CPTSD treatment so you can start a newer, healthier chapter in life.

Are You Struggling With CPTSD Symptoms?

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Everything Feels Bad

With CPTSD, everything feels familiar in a bad way because it reminds you of past trauma. Every conflict might feel like the ones you watched growing up. Every look might feel like the harsh criticism you’ve endured before. Every relationship might feel hurtful, painful, scary, or complicated. Standing up for yourself, taking care of yourself, and putting yourself first can all feel bad and wrong.

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Disconnected & Alone

Complex PTSD often comes with feeling like you’re the worst - just a bad, disgusting, unlovable person. (It’s not true, but it feels so true) You might feel abandoned a lot by friends, family, and partners or struggle with wanting people closer and feeling panicked when you sense them pulling away. Being around people might be really triggering though, which can lead you to isolate yourself.

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Harsh Inner Critic

CPTSD often includes a merciless inner critic. You might blow up at yourself for minor mistakes or threaten yourself with failure before you’ve even begun. You might feel so ashamed it’s hard to face people which can lead to feeling judged even when no one is actually judging you. Anger toward yourself for all your perceived flaws and imperfections can even turn into suicidal thoughts and self-harm.

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Top 5 Myths of CPTSD

Most people with CPTSD come up with the same strategies to try and manage it. Here’s a breakdown of some of the most common tactics, (along with explanations for why these don’t work long-term).

If you’ve been relying on these rules for managing your CPTSD symptoms you might have noticed that you get short-term relief. However, you may have also noticed that over the long-term your symptoms have only gotten worse. You may be feeling more wound up, more worthless, or having more severe suicidal thoughts than you did before.

How CPTSD Treatment Can Help

When It’s Time to Call In the Pros

CPTSD will inevitably affect major areas of your life - your relationships, work, finances, self-esteem, and your physical health. Everyone feels down, anxious, overwhelmed, or lonely from time to time. Certain situations, such as being laid off or going through a breakup can remind you of past painful experiences and wreak havoc for a while in the present. Mood changes aren’t necessarily a problem that warrants therapy, as long as they’re mild and aren’t affecting your life. If you notice your cptsd symptoms have been going on for a long time, if they’re bothering you, or if they’re negatively affecting major areas of your life, it’s time to reach out. Read on to learn more about how our team can help.

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Find Safety in Relationships

After successfully completing cptsd treatment our clients report feeling safer in their relationships. They often report less feelings of panic and abandonment, feeling less like a burden to the people in their life, and feeling more support and less criticism from those around them.

Because CPTSD is often the result of attachment wounds, CPTSD treatment also focuses on supporting our clients as they learn to identify personal boundaries using their body’s physical and emotional cues, so they no longer have to rely on others to define what is “okay” or “not okay” in any kind of relationship. This often naturally leads to finding their voice and slowly strengthening their ability to use it to stand up for themselves.

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Find Your Identity & Self-Worth

Many of our clients who successfully cptsd depression treatment report feeling as if they went from surviving to actually living. They can often name their positive attributes and the value they bring to the world and the lives of those around them - something that never would have occurred to them before. 

CPTSD treatment involves learning to tame your inner critic and point that anger in a healthier direction - turning it back on your abusers or the unrealistic expectations others have put on you. While this can often begin the process of grieving past painful experiences, it can also lead you to feel stronger, less perfectionistic, and more compassionate toward yourself.

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Reduce or Eliminate Suicidal Thoughts

Our clients with CPTSD often report a long history of suicidal thoughts. CPTSD treatment can help to decrease feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and shame that often lead to suicidal thoughts. We have clients who report they are no longer experiencing suicidal thoughts, often for the first time in their lives, after decades of living with these thoughts. 

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Get a Handle on Your Moods

Our clients with CPTSD often report feeling defective and broken before starting CPTSD treatment. Our work together often leads these clients to piece together how past experiences relate to their moods in the present. We work to build context for what you’re experiencing so your mood swings no longer feel like random bolts of lightening that strike on a whim. With this knowledge of what has triggered them and why, our clients often report feeling far more equipped to respond to mood shifts with healthier coping skills so they can feel better faster without sinking as low in the process. 

Ready to Get Started?

Get In Touch With Us

Perhaps one of the hardest steps you’ll have to make by yourself is the first step of reaching out to us.  Send us your info and we’ll take it from there, supporting you each step of the way.

Complete a Free Consult

You might be nervous about making phone calls or not sure what to say - either way we’ll walk you through it step-by-step in about 15 minutes. We like to be sure it’s a good fit first.

Have Your First Session

We’ll set up your first session with your therapist to complete your initial assessment. This helps to ensure we have a solid game plan from the get-go so you can feel confident in the process.

References:

Mattick, R., and C. Clarke. 1998. Development and Validation of Measure of Social Phobia Scrutiny Fear and Social Interaction Anxiety. Behavior Research and Therapy 36:455–70.