauma: it happens over time; it is functionally inescapable; and it definitely entwines with our most important relationships.
CPTSD survivors are often shamed for “still” being “hung up on” things that happened “so long ago.”
What the world doesn’t understand is that our pain today isn’t entirely, or even mostly, about what happened then.
Our pain today is focused on our struggles handling today— which is a struggle we’ve been enduring every day since what happened happened “so long ago.”
What happened then was painful.
But also painful are the opportunities we’ve missed— or f*cked up— in the years since, due to or trauma symptoms and struggles.
The relationships we’ve lost.
Hell, the SLEEP we’ve lost.
The world doesn’t understand that, while, yes, we did demonstrably survive our trauma, it is still a very open f*ckng question whether we all survive our recovery.
There is a myth that we just need to “process” the initial trauma we endured in order to recover from it.
Trauma processing certainly can be a part of our recovery blueprint— but to actually recover from CPTSD, we need to understand that our CPTSD is not entirely about our original trauma.
It’s often said that pain becomes trauma when we endure it alone.
So, so, so many CPTSD survivors have been enduring their pain alone— year, after year, after year.
So many CPTSD survivors have felt unsafe even trying to describe what we’ve been carrying all this time— often because w know we’re going to get sh*t to the tune of, “but that was so LONG ago— you’re still hung up on THAT?”
So— we keep it to ourselves.
Which is exactly how CPTSD deepens. In silence. In isolation.
This is how CPTSD becomes so much a part our daily life that we often actually mistake CPTSD for our personality. (Also why CPTSD is frequently misdiagnosed as a “personality disorder.”)
CPTSD is not about “back then.” Not entirely.
CPTSD is also about the long term complex trauma of living with CPTSD— often having no idea this isn’t normal or how things will be forever.
The good news is: understanding the nature of our trauma— all our trauma, original and subsequent— is the first step to realistic, sustainable recovery.
You can do this.
Breathe; blink; focus.









