
Some nights you’re going to be in a terrible mood.
Some nights words won’t even seem to make sense.
Some nights your motivation is going to be garbage.
And, let me spoil the suspense: Trauma Brain, the internalized voices of our bullies and abusers, is going to use how we struggle on some nights to try to tell us WE’RE garbage.
Mind you, that doesn’t mean we’re garbage. It means we’ve been CONDITIONED to feel like garbage when we struggle.
It means we’ve been CONDITIONED to attribute the fact that we struggle to some inherent quality of our being— or the supposed “fact” that we’re just “failing” at life.
I don’t care if you feel like garbage tonight, if you feel scattered tonight, if you’re in a terrible mood tonight, or if your motivation is dog sh*t tonight— none of that means you’re “failing,” at trauma recovery or life.
It means what it means. It’s a rough night. They happen.
What we say to ourselves really, really matters— ESPECIALLY on a rough night.
It’s when we struggle, when we’re triggered, that our trauma conditioning really kicks in.
Trauma Brain can do a reasonable job of quietly lurking in the background much of the time, only to rear right up when we’re having a tough night.
Know why that is? Because rough nights make us vulnerable.
We tend to go on autopilot when we’re having a rough night.
And guess who and what experiences programmed our autopilot? That’s right— our abusers and bullies.
Trauma Brain, in other words, does exactly what abusers and bullies always do: attacks us when we’re the most vulnerable.
We need to remember that on our rough nights.
We need to remember how we’re feeling on a a rough night is not the same as how we’re DOING, overall, in our recovery.
(An old mentor named Andy taught me that: “don’t confuse how you’re FEELING with how you’re DOING.”)
On a rough night we need to remember that there is no rule that says we MUST feel good or better. We’re not going to be in trouble for having a rough night.
On a rough night we need to remember that our biochemistry and psychological functioning fluctuates throughout the day and night— and the fact that we happen to be feeling like crap right now is part of that fluctuation.
On a rough night we need to remember that there is nothing in the world wrong with just getting by, leveraging the recovery tools of distraction and containment.
If there is anything that is universal to EVERY survivor’s experience of trauma recovery, it’s that we are GOING to have rough nights. Not “maybe;” we absolutely will.
It doesn’t mean what Trauma Brain wants you to think it means.
So you’re feeling like sh*t. It happens.
Don’t overreact. Don’t make long term decisions. Don’t make short term choices that will leave you feeling sh*tty tomorrow. You know the kind of decisions I’m talking about. Play the tape forward.
Easy does it. Breathe; blink; and focus.
Get through tonight.
Then push the “reset” button tomorrow.
