
It can be hard, during the course of the day, to remember that what our trauma conditioning tells us is not reality.
It sure FEELS like reality.
Especially the stuff about how we suck and deserve to suffer and are destined to suffer.
That stuff all tends to FEEL true— not because it is true, but because it’s consistent with what we were told growing up, often by the very people who were supposed to love and support us the most.
When the people who share your name and DNA spent years effortfully sh*ttng on you, it’s hard to believe you “deserve” anything better.
When the people whose job it literally was to raise you to understand who you are fill your head with doubt and fear, it’s hard to believe that you’ll EVER feel or function better.
What we’re exposed to growing up, implicitly and explicitly, becomes our baseline.
It becomes our programming, our operating system— and it runs so quietly and pervasively in the background, we barely register it’s a thing.
Fast forward to now— is it any wonder we meet ideas about how maybe we’re not the worst, maybe we have something to offer, maybe we can do better, with skepticism?
We’ve been programmed to doubt ourselves. To distrust ourselves. To believe that, given enough time, we’ll “obviously” f*ck up this job, this relationship, this opportunity, just like we “f*ck everything up.”
It’s not real. It’s programming. Conditioning. Propaganda.
And, like all propaganda, Trauma Brain’s bullsh*t has a specific goal: to make you and me feel like trash.
That’s it.
But you and I need to remember, Trauma Brain’s bullsh*t will FEEL real— because it is consistent with our past conditioning.
It’s familiar.
It goes down easy, because we’ve heard it before. Our nervous system has been “softened” to its message.
That doesn’t mean our self-loathing, self-distrustful thoughts or beliefs are “true.”
The real truth is, you and I are human. We’re mixed bags. Some things we do well. Some things we could stand to improve. Believe me when I tell you, trauma recovery will put us in touch with both of those categories.
Because that harsh narrative about ourselves feels true doesn’t mean it is true.
Yes, challenging it can feel like a risk. Like we’re setting ourselves up to get punked or punished.
I wouldn’t ask you to take that risk if I didn’t truly believe it was worth it.
It is worth it. You are worth it.
