
You need to know you didn’t develop these CPTSD patterns or DID patterns for the hell of it.
That’s what CPTSD and DID are: patterns. Conditioned patterns of attention, experience, and reflexive behavior.
CPTSD and DID are NOT “incurable diseases.”
CPTSD and DID are NOT who you are or your “personality.”
CPTSD and DID are NOT “choices.”
They are patterns that have been conditioned in you, likely for years or even decades— meaning you may not even remember a time when those patterns didn’t define your life experience.
Patterns that have been conditioned, can be unconditioned and reconditioned.
That doesn’t mean it’s “easy.” That means it’s possible— with consistency and commitment and support and strategy.
The patterns of thinking, believing, feeling, and behaving that add up to CPTSD and DID developed for reasons— most often, to keep us safe on some level.
What many people don’t understand is, the overwhelming majority of trauma “symptoms” have their roots in self-protection.
What WE need to understand is that giving up those “symptoms”— up to and including self-harm and suicidal ideation— is probably going to feel UNSAFE on some level, especially at first.
We do not develop CPTSD or DID to be “difficult.”
Nobody reading this “chose” CPTSD or DID. (Given the actual “choice,” literally everyone who struggles with either would absolutely choose differently 10 times out of 10.)
The most painful, frustrating trauma “symptoms” we experience are purposeful.
And if we’re going to realistically reduce our vulnerability to them, we need to understand and respect what they’re all about.
We have to give them their due.
All of this is part of a larger project of steadfastly refusing to hate or reject “parts” of ourselves or our experience.
For as ashamed or confused as we are by aspects of what we’re experiencing, realistic recovery is going to ask us to deal with our “parts” and our experiences with respect, patience, and openness.
CPTSD and DID do not exist, either in general or in us, “for no reason.”
And if we’re going to ask our nervous system to run new, different unfamiliar patterns, instead of the patterns we’ve been running for years, we’d better be prepared to demonstrate that we understand what a significant “ask” that is.
