
A common experience for trauma survivors working our recovery is, this is taking a lot longer than we thought.
Mind you, we’re never quite sure how long we figured this was “supposed” to take. No one gave us a user’s manual for recovery. Or life, for that matter.
All we know is, often we have the feeling that we’ve been grinding away at this “recovery” thing for f*ckin’ ever— and some days we’re not entirely sure we’ve made any progress at all.
I’ve definitely been there. So has literally every survivor who has ever worked a recovery.
The thing about recovery is, it’s not an “event” that “happens.”
It’s not even an “accomplishment” we “earn,” although we do work plenty hard to design, execute, and support our recovery, much like we did when we were “earning” other “accomplishments.”
What trauma recovery is, is a lifestyle. It’s a frame.
It’s a set of tools, skills, and philosophies that we engage and develop so we can do all the OTHER in our life that matters to us.
The reason recovery can feel like it’s going slow or taking forever is because, if we’re doing it right, aspects of recovery touch every other thing we do or think about.
It’s not taking forever because we’re doing it wrong— it’s feeling extended because we continue to exist. And as long as we continue to exist, we’re going to be in recovery.
And that’s actually the good news.
Trauma recovery is a project, yes, but it’s not a project we do for its own sake.
Nobody’s handing out medals— or demerits, for that matter— for trauma recovery. It’s not a competition.
The best analogy I can think of when it comes to the experience of trauma recovery is, it’s like a philosophical or religious conversion.
Recovery is not “religious” in the sense that we become devotees, or even congregants— but it’s similar to religion insofar as it is designed to help us understand and process the rest of our life.
(Of note, recovery is significantly unlike religion insofar as there is absolutely no moral connotations to struggling with it. Nobody is going to hell for making recovery inconsistent decisions. Doing well in recovery doesn’t make us a “good” person. And the rewards of recovery show themselves in our day to day life, over time— not any kind of afterlife in which we’’ll be judged.)
Recovery can also be likened to a fitness regimen. It entails skills we must learn and endurance we must develop— but the real benefit of recovery, much like the benefit of fitness or athletic training, is in our increased day to day functionality.
When you adopt a new religion or philosophy, or you embark upon a new, fitness-conscious lifestyle, you don’t think of it as “taking forever.” You think of it as a thing you do now— and a thing you’ll keep doing, as long as it continues to work for you.
I completely understand that feeling of, “this is taking forever.” We want to see major difference in how we feel and function sooner, rather than later.
We’ve been struggling for so long, and we’re f*cking sick of it. We don’t want to take on another thing in recovery with which we’ll continue to struggle.
This is when it’s useful to shift our perspective.
Trauma recovery isn’t a puzzle we have to solve or a competition we have to win— it’s a set of mental and behavioral tools that will help us solve every OTHER puzzle in our life, help us win every OTHER competition in our life.
Recovery is not taking forever. Recovery is there to support us for as long as we need it.
Recovery is friend.
You can do this.
