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The Illusion of Safety: How Holding Onto Trauma Creates More Pain

22 December 202513 November 2025

There’s this quiet illusion many of us live under—the belief that holding onto our trauma somehow protects us. We think that by remembering the pain, by staying vigilant, we’ll be ready next time. That we won’t be blindsided again. But here’s the truth: holding onto trauma doesn’t prevent it from happening again. It actually creates space for more of it.

When you hold onto trauma, your mind and body live in defense mode. You start scanning everything and everyone for signs of danger. You’re alert, always ready to run or shut down. In that state, even peace feels suspicious. Kindness feels like a setup. You start mistaking calm for the calm before the storm.

And because your nervous system expects pain, it begins to recreate it. You attract situations that confirm what you already believe—that the world isn’t safe, that people can’t be trusted, that love always ends in loss. Trauma builds its own echo chamber, and if you’re not careful, it keeps calling in new versions of the same wound.

But healing isn’t about forgetting or pretending it didn’t happen. It’s about slowly loosening your grip on the pain. It’s allowing yourself to stop expecting the past to repeat itself. It’s learning that you can be safe even without being on guard all the time.

Holding on keeps you in survival. Letting go—gently, patiently—is what opens the door to life again.

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