c-PTSD and Relationships
One way to heal from your trauma and build trust in your relationships is to establish healthier coping mechanisms. The following is a chain link analysis exercise that will help you become more cognizant of not only your triggers, but also how they impact your relationship.
PTSD vs c-PTSD: what’s the difference?
Both Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and Complex PTSD (c-PTSD) occur in response to trauma.
PTSD and c-PTSD share the following symptoms:
While the two have various overlapping symptoms, the main difference between the disorders is that PTSD is caused by a single traumatic event, whereas c-PTSD is caused by long-lasting trauma that continues repeatedly.
c-PTSD and Intimacy
If you live with c-PTSD symptoms, you likely find it challenging to experience intimacy within your relationships. The psychological distress caused by c-PTSD can be a tough barrier to overcome. It can feel like the closer you are to someone, the greater the perceived threat. Your symptoms may manifest as emotional or relational avoidance, lack of trust, and/or a cycle of toxic relationships that resemble the past trauma at its roots.
One way to heal from your trauma and build trust in your relationships is to establish healthier coping mechanisms. The following is a chain link analysis exercise that will help you become more cognizant of not only your triggers and trauma responses, but also how they impact your relationship.
Identifying Triggers
Trigger Chain Link Analysis
Follow each step to map out your specific triggers, emotional states, behaviors, symptoms, and new behavior patterns. Let this exercise serve as a launching pad for new and improved habits that can eventually replace your trauma responses.
Step 1: Write down at least one trigger you experience in your relationship. Here are a few examples to get you going.
Step 2: Connect the trigger to an emotional state + behavior pattern. Think back to previous conflicts regarding this trigger. What thoughts did you have? How did you feel? How did you react?
Step 3: Connect the emotional state + behavior pattern → to the c-PTSD symptom(s) that fits.
Step 4: Write out new behavioral patterns in place of your usual trauma response. Don’t pressure yourself to implement the new behavior right away. Remember this exercise is a launching pad meant to map out alternative and healthy habits to practice in the future.
View the full chain link analysis below for an example of how to map out triggers, unwanted behavior patterns, and the new habits you’ll form in the future.
c-PTSD resource list:
Articles/sites:
Relational Healing and Complex PTSD
Emotional Flashbacks
Books:
Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving
The Body Keeps the Score