
CPTSD survivors are often not great at the skill of feeling joy.
No shame. Of COURSE we’re not good at it.
Why would we be good at feeling joy, when for so long feeling anything remotely good felt like—or demonstrably was— a trap?
We were conditioned to believe that feeling good left us vulnerable.
We were conditioned to believe that feeling good was most likely “fake”— that to allow ourselves to feel good only made it harder when the good feeling went away. Or was ripped away, as it often was.
We were conditioned to believe that we had no “right” to feel good— and we were “bad” if we “gave in” to the “temptation” of feeling good.
Most of the time this conditioning operated outside of our awareness— that’s how conditioning works.
But the end result was, our nervous system was not predisposed to feeling good.
It wasn’t a skill we had a lot of practice with.
Fast forward to today, to us working our trauma recovery: as we do things, day by day, to feel and function better, it’s very common to notice anxiety spiking alongside our progress.
That anxiety is often an artifact of how we’ve been conditioned to respond to feeling good.
The “it’s a trap!” energy can be strong.
Sometimes that anxiety can get so intense that we actually sabotage ourselves, so we don’t actually have to “cope” with feeling good.
Yes— all this might sound weird, even “crazy,” to a non-trauma survivor.
They might read this and be like, “who DOESN’T want to feel good? Weirdos.”
It’s one of the many paradoxes of CPTSD.
It’s not that we don’t want to feel good. Of course we want to feel good.
It’s that we’re not quite sure how to feel good without jumping out of our skin with anxiety.
Our relationship with pleasure is one of the many relationships we need to revisit and probably reshape as we work our trauma recovery.
You, actually, have the right to feel good.
You have the right to feel good without worrying intensely about someone coming along and stealing that feeling from you— or shaming you for feeling it in the first place.
We get better at experiencing joy the more precise we get at it— and the more we meet our complicated relationship with pleasure with compassion, patience, and realism.
You know— like we meet all our symptoms and struggles in trauma recovery.
Breathe; blink; focus.
