I wish I knew more about it. It's a word my T tossed into conversation.
I spend so much time analyzing my behaviors and those of my abusers. I've developed a lot of theories, but I am not a doc!- well not yet. ;)
We are all different. We process the pain differently. The common thread we all hold is that our physical bodies 'remember' and 'remind' us of the past. How frequently? I think that is up to the individual body and environmental factors.
I know that, for myself, I am still stunned sometimes to think of how I was treated. I cannot wrap my mind around how my abusers 'rationalized' their actions. That's probably the 'so shocked to have been wronged' part for me. I just don't get why they would do those things and I probably never will.
You really nailed it for me; at the Nuremberg trials, the Jewish prosecutor (I can't remember his name) defined evil as "the absence of compassion," which allowed people to rationalize anything. However I will go one better, and say that it's the
arrogance of condescension, whereby compassion is seen as an "irrational, emotional weakness," and therefore cruelty becomes a sign of superior intellect and self-control. My own childhoood-therapist even took this attitude on me when he said that I was using emotions to manipulate my parents, when I didn't want to be imprisoned in a mental institution, simply because I was being abused at school.
Saying "shocked to be wronged" pertains to a legal infraction called "intentional infliction of emotional abuse," or IIED, which can either be some conduct which "shocks the conscience," or which deliberately affects a sensitivity that the person has. Most often, those of us with CPTSD are susceptible to unintended slights due to our past injuries, while
deliberate ones can send us into full breakdown-- thus the "shocked to be wronged" idea.
In short, we're often told to just throw caution to the wind and "play with fire" by socializing as if nothing's wrong; and of course no one would dream of such risky behavior with any other condition-- but again PTSD is too easily and too often blamed on the victim with a thousand cliches that we're "taking it too seriously" or "self-pity" or even rationalizations for deliberate abuse.
The conclusion is that I have to know and accept myself without judgment, and not debase myself by trying to force something that doesn't want to go-- and also you have to make that clear to others, and even avoid them altogether if possible.
And be prepared for all the negative labels and stigmas you'll get--but don't internalize it, realize that's it's just a form of control. Just be sure no one spreads negative rumors about you, since that's defamatory, as well as invasive of your privacy, and you can make them stop it by threatening legal action.
Mainly, I'm afraid of others finding out about my condition, and incurring stigmas from it, since it's such a vulnerable position to be in.