Trauma Is Not Your Fault, But Healing Is Your Responsibility

Raised by Wolves, Possibly Monsters - From Mobster To Reiki Master - healthy Masculinity - recovery - healing - self-help - traumaBook Release: Raised by Wolves, Possibly Monsters – From Mobster to Reiki Master, A Memoir of Awakening & Transformation. Find out more about this exciting new book here.

Buy Your Copy Now!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We all come into this life with stuff to unpack and learn.  Some of us have entered life with more significant challenges than others.  It can be said that ALL OF US have endured trauma in one form or another. This can mean being neglected as children, being abused as a child, teen or adult, military, sexual assault and rape, alcoholism and drug addiction, poverty, and racial and cultural issues, just to name a few forms of trauma. We all experience these challenges in different ways. It has become widespread for self-help and pop psychology “gurus” to present pathology as a singular, logical pattern that explains life experiences through a lens that, in all cases, “this means that” and all people experience “this and that” the same. It is false and damaging to the millions of people who read or hear these claims and wonder why it is not valid for them.  We have our shared experiences but in our own unique way. That is one of the joys of being human!

No two people experience trauma the same, but there are enough common traits to share and learn from each other and gain support and camaraderie.  I can learn from you and vice-versa.  I remember when my cousin returned from Vietnam, he would not discuss what happened to anyone. Then, one day, a friend of his who was also a Vietnam vet was over. He talked and talked about what he saw and did for hours. We were all surprised after not hearing him speak about it for more than a paragraph after being home for several years.  The same applies to people participating in Twelve-Step or cancer survivor groups. Shared experiences help us feel like we belong and we are not alone. This is important in moving forward through traumatic experiences.

Trauma Is Not Your Fault, But Healing Is Your Responsibility 0 Michael Swerdloff - Providence Holistic Counseling, Coaching and Reiki

The challenge is to navigate life after the trauma and not get lost in the weight of the experiences. Trauma can hijack a life in a flash. Many people struggle with these issues throughout their lives and never really feel “safe” again. Our trauma is not our fault; it’s not. Shifting the story is! Recovering from trauma is not an event; it is a process. We experience trauma on many levels and parts of our personality and body. Trauma can be experienced in various forms within our nervous systems, some obvious and some buried. Recovering from trauma takes time.

We may experience a giant leap forward and feel like we are on the other side of it, and then, one day, we get blindsided by a memory or something that pokes the still-open wound. It can be disheartening when we feel like nothing has changed. This is not true. We fail to account for the depth of the scars and how many aspects of our being have been affected that may still need to be addressed. Many people need help finding their way at this stage of their development. They feel that “all this work was a waste of time and it will always be leak this for me.” This is also false.  This is where most people get stuck and go through life without ever achieving balance, security, and a sense of being “OK.” It is our responsibility to move past this stage of recovery.

We are NEEDED! We deserve to feel safe and solid. We deserve to experience life, unlike a constant battle to tread water. Life does NOT have to be this way.  Our responsibility is to our friends, family, coworkers, and every human we encounter. It is our responsibility to be stable and balanced. This will not look the same for all of us. Stability and balance express themselves differently in each of our unique lives. For one person, stability means keeping a job and the same residence for many years; to someone else, it means NOT feeling they need to live or work somewhere long-term. The specifics are less important than “I am OK and will be OK.” This is our responsibility.

Trauma Is Not Your Fault, But Healing Is Your Responsibility

It was not something you asked for, it was not something you deserved.

What happened to you was not fair.

You were merely collateral damage on someone else’s warpath, an innocent bystander who got wrecked out of proximity.

We are all traumatized by life, some of us from egregious wrongdoings, others by unprocessed pain and sidelined emotions. No matter the source, we are all handed a play of cards, and sometimes, they are not a winning hand.

Yet what we cannot forget is that even when we are not at fault, healing in the aftermath will always fall on us — and instead of being burdened by this, we can actually learn to see it as a rare gift.

 

Trauma – Healing Is Our Responsibility

Healing is our responsibility because if it isn’t, an unfair circumstance becomes an unlived life.

Healing is our responsibility because unprocessed pain gets transferred to everyone around us, and we are not going to allow what someone else did to us to become what we do to those we love.

Healing is our responsibility because we have this one life, this single shot to do something meaningful.

Healing is our responsibility because if we want our lives to be different, sitting and waiting for someone else to make them so will not actually change them. It will only make us dependent and bitter.

Healing is our responsibility because we have the power to heal ourselves, even if we have previously been led to believe we don’t.

Healing is our responsibility because we are uncomfortable, and discomfort almost always signals a place in life in which we are slated to rise up and transform.

Healing is our responsibility because every great person you deeply admire began with every odd against them, and learned their inner power was no match for the worst of what life could offer.

Healing is our responsibility because “healing” is actually not returning to how and who we were before, it is becoming someone we have never been — someone stronger, someone wiser, someone kinder.

Trauma – Healing Begins

When we heal, we step into the people we have always wanted to be. We are not only able to metabolize the pain, we are able to affect real change in our lives, in our families, and in our communities. We are able to pursue our dreams more freely. We are able to handle whatever life throws at us, because we are self-efficient and assured. We are more willing to dare, risk, and dream of broader horizons, ones we never thought we’d reach.

The thing is that when someone else does something wrong and it affects us, we often sit around waiting for them to take the pain away, as though they could come along and undo what has been done.

We fail to realize that in that hurt are the most important lessons of our lives, the fertile breeding ground upon which we can start to build everything we really want.

 

Trauma – Time To Change Our Story

We are not meant to get through life unscathed.

We are not meant to get to the finish line unscarred, clean and bored.

Life hurts us all in different ways, but it is how we respond — and who we become — that determines whether a trauma becomes a tragedy, or the beginning of the story of how the victim became the hero.

This article originally appeared in Thought Catalog.

Trauma Is Not Your Fault, But Healing Is Your Responsibility 0 Michael Swerdloff - Providence Holistic Counseling, Coaching and Reiki

 

I am interested in hearing about your experiences regarding the need to recover from trauma and our responsibility to those in our lives. What about our commitment to ourselves? What is our responsibility in healing trauma(s) that are not our fault?

Trauma Is Not Your Fault, But Healing Is Your Responsibility 0 Michael Swerdloff - Providence Holistic Counseling, Coaching and Reiki - Ruminator quote

Other Posts you may enjoy:

Building Bridges or Building Walls

Acknowledging Pain Is Highest Form of Support

Anger A Secondary Emotion – What Are We Protecting?

Listening as an Art and Skill to Improving Relationships

Does Kindness Make You More Attractive? Research Says Yes

 

Michael Swerdloff

Providence Counseling, Coaching and Reiki


10 Replies to "Trauma Is Not Your Fault, But Healing Is Your Responsibility"


Leave a Reply