
When we’ve been used, over & over again, by the people or institutions that were SUPPOSED to love and protect us, it changes us.
It changes how we think about ourselves.
It changes how we engage with the world.
It changes how we understand our worth and role in life.
This is how CPTSD develops: exposure to abuse and/or neglect that was prolonged, inescapable, and entwined with our relationships.
Being used instead of loved is exactly this kind of trauma.
We’re uniquely vulnerable to complex trauma as children, but in truth humans can develop CPTSD throughout the lifespan when we’re used instead of loved.
It happens in families, it happens in churches, it happens in communities, it happens in political movements, it happens in cults.
It happens whenever and whenever a person or institution that claims to have the best interest of someone in mind actually just uses them— for their body, for their money, for their vote, or whatever.
Many of us don’t like to admit we were or are vulnerable to complex trauma.
We’ll do backflips to explain how what we experienced, ether in the distant or recent past, wasn’t “really” traumatic— how, yeah, maybe we were used, but it really wasn’t a “big deal.”
Psychologically, it’s always a big deal when humans are used instead of loved, particularly by people or institutions that claim to love them.
We often try to deny this— because we don’t like to feel we “need” anything that the people or institutions that abused us “should” have offered us.
We want to seem “tough.”
But neither you or I are “tough” enough to not need love— or be be unaffected when love is replaced by exploitation.
It’s a specific kind of betrayal.
And the reality is, most CPTSD involves betrayal.
Parents betraying their roles.
Clergy betraying their vows.
Churches betraying their missions.
Political parties betraying their supposed purpose.
There can be many paths to developing CPTSD, but those paths often converge at the point of human beings being used instead of loved.
CPTSD recovery involves us beginning to see ourselves as human again— that is to say, worthy of love, worthy of belief, worthy of care, and worthy of protection.
Affirming our humanity— our essential deservingness and our essential agency, in particular— is core to realistic, sustainable CPTSD recovery.
You shouldn’t have been used.
You should have been loved.
We still need and deserve that.
No toxic positivity bullsh*t— you and I still need and deserve to be loved instead of used.
