Many people assume Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) only affects combat veterans or individuals who have experienced extreme tragedies. In reality, PTSD can develop after many different kinds of overwhelming experiences, including accidents, abuse, betrayal, medical trauma, sexual assault, childhood neglect, or witnessing distressing events.

PTSD is not a sign of weakness.

It is a sign that the nervous system has been overwhelmed and is still trying to protect you.

When something traumatic happens, the brain and body shift into survival mode. For most people, the nervous system eventually recognizes that the danger has passed. But for individuals struggling with PTSD, the brain can become "stuck," continuing to react as though the threat is still present.

Common Signs of PTSD

This is why people with PTSD may experience:

  • Flashbacks or intrusive memories.
  • Nightmares or difficulty sleeping.
  • Hypervigilance and feeling constantly "on guard."
  • Anxiety, irritability, or an exaggerated startle response.
  • Avoidance of certain people, places, or situations.
  • Emotional numbness or feeling disconnected from others.
  • Difficulty trusting or feeling safe.
These reactions are not character flaws. They are survival responses.

Many people living with PTSD become frustrated with themselves, wondering, "Why can't I just move on?" But healing isn't about simply forgetting what happened. It's about helping the brain and body recognize that the trauma is over and that safety is possible again.

PTSD Is Highly Treatable

The encouraging news is that PTSD is highly treatable.

Evidence-based approaches such as EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), trauma-focused therapy, and nervous system regulation techniques can help individuals process traumatic experiences and reduce the intensity of symptoms. As healing occurs, many people discover they are no longer defined by what happened to them.

Recovery does not erase the past.

Instead, it allows the past to take its proper place — as something that happened, rather than something that continues to control the present.

If you've been living in survival mode, know this: your reactions make sense, your symptoms are understandable, and healing is possible.

The goal of trauma therapy is not to make you forget your story. It's to help you reclaim it.