
“They” will try to influence you. All day.
They don’t actually want you to recover from CPTSD or DID. Hell, some of them don’t even believe in CPTSD or DID.
They don’t especially care what you actually need to recover from your trauma.
What they do want, is for you to behave in ways they find understandable, predictable, and controllable.
That’s not being negative; that’s reality.
What most people want from you is predictability and controllability. And they want your motives and choices to make sense to them.
Anything else threatens or inconveniences them.
That’s not to say “they” are necessary ill-intentioned. Some of “them” actually think they’re helping— they think all this “trauma” stuff is bullsh*t, and it’s keeping you from “letting go” or “moving on.”
They’re going to think what they’re going to think.
It’s not your job to educate them.
It IS your job to work your recovery, regardless of what they think or how they try to influence you.
The fact is, your recovery will ask things of you that they won’t understand.
It’ll ask things of you that won’t make you particularly predictable to them— that is, you won’t be behaving like the version of you that they knew before.
And recovery will definitely ask things of you that will make you difficult to control.
“They” won’t love it.
They’ll try to pressure and shame you into abandoning your recovery.
“Why can’t you just be normal?”
“Why can’t you just let it go?”
“Why are you always talking about ‘recovery?’”
Yes, they’ll try all of that— and what they’re really trying is to force you back into that box you were in pre-recovery.
It’s going to be up to you, every day, to not let them get in your head.
“Their” skepticism about trauma and recovery might mirror your own skepticism— that is, Trauma Brain’s insistence that you’re just a “drama queen” and none of this actually all that big a deal.
Even if what they say has teeth or resonates with you— it’s on you to stay on target.
You’re not working your recovery to please or impress them.
You’re doing this to save your life.
You’re doing this to protect your goals.
You’re doing this to actually live you values.
So “they” will try to influence you.
You keep your recovery tools, recovery mission statement, and recovery blueprint handy.
You stay true to yourself and your needs.
Breathe; blink; focus.
