
If you’re reading this, you know that one of the hardest parts of trauma recovery is not overreacting.
We don’t “choose” to overreact— we’re conditioned into it.
We’re conditioned to believe we “have” to massively respond to many thoughts, feelings, and sensations.
We’re conditioned to believe we “have” to punish ourselves for failures.
We’re conditioned to believe we “have” to give up when we hit certain speed bumps or pot holes.
The truth is, we don’t “have” to do nearly as much as our nervous system is convinced we “have” to— but we struggle to believe that, because so many of our reactions feel so urgent and unmanageable.
Learning to not overreact, to not panic, takes a minute.
And it also takes a steadfast willingness to not shame ourselves for the overreactions we’ve been conditioned into in the past.
We didn’t ask for this conditioning. We don’t want it.
The fact that we were conditioned to overreact to body sensations, thoughts, memories, or stimuli out there in the world— triggers— doesn’t make us “dramatic.”
It makes us vulnerable to conditioning— just like every other human.
So much of early trauma recovery especially is meeting our overreactions with acceptance, compassion, patience— and reminding ourselves that while there is no shame in this reaction, we can sit with it, breathe into it, manage it, and not amplify it.
We don’t choose our reflexes.
But we have some choices when we clock what’s going on.
We don’t often have the choice to simply shut the reaction down— but we can choose how we talk to ourselves about it, how we explain it to ourselves, how we meet it, and what we do with our body and breathing in response to it.
“Easy does it. Don’t overreact,” is one of my go-to self-talk statements.
Putting some time and space between trigger, reflex, and reaction is a game changer for many trauma survivors.
It all starts with acknowledging our vulnerability to overreaction— and getting curious about how we can reel it in, without getting judgmental or aggressive with ourselves.
Breathe; blink; focus.
