Re-enacting takes its toll.
As a child, there was no escape and thus helplessness. The child doesn’t choose the situation, but was ushered into it.
As an adult, the pain looks more like trusting the self and others, only to be met with the same deadly patterns.
If one was manipulated and had shattered trust as a child?
This person will be manipulated and will have trust shattered as an adult.
But now there’s the layer of adult responsibility.
In this example, the adult has been manipulated and their trust in others and themselves is broken.
And because the adult is not a child, it will be their fault and responsibility, even though much of what is going on is unconscious.
Even though being victim to multiple manipulations and betrayals shouldn’t make the sufferer the ‘unstable’ or ‘mad/crazy’.
Even though being on the receiving end of manipulations often is thought of as the person “not responsible.”
Right. They’re not responsible, unless their life is a broken record of manipulative abuse.
Now all the sudden, it’s somehow become this persons responsibility.
If sufferers don’t get better at learning to be more careful with trust and spotting manipulations and liars, or whatever is at the source of the ‘trauma that breaks you’, they will be doomed to repeat the harms of the past.
Harms where there already are scars.
Re-enacting is slashing into the scar tissue of old and deep wounds, then rubbing the exposed bloody flesh in salt.
Living a life with damaged trust is painful.
Living life while trusting too much is painful if that is what is at the core of the “breaks you” trauma.
Living life with zero trust is unfortunately not possible or sustainable.
Good luck figuring that mess out.
PTSD and re-experiencing is a catch 22.
It feels like no matter how much one learns, works on oneself, and improves, life can and will take away one’s support systems, remove safety cues, and add stress and activate triggers. This overwhelming pressure, and feeling of helplessness despite years of work and best efforts, that is what re-enacting is. And when the PTSD sufferer’s cup is full and the trigger goes off? The aftermath is the sufferer’s responsibility.
When the person with PTSD can’t be a Superhuman, if this person can’t do ‘good enough’, if there is one slip, one moment of giving into the temptation of a trigger- which is often not a choice (see the cups explanation), the sufferer is shoved back into a personal hell. This is beyond frustrating.
And it’s still PTSD sufferer’s responsibility for not doing better.
CPTSD is not just a mental health condition. It’s not just brains misfiring, or the guts reading the room wrong, or a misfiring nervous system.
Medications may help some people with symptoms, but that’s not at the heart of the issue. It’s not at the core of PTSD and they will never ‘solve’ the problem.
Life with CPTSD and PTSD is living with a curse. And some curses are damn near impossible to break.