By Kat Grace
CPTSD doesn’t usually look like what people expect.
It isn’t always flashbacks on the floor or dramatic emotional collapse. More often, it looks like a capable, thoughtful, self-aware person quietly managing an invisible weight—every single day.
This is not a clinical explanation.
This is the lived reality.
It Looks Like Functioning… With a Cost
Most people with CPTSD function. They work. They show up. They respond to texts. They smile. They care deeply.
But underneath that functioning is constant calibration.
• scanning tone
• managing energy
• deciding what feels safe today
• bracing without realizing you’re bracing
You’re not lazy.
You’re not dramatic.
You’re not broken.
Your nervous system learned early that staying alert was safer than relaxing.
It Looks Like Exhaustion That Sleep Doesn’t Fix
CPTSD fatigue isn’t just “tired.”
It’s waking up already depleted.
It’s feeling heavy before the day begins.
It’s needing rest after interactions that weren’t even bad.
This isn’t because you’re weak.
It’s because your system has been doing the work of protection for a very long time.
Rest can feel unsafe—not because you don’t want it, but because stillness used to be where the danger lived.
It Looks Like Overthinking Simple Things
CPTSD often shows up as:
• rereading messages
• replaying conversations
• worrying you said too much or not enough
• sensing shifts others don’t notice
This isn’t obsession—it’s pattern recognition that once kept you alive.
Your system learned to anticipate moods, read micro-changes, and stay one step ahead. Letting go of that vigilance doesn’t happen just because someone tells you you’re safe now.
It Looks Like Emotional Numbness — Or Sudden Waves
Some days you feel everything.
Other days you feel nothing at all.
Numbness isn’t the absence of feeling.
It’s a protective pause.
When emotions were overwhelming or dangerous in the past, your system learned to dim the volume. Healing doesn’t mean forcing feeling—it means slowly restoring choice.
It Looks Like Guilt for Needing Boundaries
People with CPTSD often struggle to rest without guilt.
You may feel selfish for needing space.
Ashamed for canceling plans.
Uncomfortable saying no—even when your body is screaming yes to rest.
That guilt didn’t come from nowhere.
It was learned in environments where your needs were inconvenient, ignored, or punished.
It Looks Like Longing for Safety You Can’t Explain
There’s often a quiet grief inside CPTSD—the grief of not having known consistent safety.
You might long for:
• calm
• softness
• being held without tension
• relationships that don’t require effort to survive
This longing isn’t weakness.
It’s the body remembering what it deserved all along.
It Looks Like Healing That Isn’t Linear
Healing CPTSD doesn’t move in a straight line.
You can have months of stability, then suddenly feel raw again.
You can intellectually understand everything and still feel dysregulated.
You can do “all the work” and still need support.
This doesn’t mean you’re failing.
It means your system is unwinding years of adaptation at a pace it can tolerate.
The Quiet Truth
People with CPTSD are often deeply empathetic, perceptive, and resilient—not because trauma made them special, but because survival required depth.
Healing isn’t about erasing what happened.
It’s about teaching the body that it no longer has to live there.
If this resonates, know this:
You are not behind.
You are not doing it wrong.
And nothing about your nervous system is shameful.
It adapted brilliantly.
Now it’s learning how to rest.
And that takes time. 🌿


