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But you're discarding the answer you just gave, being people move at their own pace. Trauma recovery is what I have always referred to as "baby steps." Because you will learn to crawl, then stumble, fall, eventually you will walk, then run.I watch other people on this forum moving forward, each at their own pace
So... is anyone who causes that much damage to you, really good for you? That is more rhetorical at present, because you need to change your core beliefs first before the answer to that will actually validate for you. Like you said, you know the answer, but you have your negative belief structure in place presently reinforcing itself. When that changes, you will change and go further forward.At first it just made me hate myself, but over the years it's gradually cost me pretty much everything I worked my ass off for: career, home, friends, family
You would have to toss me into that box, because this is similarly where I started. I had no idea about PTSD, trauma, na da. Nothing. Therapists were trying to get me to talk about trauma and things way above my head. It was on my PTSD course, specific here to veterans, where the baby steps concept was introduced to me, and to stop thinking in days, weeks, months, but instead years and it takes as long as it takes."good grief, how pathetic am I with these totally basic concepts"
there is a logical process, you start at the basics and you DO NOT progress until you have the basics understood and implemented. You can often pin point in peoples recovery failures where and why they failed at a specific stage,