I'm finding moving on from trauma difficult. Understandably while I was actively dealing with it (cutting ties abusive fam) I was stressed, anxious etc but now its a year since its calmed down and I am actually safe and yet....I feel exceptionally fragile, anxious, etc. And life is moving on around me, my mum (who is awesome) is about to be diagnosed with a chronic disease so I'm taking care of her and trying to deal with it...but I'm feeling so ineffective with it all. Any thoughts? Thankz.
About 2 years ago I cut all ties with my family for the sake of my trauma recovery. The process set off worsened flashbacks, dissociation, panic attacks, etc. I figured once I settled into life without them it would all go away. Instead, 2 years later Iâm still more fragile than I was before. Iâm ok when locked away at home blocking the world out, but going out at all is really hard for me.Â
The thing is, trauma is much more than a reaction to something traumatic. It is a rewiring of your brain. It makes you more susceptible to stress and anxiety. It tends to make you assume the worst possible outcome and fear the worst of people as a warped form of protection. It changes the way your brain responds to stress. It causes so many physical changes that just because youâre no longer in contact with the people who abused you that doesnât mean the signs of the trauma go away. As long as you have sources of stress in your life, like we all do, you have opportunities for your brain to mistake benign situations for dangerous ones and cause too much fight or flight response than a situation calls for. You donât always respond to a situation, like being safe, in a way that recognizes the fact that you are safe. Your brain is wired to look for danger in every situation so youâll never be caught off guard.Â
Patience, self-awareness, acceptance, and exposing yourself to situations that cause you anxiety until you gradually decrease your reactions to them will help you over time. Exposure therapy is fantastic if you can afford a therapist. Dialectical behavioral therapy skills are great. Thereâs a workbook thatâs used in most DBT therapy groups and sessions you can buy on Amazon.
Having chronic diseases myself, donât take on too much when it comes to supporting your mom. Be there for her and do what you can, but do so without taking on her pain over it or all the worry about it. When it comes to my husband taking care of me when I canât take care of myself, itâs very important to me that he not take on my feelings about my health and that he not put any responsibility on himself to fix me or take my pain or sadness away. I just want him to be available and not judge me for what I canât do. Â









