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Heal the Emotional Pain Connected to Complex PTSD

August 3, 2019 Traci Powell

It takes time, but you can heal the emotional pain of complex posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Living with PTSD brings intense emotional pain. Complex PTSD comes from many incidences of interpersonal trauma. This results in often unbearable hurt as you consider all of the people in your life who have let you down or abused you. Sometimes, it can feel as if it's a gaping wound in your soul that will never heal. 

Even after a lot of emotional healing, I still have that ache that clenches my chest every now and then. Just when I start to believe I've released all of the hurt, a sight, smell, sound or look in someone's eye brings it back. While I manage my reaction to those triggers much better than I used to, they still bring pain with them, if even just for a minute. 

Triggering, Not Healing the Emotional Pain of PTSD

My abuse often came after my abusers tricked me with nice words or fake acts of kindness. Today, those things trigger my fear brain. While I know logically that nice words and acts of kindness today are not ill-intended like they were in my childhood, my brain is having trouble catching up to the message that it's safe to trust no harm will follow them. 

Good equals bad in my brain. So, in my life today, happiness itself is a trigger, and I've recently come to realize my worst depressive episodes happen when things are going great in my life. My subconscious mind is trying to protect me because it believes bad things will follow.

When I'm triggered that subconscious moment always comes that says "Horrible things happened to you. How could you think it's alright to be happy and not be in extreme pain?"

So, I find myself shutting down the good that is coming in and getting pulled to the dark side. That is the opposite of healing emotional pain.

The Difficulty of Healing from Emotional Pain with PTSD

Emotional pain can actually be worse than physical pain because people often judge those who live with devastating emotional pain, suggesting if the person would just "look on the bright side" or "stop dwelling on it," they could easily bounce back and all would be right with the world. 

Even after some serious work to repair the wound and heal the pain, unlike most physical injuries, emotional wounds may be ripped wide open again and again. Deep hurts from childhood are especially vulnerable to tearing open, which is why during my happiest of times, the pain I feel can be the most unbearable.

No one would tell someone with a broken leg, "Hey, you don't need help. Just look on the bright side -- you have another leg!" They wouldn't say, "You just need to take your mind off of the fact that you can no longer walk."

Instead, the person with the broken leg would be taken for help. Their pain would be managed and their injury mended. When you live with intense emotional pain, you have just as much right to healing as someone with a physical problem.

How to Heal the Emotional Pain of PTSD

Heal the Emotional Pain of PTSD by First Learning to Lessen It

As a survivor of childhood abuse, you can get stuck in black-and-white thinking and believe that unless your pain is completely gone, you will never be healed. Maybe though, it's not about the pain being completely gone. You have a right to hurt over the bad things that were done to you. Maybe it's more about finding a way to lessen the intensity of the pain so it doesn't completely overwhelm you. 

It's important to find a space in the middle of black and white where life isn't extremely happy or extremely sad. When I stop judging myself and the pain I experience but instead listen to my gut that says I'm allowed to feel bad about what happened to me, my heavy load feels a little lighter. When I embrace the little girl in me the holds all of the pain in my chest, I lift her spirits. She and I have a good cry together, pick up the pieces and go on until it's time to do it again. 

As humans, we have a natural drive to run from pain but that doesn't heal emotional pain. The problem is when good things of today trigger that pain, your natural drive can also become running from positive experiences because you don't want to feel the pain that you know will follow. This keeps you from having access to good feelings, though, which are the antidotes to your pain. Sometimes, you can get so stuck on the hamster wheel of running from the pain that you may never let in joy or even a smile.

Heal the Emotional Pain of PTSD 20 Seconds at a Time

When you allow yourself to feel the bad stuff, you take away its power. You learn it will not break you. Allowing yourself to take in the good stuff fills up the spaces that right now may only hold fear, shame, and pain. 

If you can allow yourself just 15 to 20 seconds of taking in good things, like compliments and positive experiences, your brain literally begins to rewire itself. It begins to see things in a new light and learns that it doesn't immediately have to prepare to fight to save you from the bad it believes will follow. 

Even if you can't believe the good is real in that one moment, over time, the 15 to 20 second moments add up. Your brain will begin to change and the message that you are safe and can be happy will eventually set in. Eventually, the good will outweigh the pain, so when the hurt you feel starts to sneak in, having access to the pile of the good of today helps keep the pain from yesterday from hurting quite so much. 

So, this is my challenge to myself. I am choosing to not immediately run away from compliments or good experiences in my life. It's been challenging. My instinctual drive to run for my life still kicks in. I'm learning though, that I don't need to give in to that urge. My world doesn't collapse just because I took 20 seconds to be in the moment. Even more, I'm learning that even though the pain may always be nearby, I have the capacity to acknowledge it, sooth it and then move on until the next time. In this way, I'm slowly healing my emotional pain.

Try to apply this challenge to your life. When someone says something nice to you or a good thing happens, give yourself just 20 seconds to be in the moment. You don't have to be filled with warm fuzzies. Just don't allow yourself to run away. Only for 20 seconds. Over time, as you keep allowing in the good of today, when the pain of yesterday starts to creep in, you will know that you can handle it. In time, you can heal the emotional pain of PTSD.

APA Reference
Powell, T. (2019, August 3). Heal the Emotional Pain Connected to Complex PTSD, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, April 25 from https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/traumaptsdblog/2019/8/heal-the-emotional-pain-connected-to-complex-ptsd



Author: Traci Powell

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Natalie Ann Lampros
July, 18 2021 at 6:29 am

I have been struggling immensely and feel So alone in my pain. This has helped me feel less alone. I constantly am waiting to be "healed" and i feel incredibly guilty I am not. Thank you for c
Helping me free myself of that guilt.

Debbie. VENTURABEACHCA
October, 6 2019 at 4:21 am

Thank you so much..I've been researching Since Saint Patricks day this year bnb when my 2 children, mynworld, came to me for answers to those questions they didn't knownhow to ask. They were used, both of them, my now 30 yo beautiful son was held hostage and kept f er om me, so a turned 40 yo.drug attich would have a roof over His head and he couldn't stay at his ogar old parents house either, UNLESS, he had my son to care for. Not only did he rob him of his childhood after he never left my side for two years he kept on for absolutely no reason, then overloaded him with extreme psychological abuse and allianiated us from each other then he FORCED HIM to go to some stranger.pschy to FIX my son when asking for me still...tormented, then unbelievably BLAMED him for everything that he did to.him. My son is DEVASTATED. He qlready hated my guts and 30, Masters in Pschy and hes on the verge of lo9sing everything, every single thing and Hes so upset and cant put one piece together in that puzzle...he just kept saying he didn't do anything wrong and He.doesnt even remember who i am when he say our picture on my table, over over 10 years, erased he is so upset and frustrated mad he left while my daughter couldnt stop crying and only got out " if I'd only mm made different choices we'd all been together". It happened to me..the nonstop abuse does tramatize little babies, children growing upwhen it never ends until you ezcape if you can. I didn't do anything but have the cult mother and fall down abusive angry husband SHE married and watched him abuse me and before died tow his 3rd aim with the gun and shoot me for no reason. There were 4 kids and 2 of them. She watched bored like and the others joined in when they got their urges. I di DC everything I could to stay away age appropriate no resources but behind those doors i was in trouble and my love for my two children even though they hate my guts..i know its not me they hate its as ll the insidious lies nonstop. My daughter was first kidnapped planned by that mother and yo sister when she was 10 mos old and i was forty. Then i immediately took greyhound across to the other end of the country and got her back. Then that bit..and. her mom sat in the computer room making up their lies to now take my daughter....real reason..same as her. Mother's. She didnt like her husband bothering her either and he wanted a baby girl, so that is why she did the same things to her...Ive been writing my own words very vey carefully not to give blame or force them into ANY more choices..because I KNOW from experience..it WILL push both of them,over the edge....THIS ABUSE IN EVERY WAY....TAKES YOUR MEMORIES AWAY...YOU ARE NOT ABLE TO LOVE RIGHT...THIS IS THE FIRST TIME IVE SAID THIS TRUE FACT AND ITS NEVER BEEN SAID IN DECORATE ARTICLES.....THEY TAKE YOUR MEMORIES AND CONTINUE TO GO ABOUT THEIR LIVES LIKE IT OK, NOTHING HAPPENED, AND THEY STARTED CALLING ME A LIAR JUST WHEN THEY THOUGHT, PROACTIVE I MIGHT FINALLY SAY SOMETHING.......THIS ARTICLE IS PROBABLY NO 75 IN 7 MONTHS......AND THANK YOU...ITS PERFECT, IT HAD TO BE IN SOMEONE'S WORDS BUT NOT MYNE.......I NEED TO TELL THEM ITS OK NOT TO BE OK SOMETIMES....I CANT TELL THEM THE TRUTH...BUT ITS A TRAIL AND AVAILABLE.....RIGHT NOW THEY DIDNT EVEN KNOW WHERE THEY WERE EITHER BY THE SIGN ON MY APARTMENT WALL...THEIR BOTH REALLY REALLY BAD FROM WHAT THOSE SADISTIC MALIGINANT NARCISSISTS DID FOR THEIR ENJOYMENT......THEY TOOK MY WORLD I LOVED AND LOVE MORE THAN ANYTHING IN THIS WORLD AND THEY HURT THEM FOR NO REASON....1ST IS HELPING MY BABIES.....MY HURT DOESNT MATTER, THE DO, NEXT I'LL RETURN THAT INTENSE HATRED TO THE RIGHTFUL OWNERS AND I NEVER HURT A FLY BEFORE.....

Michelle ollerenshaw
August, 3 2019 at 3:58 pm

Very helpful post it's so true with complex PTSD to blame yourself for all the abuse you endured you feel guilt because you not functioning properly affects the people closest to you and you feel shame because you feel like you allowed this to happen and wasn't strong enough to stop the abuse I live in hope that one day this will get better x

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