
I want your CPTSD recovery to be realistic and sustainable.
Not dramatic. Not cinematic.
And not stupid fast.
Don’t get me wrong, I don’t want any survivor to suffer for a second longer than they have to.
But I have seen trauma recovery go up in smoke because survivors pressured themselves to do it fast.
Part of that is an artifact of how many of us were raised.
Many of us were conditioned to believe that fast is good and slow is bad. That if we’re “good” at something, we can do it fast, and ideally more or less perfectly the first time.
Many trauma survivors (and many humans!) very much HATE feeling like we’re not good at a thing we’re trying to do.
We feel embarrassed. We feel humiliated.
We feel like we want to quit this thing we’re trying, because we believe we’re “failing” at it— and we want to not try at it anymore, because who needs to feel like a “failure,” am I right?
The truth about trauma recovery is, we tend to be better at it the slower we take it.
And the real truth about trauma recovery that many survivors don’t want to hear is, we only ever get REALLY good at it by embracing the fact that we are, every day, beginners at it.
That might sound weird. Isn’t the goal of this whole thing to achieve mastery?
You bet it is— but we only ever achieve anything approaching mastery at trauma recovery by approaching it every day as a beginner.
Whenever a survivor starts making noises about how “good” they are at trauma recovery, that sends up a flag for me— a flag that there’s something off about their recovery.
Trauma recovery is too delicately balanced for us to get a big head about any of it.
True masters, of recovery or anything else, approach EVERYTHING as a learning opportunity.
I approach every day in my own trauma and addiction recovery as a student. A beginner, who has things to learn from this day.
Not only does that take off some of the pressure of having to “perform” recovery, it reminds me that I am never, ever, so strong or so skilled that I have nothing to learn from this day.
Part of being an eternal beginner, an eternal student, is going slow.
After all, if we go too fast, we can’t really learn things— we’re too busy keeping up and plowing ahead.
Mind you: I’m a big believer in self-improvement and goal setting.
Yes, I want to improve constantly. A core principle of my life is CANI— Constant And Never-ending Improvement.
But to realistically achieve CANI, I have to slow down.
To really look and really see.
To really take in what this day in recovery has to teach me.
To really internalize and reinforce the skills, tools, and philosophies that will keep me safe and stable today.
Wanna go fast in trauma recovery? Me too.
So go slow.
Slow is steady.
Steady is fast.
And beginner mind is mastery.
