
Remember: a day is just twenty four hours strung together.
An hour is just sixty minutes strung together.
A minute is just sixty teeny, tiny seconds strung together.
All we need to do is figure out a way to be safe and focused for a second. This second.
CPTSD, if you haven’t noticed, does its very best to overwhelm us. To make us truly believe we have to handle EVERY f*cking thing in our life, RIGHT NOW.
CPTSD tries to make us believe we HAVE to solve EVERY problem we have, NOW.
And what’s more: CPTSD make us believe that if we can’t solve every problem we have RIGHT NOW, then we can’t solve ANY of our problems.
It makes us believe we are a failure for feeling overwhelmed.
You are not “failure” for feeling overwhelmed.
CPTSD is one of the most overwhelming experiences human beings can experience.
Hell, the very reason CPTSD and, especially, dissociation exist is because we’ve experienced things that overwhelmed our nervous system.
That’s not a knock on our nervous system, by the way. Every nervous system has its breaking point, just like every bone has its breaking point.
We don’t shame bones for breaking when they’ve been subjected to the kind of pressure that breaks bones; and we shouldn’t shame our nervous system for dissociating or developing complex trauma responses when subjected to the kind of pressure that produces CPTSD.
You are not “crazy” for developing these responses.
Complex trauma is overwhelming, by definition— and that’s true whether or not you happen to remember, or remember clearly, what happened to you.
Realistic trauma recovery is all about bringing it back to basics, every day.
Twenty four hours in a day.
Sixty minutes in an hour.
Sixty seconds in a minute.
And we’re back to using the tools of self talk, mental focus, and physiology, especially breathing, to find a way to make THIS sixty seconds safe.
Don’t get rushed, bullied, or discouraged by Trauma Brain.
Reel it in, and focus on this sixty seconds.
Let the following sixty seconds take care of themselves.









