
It’s real important we be clear with ourselves that other peoples’ approval or acceptance does not, cannot, make or break our actual worth.
Sounds obvious, right?
Not so much when we’re operating with a nervous system wounded by CPTSD.
It can be more than a little counterintuitive that we get so attached to— and f*cked up by— the very idea of others’ approval or acceptance. After all, we’re smart grown ups, right? Why should we care?
It’s not a rational thing.
No one reading this woke up this morning and thought to ourselves, you know what, I think I’m going to get way up in my head about what other people think.
It’s a deep, gut level thing— a reaction, a reflex.
Caring what other people think is most closely tied to the “fawn” trauma response, which I describe as that “please and appease” reflex.
“Fawn,” just like any other trauma response, is not a “choice”— we do it because our nervous system truly believes, in that moment, that we would be literal dead meat if we DON’T please and appease.
“Fawn” can FEEL a little more like a “choice,” insofar as it manifests in was that tend to be a little more cerebral or nuanced than “fight,” “flight,’ “freeze,” or “flop,” but it’s real important we be clear: no matter how nuanced or complex a trauma response seems to be, it’s still a trauma response.
That is to say: it’s still not a “choice.”
When we’re up in our head about making others happy or meeting others’ expectations—that s to say, when we’re drowning in anxiety about others’ approval or acceptance— we’re very frequently playing out a “fawn” response.
We’re not “weak” and we’re not “stupid.” We’re responding reflexively to conditioning— and trying like hell to survive a situation that truly, honestly feels like like life or death to a “part” of us.
Yes, learning to care less about others’ approval or acceptance is going to be a significant part of everyone reading this’s trauma recover blueprint— but don’t get sucked into thinking that’s a simple, straightforward “decision” we make, to just “care less.”
What was conditioned into our nervous system by trauma needs to be reconditioned in our nervous system by recovery— and that takes the time it takes.
Easy does it. Grace over guilt.
You didn’t ask for these patterns, and you exist in a culture that does not understand we can’t make significant positive changes in our nervous system in an instant.
Whether it’s “fight,” “flight,” “freeze,” “fawn,” or “flop” we’re trying to recondition in our nervous and endocrine systems, we need to start by creating realistic safety inside our head and heart— and THAT project starts with giving ourselves permission to find this hard and unfair.
Others’ approval or acceptance can nether create nor destroy our true worth.
No matter what the “fawn” response is whispering in your ear right now as you read this.
Breathe; blink; focus.









