
Every day in trauma recovery, including today, is going to be a mixed bag.
What that means for you is that if you happen to be having a garbage day today, that’s okay.
It’s not preferable, we don’t love it— but it’s okay.
It’s not evidence you’re “failing.”
It’s not evidence you’re screwed.
Why does this matter? Because you, like me and every other trauma survivor, are likely super vulnerable to perfectionism.
We truly believe that if today doesn’t go exactly to plan, we’re in trouble.
We’ve been CONDITIONED to think in very black and white terms about things like “success” and “failure.”
Just today I worked with multiple survivors who thought that because their sessions weren’t picture perfect, they “must” have “failed” me, or themselves, or their recovery.
What BS. (Belief Systems— but also, you know, bullsh*t.)
The truth is, some of the most ultimately productive therapy sessions are wildly unpredictable and imperfect.
The broader truth is that some of the most productive recovery days are wildly unpredictable and imperfect.
It’s okay.
What I want to communicate to every trauma survivor reading these words is, you are working a real world recovery. We want it to be realistic and sustainable— and that means we have to give up these fantasies about having “perfect” recovery days.
Trauma recovery does not have perfect days because life does not have perfect days.
If you or I happen to have a “perfect” recovery day in terms of choosing and using our tools and skills, that’s completely accidental, insofar as humans almost NEVER have “perfect” days.
(No, you are not The Exception.”)
Acknowledging that nearly 100% of our recovery days will be a mixed bag is not “making excuses” for underperforming.
It’s acknowledging reality— which we survivors can struggle with, when reality isn’t great.
When reality isn’t great, our default is often shame and self-blame— which makes perfect sense, insofar as we were often shamed and blamed growing up for…well, a lot of things, very few of which we actually our fault or responsibility.
Trauma recovery asks us to scramble that pattern of reflexively shaming or blaming ourselves when our day or our choices are imperfect.
Trauma recovery is a mixed bag. You and I are mixed bags.
And that’s okay.
The task in font of us is still the same: baby steps that are congruent with our recovery goals and values.
Just do the next right thing— and forgive yourself.
Again ,and again, and again.
