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CPTSD: Treating Long-Term Trauma

Trauma isn’t always one event. Sometimes it’s a long thread woven through years of a person’s life, almost invisible to others but impossible to escape. This is the territory of Complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, or CPTSD—a condition born not from a single wound but from repeated injury over time.

What Makes CPTSD Different?

Most people have heard of PTSD that’s usually tied to something sudden: an accident, a disaster, a battlefield. CPTSD is different. It often comes from experiences where leaving wasn’t an option—growing up in a home marked by abuse or neglect, living with a partner who controlled and harmed, being trapped in an environment where fear was constant. Over time, the body and mind adapt in ways meant to protect, but those same adaptations can linger long after the danger is gone.

How It Feels

The symptoms of CPTSD can be hard to put into words, but many people describe:

These symptoms don’t always look the same from day to day. They can shift, overlap, or recede, but together they capture the weight of living with trauma that stretched across years.

Causes and Symptoms

Complex PTSD rarely comes from a single moment. It grows out of trauma that lasts—trauma that reshapes a person’s sense of safety over weeks, months, or years. What makes it “complex” is not just the event, but the repetition, the helplessness, and the absence of a safe place to turn.

Some of the most common causes include:

Risk increases when trauma begins early, when it is caused by someone who was supposed to provide care, or when there is no support available to help the person process what’s happening.

Recovering from CPTSD

Healing from Complex PTSD is not quick, but it is possible. Because CPTSD stems from experiences of being unsafe or unheard, recovery often begins with finding a safe space where your story is respected and your pace is honored.

One of the most important pieces of recovery is working with a trauma-informed therapist. Trauma-informed care means that the therapist understands how trauma lives in the body and mind. It means the focus is not on “what’s wrong with you,” but on “what happened to you.”

Different approaches can support healing, including:

Healing is rarely linear. There may be setbacks alongside progress, but each step forward matters. Over time, people with CPTSD can learn to quiet the nervous system, soften the grip of shame, and open themselves to safer, more meaningful connections.

Our practice offers EMDR and trauma-informed therapy for clients living with the effects of CPTSD. We know how heavy the past can feel—and we also know that healing is possible. You don’t have to carry it alone.

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