I think the anxiety around talking about “parts” in the context of trauma is the seriously overused language of DID, to where if you mention part of you reacting in X way, or feeling Y people start thinking about multiple personalities or alters.
I think I’m fact we all have different parts to our personality - partvof ne is very outgoing, enthusiastic and supportive, I can also be incredibly organised, efficient and planned in what I do, part of me can really react and over react emotionally to particular triggers. They’re all part of me and show up at different times, but they’re all me - not different identities and not alters, just different facets of my personality or different configurations of me.
I too have a part that completely shuts down in therapy sometimes, I have a part of me that wants my Ts attention and affection and part of me that feels very very young in therapy. And part of me that knows those other parts are all just expressing needs that are hard to verbalise. Some people truly do have different complete personalities within them, but it’s much rarer than we’d like to think.
I’m saying all of that because what you’re describing, the conflicting feelings, and different parts of your process sound very normal - as in people without PTSD would recognise much of what you describe in themselves.
I think I’m fact we all have different parts to our personality - partvof ne is very outgoing, enthusiastic and supportive, I can also be incredibly organised, efficient and planned in what I do, part of me can really react and over react emotionally to particular triggers. They’re all part of me and show up at different times, but they’re all me - not different identities and not alters, just different facets of my personality or different configurations of me.
I too have a part that completely shuts down in therapy sometimes, I have a part of me that wants my Ts attention and affection and part of me that feels very very young in therapy. And part of me that knows those other parts are all just expressing needs that are hard to verbalise. Some people truly do have different complete personalities within them, but it’s much rarer than we’d like to think.
I’m saying all of that because what you’re describing, the conflicting feelings, and different parts of your process sound very normal - as in people without PTSD would recognise much of what you describe in themselves.