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CPTSD and Social Awkwardness: Another Source of Isolation

 

For those of us who grew up with abuse and neglect at home, it can be hard to know how to ACT in social situations. Here's an example....

Have you ever been to a hotel where there is a person who is there to carry your bags, and even though you didn’t ask, they carry your bags to the room and it’s totally awkward, and you think “I’m supposed to give them a tip, right? I’ve, like seen this on TV. But you don’t have cash, and they’re just standing there," and you think, "What do I do? What do I say?" And instead of saying anything -- you just say "OK bye!" and shut the door. And then feel like a real A-hole. 

Or maybe you’re the person who carried the bags, and you you’re not really supposed to ask for the tip, and there’s some right amount of time to stand there... But if you have Childhood PTSD and you’re vulnerable to feeling shame and getting all dysregulated over this, just like the person who is supposed to give the tip, and then you get the door shut in your face. Now We’ve got two people on either side of this door, flooding with shame and not able to say a word!

This kind of awkwardness happens all the time. But for those of us who experienced trauma in childhood, the shame we feel in awkward social situations can make us collapse inside and want to flee AND isolate from all people for all time!

This is my third article and video in the Isolation series, and it’s all about social awkwardness and how to navigate it so we can more gracefully handle awkward situations, and avoid the need to isolate.                                                    

 READ MORE or...

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Great post. The thing I like about your blog posts/videos, Anna, is that they often address those otherwise "sidelined" effects of childhood trauma -- the ones that don't often make the clinical "symptoms of childhood trauma" lists. They're also the ones that those of us who've experienced childhood trauma suspect, in our perhaps not-always accurate (because they've been thrown off-kilter by the trauma) guts and hearts that this everyday problem that we can't quite put our finger on is yet another result of the less-than-healthy way in which we grew up. And because many of us struggle with self-trust AND were raised in environments that invalidated our thoughts and feelings, it can be hard to bring this sort of thing with someone else if we aren't pretty darned sure they will understand and not dismiss what we say -- someone else such as another survivor. Thank you for all that, Anna.

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