When trauma teaches you to fear the good, trusting peace can feel like betrayal
Have you ever noticed how fast your mind finds the crack in the glass?
Something good happens—and before it even settles, you’ve already ruined it in your head.
You pass the test, then tell yourself you’ll probably fail the next one.
Someone says they’re proud of you, and you immediately wonder what they really meant.
You finally get a moment of peace, and instead of resting in it, you’re holding your breath waiting for it to explode.
That’s not you being dramatic.
That’s trauma.
That’s conditioning.
When you’ve lived in survival mode long enough—when love came with punishment, when silence meant danger, when even your joy got twisted into a weapon—you stop trusting anything that feels too good.
Your brain starts treating calm like a trap.
It looks for warning signs even when there aren’t any.
Because in your experience, the good things never came without a price.
So, of course, your mind zeroes in on what hurts.
That was your safety plan. That’s how you kept yourself alive.
You learned to listen for footsteps. You studied his moods like they were gospel. You walked on eggshells because they were safer than landmines.
So when someone tells you to “just think positive” or “celebrate the good,” it doesn’t land. It feels fake. It feels dangerous. Because in your world, hope always came back with bruises.
I remember the day I reached for help.
I wasn’t even expecting a miracle—just someone to see me. I told the truth. I admitted I was scared, confused, and unraveling. I laid it all out there: how small I felt, how broken I had become, how the God I was clinging to didn’t feel like He was anywhere near me anymore.
And the answer I got?
“Just go home and be a good wife.”
No rescue. No comfort. Just a command.
That broke something in me.
I learned right then: honesty doesn’t guarantee help. Hope can backfire.
So I stopped reaching. I started bracing harder. I got quieter.
Because at least silence couldn’t slap me in the face like that again.
That moment shaped me. And not in a holy way.
But here’s what I want to tell you—what someone should have told me:
You’re not negative.
You’re not broken.
You are conditioned. And you can unlearn it.
But not by pretending. Not by slapping affirmations over your scars.
It starts small. Like this:
When the voice comes up that says, “This won’t last,” or “You don’t deserve this,”
just pause.
Don’t fight it. Don’t obey it. Just notice it.
That voice isn’t your truth.
It’s your trauma.
And slowly, you can start choosing differently.
Not because you’re suddenly healed. But because for once, you’re finally allowed to be aware of how deep the damage goes—and how much more you were made for.
You’re allowed to want peace without fear.
You’re allowed to hold joy without bracing for pain.
You’re allowed to believe something good… might actually be good.
Even if your brain’s not there yet, you are.









