For a long time, I believed my healing would announce itself with a clear endpoint—a day when the pain would finally stop, when the hypervigilance would dissolve, when I would wake up and simply feel whole. I waited for that day for years. Decades, even.

It never came.

What came instead was something I could not have anticipated: the slow, almost imperceptible realization that healing was not a destination I was failing to reach, but a landscape I was learning to inhabit.


The Event and the Aftershocks

At twenty-six, my life was split in two by a head-on collision that killed another woman. The physical aftermath was immediate and undeniable—surgeries, rehabilitation, a body that no longer moved the way it once had. But the complex trauma that followed was quieter, more insidious. It did not announce itself with sirens. It seeped into my life like groundwater, slowly saturating everything.

I carried survivor’s guilt like a second skeleton. I became hypervigilant, my nervous system permanently calibrated to threat. My body held the memory of the crash in ways my mind could not access—chronic tension in my shoulders, a startle response that left me exhausted, a pervasive sense that safety was an illusion I could no longer afford.

And beneath all of it, a question that would not leave me: Who am I now?

The person I had been—capable, independent, a young mother with a future mapped in neat coordinates—was gone. In her place was someone defined by limitation, by what she could no longer do. I did not recognize myself in the mirror. I did not know how to introduce myself to my own life.


The Spiral, Not the Line

For years, I measured my progress by how far I thought I had come from the worst days. And for years, I felt like a failure. Because healing, I learned, is not a straight line. It is a spiral.

I would think I had moved past a particular wound, only to find myself circling back to it months or years later—but each time, from a slightly different vantage point. The grief over the loss of my former self returned again and again. The anger at the randomness of suffering resurfaced. The shame of being “broken” whispered its old lies.

What changed was not the presence of these feelings, but my relationship to them. I stopped treating them as enemies to be defeated and started seeing them as messengers. They were not evidence that I was failing at healing. They were evidence that I was in it—that the wound was deep, and that deep wounds take time.


The Body’s Intelligence

One of the most profound lessons of my journey has been learning to listen to my body.

Complex trauma does not live only in the mind. It lives in the tissue, in the nervous system, in the places where we learned to freeze, to brace, to protect. For years, I tried to think my way out of my suffering. I read books, went to therapy, prayed fervently. I treated my body like a vehicle for my mind, something to be managed while the real work happened elsewhere.

I was wrong.

Healing began when I started paying attention to sensation rather than meaning. When I noticed where my breath stopped short—usually in my chest, where fear lived. When I tracked the tension in my shoulders without immediately trying to fix it. When I learned that grounding wasn’t a metaphor but a practice—feeling my feet on the floor, my back against the chair, the simple, profound fact of being in a body that was, against all odds, still here.

My physical therapist, years ago, gave me a gift I did not recognize at the time. She taught me to stop asking what my body couldn’t do and start noticing what it was doing in any given moment. A slight shift of weight. A small release of tension. These were not failures. They were communications. They were my body’s way of saying, I am still here. I am still trying.

Photo Credit: Unsplash

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