For most of my life, I had no reason to question my past. I had warm childhood memories, a solid understanding of who I was, and no indication that something darker lurked beneath the surface. But then, seemingly out of nowhere, my mind cracked open, and pieces of a story I never asked for started falling out.
At first, I tried to push them back in, trying to make them fit into the version of my life I had always known. But no matter how much I willed them away, they kept coming—not in full, cohesive scenes, but in flashes, in body sensations, in a deep, unshakable knowing that left me questioning everything.
And that’s when the real battle began.
The Shock of Remembering
Nothing prepares you for the moment your own mind turns against you. One day, you think you know yourself. The next, you are drowning in memories that do not feel like yours but somehow are.
It feels impossible. Unbelievable. Like something you might have read in a book but never expected to happen in your own life. And yet, there it is.
For me, the shock came with a mix of emotions I did not know how to handle. Grief for the childhood I thought I had. Rage that my brain had kept this from me. Terror that if this was true, then nothing in my life had ever been what I thought it was.
And then came the worst question of all: What if I’m making this up?
The “Am I Making This Up?” Spiral
If you have been here, you know the loop.
- Why now?
- Wouldn’t I have always remembered if it were real?
- What if I’m just looking for attention?
- What if I planted this idea in my own head somehow?
I wrestled with these thoughts constantly, dissecting every memory fragment, analyzing every feeling, desperate for proof that would make it undeniable. But that proof never came in the way I wanted.
Instead, my body became the evidence. The panic that gripped me in certain situations. The way I froze at a touch, I should have been able to tolerate. The overwhelming nausea, the shaking, the way my mind wanted to flee even when I was safe.
My body had always known, even when my mind did not.
But the doubts were relentless. There were moments when I was certain I had broken completely, that I was unraveling, that soon I would not be able to trust a single thought inside my own head. I had been sure of my past once. If that could change, then what else was not real?
When the World Feels Unreal
One of the hardest things about repressed memories resurfacing is how they shatter your sense of reality. Everything becomes uncertain: your past, your identity, your relationships. And if you are anything like me, you crave certainty. You want someone to confirm what you remember, to tell you it is real, to give you something solid to stand on.
But most of the time, that doesn’t happen.
I started second-guessing everything. I would stare at old photos of myself as a child, looking for signs in my own eyes. Did I look happy? Did I look scared? Could I have been hiding something even from myself?
And then there were the nightmares. The ones that left me gasping for breath, the ones where I woke up drenched in sweat, my body aching in ways I could not explain. My mind tried to tell me they were just dreams, but my body told a different story. The fear, the disgust, the panic. It was real.
I had to learn how to exist in the in-between, to trust myself even when I had doubts. To accept that my brain had done what it needed to do to protect me and that just because I didn’t remember for decades didn’t mean it wasn’t true.
The Despair of Not Knowing
No one talks enough about the despair. The way it can swallow you whole. When you start remembering pieces of something so unthinkable, its weight is unbearable.
I remember curling up in bed, unable to move, unable to function, my mind replaying the same thoughts on a loop.
“This isn’t real. This can’t be real.
But what if it is?
What if I’m losing my mind?
What if I’m just broken?“
Nothing shakes your sense of reality like waking up one day and realizing your past is no longer what you thought it was.
I would search my memories for signs, clues, anything that would either validate or disprove what I was starting to uncover. But memory does not work like that. It does not arrive neatly, in perfect order, with timestamps and witnesses. It drips in, slowly, sometimes violently, and often without warning.
And then came the darkest thoughts.
“What if I’m making this up because I want an excuse for my struggles?
What if I’m just broken beyond repair?“
I became convinced I was unraveling, that I would wake up one day completely lost inside my own head. The fear was not just about what had happened to me; it was about whether I could ever trust myself again.
The Darkness That Almost Swallowed Me
The grief was unbearable. It was not just about the memories. It was the loss of the life I thought I had. The childhood I had once cherished now felt like a dream I had woken up from too late.
And the worst part? There was no one to validate it for me. No way to prove or disprove what my brain was screaming at me.
There were days I couldn’t breathe under its weight. Days I wondered if I would ever feel normal again. Days I thought maybe it would be easier if I just disappeared.
This is the part people don’t talk about. The way the pain can feel so heavy that it drags you under. The way remembering doesn’t feel like healing at first. It feels like dying.
Grounding Through the Chaos
If you are in this place, if your world feels like it is cracking open, and you do not know how to hold the pieces, I want you to know you are not alone. And you are not broken.
Here are some things that helped me (and might help you, too):
- Validate your emotions, even when you doubt your memories. Your feelings are real, no matter what.
- Find safe people to talk to. Whether it is a therapist, a coach, a support group, or trusted friends, do not do this alone.
- Ground yourself in the present. When the past tries to pull you under, remind yourself that you are here, now. Feet on the floor. Breathe in your lungs. Safe.
- Give yourself permission to not have all the answers. Healing is not about proving what happened. It is about reclaiming yourself.
You Are Still You
When the past cracks open, it can feel like you are losing yourself. But you are not. You are still you. Maybe even more than you have ever been.
I won’t pretend this journey is easy. It is disorienting, painful, and sometimes feels impossible. But you are not alone. You do not have to have every answer to start healing.
Your story matters. Your pain is real. And you deserve to heal, whether the world ever sees your truth or not.
You Are Not Crazy. You Are Remembering.
If you are here, in the middle of the storm, feeling like you might not make it out, I need you to hear this.
You are not broken. You are not making this up. You are not crazy.
Your brain protected you the best way it knew how. And now, it is giving you back what you are ready to hold.
You do not have to remember everything to heal. You do not have to prove anything to be worthy of support.
Your pain is real. And you are not alone.
Hold on, friend, even when it feels impossible. Hold on.
Because the other side of this? It’s worth it. And so are you.
Photo by Vincent Burkhead on Unsplash
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Danica Alison is an optimist, deep thinker, and out-of-the-box adventurer who finds meaning in life’s chaos. She’s a writer, a healing advocate, and someone who believes healing is a journey best traveled with curiosity, humor, and a little bit of rebellious joy.
A lifelong lover of stories, both lived and told. She is passionate about exploring the messy, beautiful process of being human. Whether she’s writing, learning, or connecting with others, she brings a mix of warmth, honesty, and a refusal to fit into neat little boxes.