The world feels intense and heavy at the moment. For some people, even just opening the news can feel activating.
Stories about abuse of power, like the reporting around the Epstein files, alongside constant coverage of conflict and war, mean many people are being exposed to distressing material throughout the day.
For survivors of trauma, this can have a particular impact. When the news contains themes that echo past experiences like abuse of power, exploitation, violence, secrecy, or people not being believed, it can activate old memory networks. Trauma memories are stored alongside emotional and bodily responses, which means reminders can trigger the nervous system even when the events being reported are far away.
People might notice a sense of dread, anger, intrusive thoughts, or simply feeling unsettled in their body.
These responses are not a sign of being overly sensitive. They reflect how the brain and body respond when past experiences of threat are reactivated.
At the same time, many people feel a responsibility to stay informed. The aim is not necessarily to turn away from reality, but to notice what exposure to these stories is doing internally and to create small moments of connection or grounding alongside it.
And of course, for those living in places directly affected by conflict or violence, the sense of threat may be very real. In those situations, the nervous system’s response is not simply a trauma echo but an understandable response to ongoing danger.
When the world feels overwhelming, noticing what is being activated inside you and gently seeking connection where you can helps bring the nervous system back towards a sense of safety.
#trauma #traumahealing #traumarecovery #conflict
As a child, if your worth was measured by how little you needed and how much you achieved, rest, need, and vulnerability can feel unsafe now.
Children don’t stop needing. They just adapt. Attachment research shows that when caregivers respond more positively to competence than to vulnerability, children quickly learn what maintains connection. Achievement, calmness, self-sufficiency, and emotional control become strategies for staying close.
Over time, this can organise the nervous system around performance. You may feel most secure when you’re productive or most valued when you’re useful. Maybe you feel most connected when you’re impressive.
And when you’re tired, overwhelmed, or in need then your body may register that as risk. It’s an adaptive response to an environment where dependency didn’t consistently feel safe.
The difficulty is that what once protected you can quietly limit intimacy in adulthood. Because real closeness requires allowing yourself to be seen when you’re not performing.
Healing isn’t about becoming less capable. It’s about expanding your sense of safety to include need, rest, and vulnerability too.
#attachmenttrauma #complextrauma #traumahealing #traumarecovery #emdr

Shame rarely presents as self-loathing or obvious insecurity. In high-functioning trauma survivors, it often hides behind competence.
Many people I work with are capable, driven, articulate and outwardly successful. But beneath that competence there can be a persistent sense of defectiveness - a quiet fear that if someone were to really see them, something would be exposed.
Shame often forms in relational environments where distress met misattunement. Not only through overt trauma, but through repeated experiences of being too much, not enough, inconvenient, or unseen. Over time, the nervous system learns that visibility carries risk.
Achievement can then become protective. If I perform well enough, need little enough, achieve highly enough, perhaps I won’t be rejected.
The difficulty is that shame is not resolved by more competence. It is not a cognitive error to be corrected. It is an embodied expectation of disconnection.
Healing involves something much more vulnerable: allowing yourself to be seen in ways that once felt dangerous, and discovering that you are not rejected.
You don’t need to dismantle your competence. But you may need to understand what it has been protecting.
#traumahealing #traumarecovery #complextrauma #shame #emdr