The most important moment & decision in trauma recovery.

The most important moment in our trauma recovery is this moment. 

The most important decision in our trauma recovery is the very next teeny, tiny micro decision. 

Why? Because this moment and this next decision is where we have leverage. 

We have zero leverage “back there, back then.” Any moment “back there, back then” is gone forever. 

We can lose days, weeks, months, years, spinning in retreat about decisions we did or didn’t make “back there, back then.” 

Sometimes looking back on past decisions can be helpful. With a little perspective, we can make distinctions that are useful going forward. We can understand what we were feeling and what we needed in ways that weren’t possible at the time. 

But it’s real easy to get stuck looking backward. 

Some— not all, but some— of trauma recovery is about understanding what happened to us and how it affected us. 

Some— not all, but some— of trauma recovery can involve looking back and piecing together memories or timelines from or past. 

But that work, which we call “trauma processing,” isn’t what moves us forward. 

There’s only so much mileage we’re ever going to get from looking backward. 

No matter how thoroughly we understand or come to terms with what happened to us “back there, back then,” we STILL have to intelligently manage this moment and this next decision in order to move our recovery forward. 

Your mileage may vary— but I find this enormously encouraging. 

It means that, even if I didn’t manage my last moment all that well, or even if I regret the last decision I made, I have a fresh opportunity with this moment, and this next decision. 

It means that my trauma recovery will never, can never, be defined by any moment or decision in the past— by any moment or decision that I no longer have any say over. 

The critics and skeptics of trauma informed and trauma focused work truly don’t understand trauma recovery if they think that trauma work focuses or fixates on the past. Nothing could be further from the truth. 

Authentic trauma recovery is informed by the past and realistically accounts for our past wounds— but it emphatically, unambiguously focuses on the present and the future. 

No survivor works their trauma recovery because we have any delusion about having a better past. 

We work our recovery to salvage and shape our future. 

Make no mistake: focusing on the present and future can be hard for trauma survivors. The present often sucks. The future seems hopeless. Focusing on this moment or this next decision can seem pointless or overwhelming. 

But, as it turns out, a lot of this “recovery” thing involves pushing forward with things that can feel pointless or overwhelming in the moment— but which are recovery supporting in our overall arc. 

Don’t get up in your head about having “wasted” a past moment. 

Don’t beat yourself up for having made a not-great decision. 

Learn what you can from both of them— but remember: no past moment or past decision can define or derail your recovery. 

The most important moment in your trauma recovery is this moment. 

The most crucial decision in your recovery is this next teeny, tiny micro decision. 

This moment and this next decision are opportunities to turn it all around— or to build upon what you’ve already created. 

If you’re reading this, you have the opportunity to live a recovery consistent moment and make a recovery supporting decision— right here, right now. 

And I, personally, believe you’re gonna do it. 

(Even if you don’t— there’s another moment and another choice point coming right up.)

Just do your best. That’s enough.

Are you doing your best? Then you’re doing enough. Really. 

Your trauma conditioning, however, is likely giving you sh*t— telling you, over and over again, that you’re “not doing enough.” 

Not doing “good enough.” 

Not doing whatever you’re doing “fast enough.” 

Your trauma conditioning is likely trying to keep you from acknowledging your wins or any kind of progress, because it’s not “enough.” 

All of which is just the appetizer for your trauma conditioning’s real message, its take home message: that you, yourself, aren’t “enough.” 

Not good enough, Not smart enough. Not attractive enough. Not tough enough. 

Over and over again, Trauma Brain is gonna tell us how we’re inadequate. 

Trauma Brain is real good at coming up with lists of ways we’re “obviously,” “clearly” inadequate. 

It’s real important we remember that, no matter how persuasive Trauma Brain can be, it’s definitely not “objective.” 

Trauma Brain always has an agenda: to make us feel like garbage, usually by exhaustively listing all the ways we’re falling short in all the domains we care about. 

Remember what Trauma Brain is: it’s the internalized voices of our bullies and abusers. We heard them so often growing up— and, not infrequently, our bullies and abusers were some of the most important, most relatively powerful people in our lives. 

It would have been impossible to NOT have internalized those voices. 

Those voices, of our bullies and abusers, can be loud, they can be persuasive, they can be cutting, they can be overwhelming. 

But it’s real important to remember what they are not: they are NOT the voices of reality. 

All Trauma Brain knows how to do is criticize. 

All Trauma Brain knows how to do is mock. 

Trauma Brain does not have any kind of objective take on whether we are “trying hard enough,” or whether we, as human beings existing in the world, are fundamentally “enough.” Trauma Brain is always going to say “nah” to those questions. 

But here’s the thing: you are. 

You are doing enough. 

You are trying hard enough. 

And you are, fundamentally, enough. 

Do you still have things to learn? Sure. So do I. 

Do you still have trauma recovery tools to develop? Sure. So do I. 

But neither you nor I can get sucked into this thing where we deride what we’re doing now as “not enough.” 

If you are trying, that’s all that matters. 

Yes, it might be a sh*t show at the moment. But if you’re trying, you’re doing it right. 

Yes, you might be exhausted. But if you’re trying, you’re doing enough. 

Yes, recovery might be frustrating and confusing and counterintuitive. But that’s a recovery thing, not a “you” thing. 

I believe you when you say you are trying. 

All I need you to do is try. 

All I need you to do, is your best. 

I promise you: if you work your recovery and commit to being kind to yourself no matter what, amazing things will happen. Things you can’t even imagine right now. Things Trauma Brain wants you to believe aren’t possible. 

All of this pays off. 

All of this all work out. 

Just do your best. 

That’s enough. 

Really. 

Recovery and “control.”

One of the big reasons I struggled with both trauma and addiction recovery for so long was, I absolutely hated feeling controlled— much like the vast majority of trauma survivors out there. 

Feeling controlled, or coerced, or otherwise “made” to do something, is a very common, very serious trigger for many survivors. 

For some of us, the reason for this is pretty straightforward: we’ve had experiences in our past where we were forced to do things that were painful or we didn’t want to do. 

Many abuse survivors have experience with pathological narcissists in our lives— so we know first hand what it’s like for every interaction with someone to be overtly or subtly coercive or manipulative. 

For other survivors, our aversion to feeling controlled or forced has to do with the fact that we feel the overwhelming need to BE in control of a situation— because that’s the only way we can enforce our perfectionistic standards on ourselves. 

That happens when you grow up conditioned to believe you and you performance need to be “perfect” to avoid punishment or shame. 

For still other survivors, feeling controlled triggers a whole constellation of feelings and reactions connected to our conviction that awful, painful things are always just around the corner. 

Feeling controlled plugs right into our sense of helplessness and hopelessness that we can possibly avoid or mitigate the awful, painful things that are surely coming— and that can lead us to panic or despair. 

For most of us, it’s a combination of all of these things. 

Trauma survivors’ struggles with feeling controlled comes out in a number of ways— some of them pretty overt, others kind of subtle. 

I can personally attest that trauma survivors’ control issues often come out in workplace settings, where we’re expected to follow directions and defer to our bosses and supervisors. 

It’s not that we don’t understand this is a reasonable expectation in the workplace— it’s that required, enforced submission triggers the hell out of us, even IF it’s a “reasonable expectation.” 

I personally am the poster child for subtle, often self-sabotaging rebellion in the workplace as a reaction to feeling controlled. 

Another very common way trauma survivors’ control issues play out is in relationships. 

We know that relationships come with “rules,” either explicit or implicit— but even if we really like a relationship or a relationship partner, we can often struggle to conform our behavior to the “rules” of even the best relationship. 

(This can lead to heartache and the assumption that we don’t value the relationship— when the truth is, our errant behavior had everything to do with an instinctive aversion to feeling trapped or controlled, and virtually nothing to do with our partner.)

Another huge way some trauma survivors’ control issues play out is in our vulnerability to addiction. 

We just do not do well with being told we “can’t” have a substance or engage in a behavior— even if that substance or behavior is observably destroying our life. 

What’s important for you to know is that struggling with feeling controlled, coerced, or trapped is a symptom of trauma. It’s not you being “difficult.” It’s not you being “irrational.” It’s not you being “immature.” 

Yes, we are responsible for our behaviors— but we can only be truly accountable for them if we understand the role trauma trauma responses, notably “fight” and “flight,” play when it comes to our relationship with control. 

If we understand our behaviors, and meet them with compassion, patience, and realism, we give ourselves the best shot at influencing how we feel and what we do in ways that are consistent with our goals and values. 

It was a game changer when I, personally, realized: recovery is not about “submitting” to anyone else’s control or expectation. 

Both trauma and addiction recovery are actually about setting boundaries with ourselves— which, as it turns out? Is the only way we become truly free. 

Breathe; blink; focus. 

The “rhythm & waves” model of trauma processing.

I wish trauma processing was as simple as, we deal with something, and we never have to deal with it again. 

But the truth is, in trauma recovery we often find ourselves returning to the same memory or the same circumstance from our past, again and again. 

It’s not that we never “get over” certain things. 

It’s that, as we come to terms with what happened to us and how it impacted us, we often uncover layers of feeling and meaning that we were previously not aware of— but which were affecting us nonetheless. 

Something we trauma survivors know every well is that, often, the most hurtful aspects of certain events aren’t the most obvious aspects. 

Often, we haven’t really had the safety or stability to really dive into what something meant to us or how it affected us— and we’re surprised, as we start to really get into it, exactly how and why we were hurt or harmed by it. 

It’s hard to “get over” something when we don’t fully appreciate how it hurt us. 

It’s hard to “move on” from an event the meaning of which we haven’t truly digested. 

Very often our nervous system has been in such a state of dysrgulaton for so long, that it’s been basically impossible to really explore certain feelings or memories— we’ve been left with virtually no choice but to avoid or dissociate them in order to stay sort of functional. 

My experience of trauma processing is that it usually happens in waves. 

That first wave will hit, and it’ll be powerful, and we’ll think, man, that was hard— but at least it’s over. 

Then, we do a little bit of work shoring up our safety and stability. We regain our balance— just in time for the next wave to hit. 

The next wave that hits isn’t quite like that first wave;  may be as powerful (or more powerful, or maybe less powerful), but it hits different. 

That’s because our recovery work has equipped us to recognize and work through different aspects of the trauma we’re processing— aspects that we couldn’t process in the first “wave.”

Then, once again, we regain our balance. We back off; we reinforce our safety and stability; we allow things to settle in our nervous system. 

Then the next wave hits— with still different things to process than either of the previous two waves. 

Lather, rinse, repeat. 

Understand: with each “wave” of trauma processing we do on a particular event or circumstance, it’s not that we’re retreading the same ground. In fact, far from it. 

What we’re doing when we process our trauma in layers is getting closer and closer to the fundamental truths of how and why it f*cked us up to begin with. 

Many people who have never experienced trauma think it only f*cks with us on the level of “some things really suck.” 

It’s true that some things really suck— but no survivor I’ve ever met has been struggling just because of that fact. 

Processing trauma isn’t about coming to terms with the fact that “some things really suck.” We all know that. I don’t know a trauma survivor who hasn’t been deeply aware and accepting of this fact. 

Processing trauma is about understanding and coming to terms with how those things that really suck, have affected us in profoundly personal ways. 

It’s about coming to terms specifically with the significant losses that those “really sucky” things have burdened us with. 

We can’t do that all at once. 

We can only do it in waves. 

But the good news about that is, waves come and go. It’s not just that we “can’t” do all of this processing at once; it’s that we don’t HAVE to. 

Waves, by definition, are rhythmic. They give us the chance to regain our footing and catch ou breath before we have to deal with the next one. 

Realistic, intelligent trauma processing is best conceptualized as happening in waves. 

And successfully navigating trauma processing is all about making hat rhythm work for us, rather than against us. 

Our difficulties with emotional regulation are not our fault– but learning emotional regulation is our responsibility.

We’re not born knowing how to regulate our emotions. 

We have to be taught. Trained. Supported.

When it comes to what most of us were taught about how to manage our feelings, many of us are left at kind of a loss. 

We were told versions of “suck it up” a lot. 

We were told, directly and indirectly, that crying was certainly NOT an acceptable way to manage any feeling. 

We were told that “managing” feelings meant, basically, not being reactive to them. That not showing our feelings was tantamount to being “mature.” 

Mind you: we were given precious, precious little guidance or support in actually managing our feelings. 

We were, essentially, told to “figure it out.” 

Some of us were told “figure it out— or else.” 

Or else what? We’d be shamed. We’d be punished. We’d be abandoned, maybe.

“Suck it up” isn’t actually an emotional management strategy. 

What does “suck it up” entail, exactly? No one seems to know. We just know when we’ve failed to “suck it up”— usually because we’re crying. 

It’s not your fault that no one taught you how to regulate your feelings. 

Those humans who did learn to successfully regulate their emotions are usually those humans who had kind, supportive adults around them who took care to talk them through tough moments. 

When we have kind, supportive adults around us who are willing to talk us through tough moments, with presence and realism, that’s what we internalize. We learn to model them. We build a skill. 

When we do not have those kind, patient, emotionally intelligent adults around us to talk us through tough moments, what do we internalize? 

Impatience. Shame. The inclination to belittle ourselves when we struggle with something we’re not familiar with or that we find overwhelming. 

What we need to understand and accept is that struggling to regulate our emotions, when we didn’t have the guidance, support, and safety to learn and practice that skillset, is normal. 

It’s not our “weakness.” 

It’s not our “brokenness.” 

It’s not our “immaturity.” 

How were we supposed to learn how to do something we never saw done? 

How were we we supposed to get good at something we never had the safety to practice? 

Emotional regulation is one of the most complex tasks human beings face— and it’s a particularly complex task when we’re dealing with the particularly intense, particularly painful feelings experienced by trauma survivors. 

I’ll say it again: we’re not born knowing how to do that. 

When we fail to receive training and support in learning how to do that— when our experiences TRYING to do that are met with scorn— not only do we NOT learn how to regulate our emotions…but we DO learn that the entire project of emotional regulation is fraught. 

We develop anxiety around it. 

Eventually we get in the habit of avoiding emotional regulation altogether— that is to say, we get in the habit of dissociating. 

Yeah. That’s how that happens. 

Realistic emotional regulation starts with refusing to beat ourselves up for not being great at it. 

It starts with accepting emotional regulation as something we need to, and can, learn as adults. 

It starts with meeting our struggles with emotional regulation with compassion and patience— because poor emotional regulation is a symptom of complex trauma, and the rule in trauma recovery is that we meet symptoms with compassion and patience. 

Actually, make that “radical compassion” and “infinite patience.” 

Our difficulties with emotional regulation are not our fault. 

Learning effective emotional regulation IS our responsibility— which is why we can’t afford to waste time with shaming and punishing ourselves. 

Easy does it. 

The power of recovery supporting rituals.

The quality of our trauma recovery is the quality of our recovery supporting rituals (RSR’s). 

Rituals are things we do every day, usually in some structured way. 

Our trauma recovery is not going to succeed or fail based on what we do every now and then. 

Truth is, we can have some pretty rough days in trauma recovery, and still be on an upward trajectory. 

But it’s also the case that interspersing the occasional recovery supporting behavior into a regular behavioral “diet” of recovery interfering behaviors won’t amount to much. 

If we’re serious and realistic about trauma recovery, we need recovery rituals. 

Your specific trauma recovery rituals are going to be unique to you. The things I do every day may or may not support you in your recovery. 

A big task of trauma recovery is getting curious and specific about about what habits of thought, focus, and behavior actually support our recovery, and turning these into rituals. 

Remember: in trauma recovery, the name of the game is rewiring our nervous system. 

We’ve been conditioned to think, feel, believe, and do certain things that, right now, are inconsistent with our recovery. 

If we we want to think, feel, believe, and do things that will support our recovery, we’re going to be up against the power of conditioning. The power of programming. 

Our nervous system isn’t going to like that we’re trying to change those particular neural pathways. Our nervous system never likes when we try to rewire conditioned neural pathways. 

Our nervous system would prefer we leave it the hell alone, to function the way it’s been conditioned to function, thank you very much. 

Interrupting old neural pathways that make make us vulnerable to trauma responses, and rerouting those neural pathways to very different places entails making making changes in the physical architecture, the physical structure, of our nervous system. 

We don’t do that by doing a different thing once or twice. 

We do that by doing a different thing over, and over, and over again. 

The whole process is similar to what happens when we strength train in the gym. At first, the whole process hurts. 

Our body would very much prefer we let it continue on not lifting those heavy weights, thank you very much. 

Strength training is painful because we are literally changing the physical structure of our body, and bodies resist being changed like that. 

The only way it’s going to work is to make going to the gym and lifting those weights a habit. A ritual. 

No one who ever built significant strength in their body did so by strength training every once in awhile, or when they felt like it. 

Similarly, no one who ever realistically, sustainably recovered from trauma did so by work their recovery every once in awhile, or when they felt like it. 

I know. I hate all this, too. 

I would much rather just go with the flow, and let my mood dictate my behavior. 

Many of us who grew up coerced or controlled get resentful when we’re told we “have to” do anything. 

Here’s the thing: none of us has to do, well, anything. 

We are completely free to keep living the way we’ve been living. 

But we are also free to decide that the cost of not working our recovery has gotten way too high. 

We’re free to choose the pain and hassle of recovery— of mental and spiritual “strength training”— over the pain and hassle of trauma responses and symptoms. 

If you care about it, ritualize it. 

If it works, ritualize it. 

If it’s essential to your trauma recovery, ritualize it. 

Rituals are how realistic trauma recovery is constructed. 

Complex trauma & self-expression.

There may be many reasons why we struggle to feel like we can express ourselves accurately— including complex trauma. 

Complex trauma is trauma that endured over time; that was functionally inescapable; and that entwined with our important relationships— that is, trauma we had to adapt to, that just became the context of our everyday life. 

After awhile, we may not have even realized complex trauma, was trauma. It’s one of the reasons so many complex trauma survivors struggle as adults to acknowledge themselves as “survivors.” 

When we grow up immersed in complex trauma, what we express, how we express it, and to whom we express it can become particularly fraught. 

If we’re growing up in an abusive family, church, or community, how we express ourselves mgt have ben heavily scrutinized. 

It may not have been safe or advisable to express certain things— including the easily observable reality of what was going on. 

A prolonged period  of heavily policed expression can do a real number on our beliefs about self-expression and our ability to express ourselves. 

One of the ways many survivors adapt to complex trauma is by internalizing the rules, attitudes, and beliefs of our abusers— because if we can police or punish ourselves, our nervous system reasons, we run less risk of getting into trouble with the people around us. 

Over time, self-censorship and self-punishment become so conditioned in us that we barely even realize we’re doing it— much like trauma became such a part of our everyday existence t became hard to recognize as “trauma.”

This conditioning then follows us, even after we’re away from our family or church or community— and we and ourselves out in the world, struggling to express things we feel should be “easy” to put words to. 

What’s more, even when we are able to put words to things, we often find ourselves doubting and questioning whether the words we’re using— or the body language and/or facial expressions that go with those words— are actually conveying what we think they are, or what we want to convey. 

So many survivors carry around such shame when it comes to our struggles with self-expression. 

We tell ourselves that communication should com “easy” to humans— after all, doesn’t it come “easy” to everybody else we know? 

We tell ourselves there must be something “wrong” with us, to have such anxiety about what seems to be such a normal behavior for so many other people. 

In trauma recovery we need to remember that we don’t, actually, know how “easy” or “hard” anything is for anyone else. We know how hard something, like self-expression, is for us, and we assume that everyone else must have it figured out. 

(They don’t, by the way. Lots of people struggle with self-expression for lots of reasons— whether or not they “seem” like it’s a problem for them or not.) 

We also need to remember that, even if we struggle with self-expression, that struggle makes sense given what we grew up with. It’s not a matter of intelligence— and it’s certainly not a “choice.” 

It’s not unusual for trauma survivors to be so anxious about self-expression that we literally practice what we’re going to say in advance, sometimes a lot. (I guarantee there are some survivors reading this who assumed they were the only ones who did that.) 

We get better at, and more confident with, self-expression as we get more practice at it— and as we get better at extending ourselves patience, compassion, and grace when it comes to ALL of our complex trauma symptoms and struggles. 

As with all of our symptoms and struggles, what is most important is that we not judge or belittle ourselves for it. 

Our symptoms are our symptoms. They can be frustrating, and they can present certain obstacles to our day to day living goals— but they are what they are. 

Our symptoms are not indictments of our “character,” or condemnations of our “intelligence;” and the are certainly not “choices.” 

Grace over guilt. As we work our recovery, we’re going to get lots of opportunities to practice self-expression. And hopefully, along the way, we’ll encounter people who are safe and trauma informed enough to prove us with useful, compassionate feedback on how we express ourselves. 

It’s a symptom. No more; no less.

And just like every symptom, we have to meet it in recovery with the patience, understanding, and care that its core wound requires. 

Trauma responses and “vibes.”

Sometimes our trauma responses will be directly traceable to things we clearly remember happening to us— but not always. 

Often our trauma responses can be triggered not by anything specific to our trauma— but by the “vibe” or “feel” of a situation. 

Our trauma responses always make sense, some way, somehow, at least to a part of us— but the “sense” they make isn’t necessarily logical or linear. 

This is why techniques of psychotherapy that try to get us to “logic” our way out of a feeling, like cognitive behavioral therapy, have never been my favorite tools— because trauma responses aren’t always, or even usually, about “logic.” 

Trauma survivors know well that the things we think and believe when we’re triggered into trauma responses have little or nothing to do with logic— even though we may “know,” in the moment, that we’re not responding “rationally.”

The fact that trauma responses are frequently triggered and depend by “vibes,” rather than any explicit connections to anything we remember experiencing, is also why I’ve always been kind of “meh” about exposure therapy for PTSD. 

There truly are some people out there who believe that trauma symptoms and struggles are mostly, or entirely, about how we remember and explicitly reexperience things from the past. 

Trauma survivors know: there are many ways to reexperience something— and many of those ways don’t have anything to do with an explicit memory. 

Post traumatic struggles are not just about what happened to us, or how we remember them. 

They’re about how what happened to us, affected us— notably our baseline level of anxiety, our beliefs, and our self-esteem. 

If trauma symptoms and struggles were “just” about what happened to us or our memories, PTSD would be easier to resolve. Maybe we could straightforwardly logic or expose our way out of it. 

But vibes? Vibes are harder to wrangle. 

We need to understand that our nervous system pays attention to context and subtext.

The details of a situation may or may not resemble anything we’ve ever experienced in the past— but our hypervigilant nervous system isn’t just sniffing for details. 

It’s sniffing for the “feel” of a situation or person. 

It’s sniffing for danger that our conscious mind may not register as danger. 

It’s sniffing for things we haven’t thought about or paid attention to. 

It’s sniffing for things that we may not even have the words to explain why they feel familiar in an awful way. 

If our nervous system becomes reactive to a trigger that we can’t quite put our finger on, or we can’t quite understand how it’s related to anything we’ve experienced, our job is to not deny, disown, or reject that reaction— but to get curious and respectful. 

Our first temptation, when a trauma response hits us, is often to list reasons why our response is illegitimate. Why it “doesn’t make sense.” Why we “shouldn’t” be having it. 

I need you to resist that temptation. 

The fact that we don’t understand a trauma response in the moment isn’t nearly as important as how we respond to it. 

We are not going to diminish the intensity of a trauma response by invalidating it, any more than we’re going to banish the thought of a pink elephant by repeating, “don’t think about a pink elephant, there’s no reason to think about a pink elephant.” 

The skill involved here is what we call “radical acceptance.” Radical acceptance doesn’t ‘mean we LIKE a particular response— it means we accept the reality and legitimacy of a response even, especially, if we don’t like it. 

If we’re serious about decreasing our vulnerability to trauma responses, we’ve gotta give up this BS (Belief System) that we “need” to understand them, or that they “need” to have a clear connection to our trauma history to be “legitimate.” 

Lead off with acceptance. 

Lead off with the assumption that this response makes sense— some way, somehow, to some part of you. 

Lead off with compassion and patience. 

You know— like with any symptom, thought, feeling, response, or need you have in trauma recovery. 

Breathe; blink; focus. 

You’re getting better. 

Don’t worry about pretty or perfect. Get through the day.

Trauma recovery tip: focus on getting through the day. Don’t worry if it’s pretty. Don’t worry if it’s perfect. 

(Trust me: it’s not gonna be pretty OR perfect. Not now, anyway. And that doesn’t matter.) 

For many survivors working our trauma recovery, it’s a daily battle to not get into our head about whether or not we’re dong this “right.” 

“This” could be anything, from recovery, to parenting, to our professional role, to being a son or daughter. 

Our trauma conditioning really, really loves to tell us that we’re doing most of what we do “wrong.” 

Trauma Brain will have a whole list of things we’ve done wrong, in the short term and the longer term, if we ask it. 

Remember what what Trauma Brain is: it’s the internalized voices, beliefs, and attitudes of our bullies and abusers— whether those bullies and abusers happened to be people, or communities, or churches. 

Trauma Brain represents what we took in— what now feels “right,” because it feels familiar. 

Much of our everyday programming is just us regurgitating what we were told and what we saw modeled. 

For many of us, that means we’re telling ourselves how much we suck, and we’re reenacting patterns of being cruel to ourselves— because we were often told how much we suck, and we often experienced people being cruel to us. 

For many of us, the self-cruelty kicks in so automatically, so reflexively, that we barely notice it. It just feels “right.” We don’t even acknowledge it as something that was conditioned in us— and something that may not represent reality. 

When we do have the thought that maybe the the things we have on repeat in our head may not be exactly true, we often use it as an opportunity to be even crueler to ourselves— because how could we think such stupid things? 

It’s real important to remember: these patterns of mental focus and self-talk that are kicking our ass aren’t “choices” were making. We are responding to conditioning. We are running programs that were “installed” by repeated experiences. 

The fact that we can, with practice, learn to shift our focus and choose different self talk doesn’t mean we suffered for years because of poor “choices.” 

We didn’t know what we didn’t know; and we couldn’t do what we couldn’t do. 

We do better as we learn better; as we take the risk, again and again, of being kind to and patient with ourselves, in defiance of old programming that insists we don’t “deserve” it. 

We do not need to radically shift how we talk to or behave toward ourselves today. That would be awesome; but that’s not how realistic, sustainable trauma recovery tends to work. 

Don’t worry about switching up everything in your nervous system today. Remember: the name of the game is getting though today, 1% safer, 1% more stable. 

I will take realistic, sustainable, 1% nudges over dramatic, unsustainable shifts every day. 

Usually the quest to do our trauma recovery— or anything else— “perfectly” is a distraction. A trap. A red herring. 

Usually the drive toward “perfection”— can you imagine, “perfection,” in a project as gritty and chaotic as trauma recovery?— is Trauma Brain trying to derail us with an unrealistic, unnecessary side quest. 

Don’t worry about pretty or perfect. My own recovery has been anything but. As has the recovery of almost everyone I know who has stuck with it. 

You just focus on getting through the day. 

Which means getting through the hour. 

Which means getting through this minute. This one, right here. 

Spending these few minutes reading this blog was a good start. 

See, lookit you— making Recovery Supporting Decisions (RSD’s) even as you sit there. 

You’re on the right track. 

Just keep baby stepping.

The little steps will add up. 

Not immediately. Often not in ways that will keep us consistently motivated. 

But they will add up. They will go somewhere. 

Many survivors in trauma recovery struggle with taking those little steps, not because we’re not motivated, and not because we’re not committed— but because our trauma conditioning has led us to believe it’s pointless to take any steps. 

One of the symptoms of PTSD is a sense of a “foreshortened future.” 

What that means is, we come to believe that either the world or our life is going to be ending soon anyway, so what’s the point of anything? 

This sense of foreshortened future can lead to what I call “doom attacks”— which are kind of like panic attacks, only instead of intense bursts of panic, they’re sudden, overwhelming feelings that The End Is Near and Everything is Hopeless. 

It’s hard to convince ourselves to take even baby steps when we’re convinced The End Is Near and Everything Is Pointless. 

We need to be clear about the fact that all of this is Trauma Brain creating noise to distract and derail us from our trauma recovery. 

Then truth is, little steps do add up. In fact, almost every big piece of movement in trauma recovery, or any long term project, is the end result of consistent, purposeful baby steps. 

Everybody who has ever worked a trauma recovery has done so baby step, after baby step, after baby step. 

What we need to remember, as we’re taking our little steps, is that trajectory is more important than speed. 

It matters more that our steps are consistent and headed in the right direction, than how fast we’re stepping or the size of our steps. 

The power of our trauma conditioning lies in its consistency. We were conditioned over, and over, and over, usually over the course of years. We were told certain things over, and over, and over. We were treated in certain ways over, and over, and over. 

Our trauma conditioning has a significant head start on our recovery reconditioning. 

That said, our trauma conditioning cannot, will not, outlast our baby steps toward recovery— provided we don’t get discouraged and get inconsistent with our baby steps. 

One thing I learned running marathons is: you absolutely WILL reach the finish line, if you keep moving forward. It may not be fast, it may not be pretty— but you WILL get there. 

Trauma recovery is the same way. 

We WILL create and live a life worth living— if we keep moving forward with purpose and consistency. 

Our trauma conditioning is not infinite. It can feel infinite, because by the time we get around to understanding what it is and trying to do something about it, it’s usually been kicking our ass for the majority of our life. 

But it is not infinite, and it is not set in stone. In fact, every scrap of modern neuropsych research tells us that our brain is far more malleable for far longer, than we ever previously suspected. 

If we keep taking purposeful little steps in the direction of meaningful recovery, if we stay consistent, if we don’t let the bad days and the apparent lack of progress get up in our head— we will win. 

I don’t need to you be enthusiastic about recovery every day. No one is enthusiastic about recovery every day. I’m not enthusiastic about my recovery every day. 

I don’t need you to have perfect faith in yourself or your recovery every day. Take it from me: your level of “faith” in this whole process is going to be wildly variable day to day. 

I don’t need you to truly believe that every baby step matters. If you’re having a day where you think nothing matters, that’s okay— have whatever kind of day you need to have. 

But I do need you taking the baby steps. 

I do need you nudge, nudge, nudging toward the life you envision. 

I do need you doing the things, even if you’re not feeling the love at this moment. 

Every survivor who has meaningfully recovered from trauma, has at multiple points doubted their ability to recovery from trauma. 

And every survivor who has ever meaningfully recovered from trauma has done so because they kept baby stepping on days when they assumed it was all pointless. 

Don’t believe everything you think. 

Just keep baby stepping.