
I’ve never met a trauma survivor who “liked” chaos.
But I’ve met plenty who are USED to chaos.
Plenty who get anxious when they’re NOT immersed in chaos.
Plenty who have returned to chaotic situations after initially escaping them— but that’s not about “liking” them.
Trauma survivors have very often learned to function in chaos.
Not just function— to handle it effectively. To be “good” at functioning in chaos, whatever that means.
We’re good in a pinch. Good in a crisis.
When things calm down, though, we don’t quite know what to do.
The adrenaline and sympathetic nervous system responses that feel our decisions in crisis are missing.
Chaotic situations ask trauma survivors to focus on short term survival, which we know how to do— but less chaotic situations ask us to focus on long term plans and goals, which can be unfamiliar, confusing, or off-putting to us.
Thinking about or planning for the future is often not a priority for trauma survivors who didn’t even expect to live this long— or who were conditioned to believe that positive long term outcomes never happen anyway.
So we might retreat back into chaos.
Chaotic relationships. Chaotic living situations.
Then we might get sh*t for what looks to other people like a “choice”— but what, in reality, is a trauma-driven retreat into our comfort zone.
Trauma recovery is going to ask us to confront our addiction to (not our “liking of”) chaos.
It’s going to ask us to realistically develop the skillset of functioning in NON-chaotic environments, which is a novel concept for many of us.
Recovery is going to ask us to forgive ourselves for supposed “choices” that landed us back in chaos in the past.
And trauma recovery is going to ask us to accept the fact that, while we survivors may be good in a crisis, we should never have had to develop that skillset. We should have had safety and support growing up— not to be left on our own to MacGuyver our way through.
Chaos may be all you know. That’s not your fault.
But you’re not in recovery to handle more chaos.
You’re in recovery to realistically learn how to tolerate peace.
