Firstly... you don't have to look at your past as your starting point. There are a few key points which many often miss when it comes to trauma therapy of any type, being:
- Your home environment must be stable, safe and supportive.
- You must be able to manage your emotional stability during trauma therapy (techniques, cognitive functioning).
- You must know relaxation and stress relief techniques, and have them implemented within your life, prior to trauma therapy.
They are the three golden rules, regardless the type of trauma. The length these take is what varies based on the individual and trauma type / severity / combination with the individual personality.
Sometimes this is all done on the fly with trauma therapy... though with complex trauma, its a MUST that you have these in place before you even think about facing fears.
Trauma therapy does not necessarily mean you have to remember the past, or even revisit your entire past. Trauma therapy is about the present, not about the past. The past has defined the problems you live with in the present, and some of the answers do lay within the past, so there is a guarantee that you will have to delve into the past for some aspects in order to piece together a resolution for the present and future.
Trauma therapy in essence is a combination of past, present and future. Thats what it really is. Its not just past, past, past, trauma, trauma, trauma.
What you felt in the past is often irrelevant, because what you felt during trauma, or when you were a child, you cannot distinguish or isolate with accuracy, more often than not, and then present emotion can be vastly different from past emotion. Emotion evolves... so its about what you feel now, based on what you endured in the past.
Long story short... if you don't have those three things completely sorted above, then you need to before you start delving into trauma therapy.
Like people have said above... relationships are broken whilst trying to do trauma therapy. Yet the relationship is broken due to the trauma.... its a pickle of a situation, no doubt about it... but one way or another, you have to stepup and sort that relationship out first before you get into trauma therapy. Whether it lives or dies, you will choose and act accordingly at that time. Those who rebuild their relationships usually have a solid stance into trauma therapy, because that is an action that you perform, you invoke change to make your relationship more healthy... which is a foundational attribute of trauma therapy. People who accomplish this often fly through trauma therapy.
Saying that... some relationships are too far gone, so its better to split, recover, get your life stable by yourself, then get into trauma therapy, then once you are in a much better place after a year or two, then review relationships, as a relationship is a massive stressor within your life whether you know it or not. Some good stress, some bad stress.