trauma
At its core, trauma can be thought of as the psychological wounds that persist, even when the physical ones are long gone.
Once A Child . Content Warning.
From the moment we open our eyes—crying in a cold, sterile hospital— the conditions of love begin to blossom. Living and growing in our mother’s bellies only holds a safe place for nearly a year before we were quite literally ejected into chaos we didn’t ask for. From that point on there are conditions to the amount of love and respect we receive. From birth when we are “good babies” in the nursery, the nurses praise us for our cooperation, whereas fussy babies, while still looked at as precious cute creations, are deemed more difficult. Though this example is rather vague and lacks depth into the true meaning of conditional love, it is a pivotal reminder of how we enter and leave this world. Alone.
By The Darkest Sunrise8 months ago in Psyche
Asylum Warehousing: Again?
The recent discourse surrounding "mental health disabilities" and their societal ramifications carries a chilling echo of a past many hoped had been left behind: the era of asylum warehousing. While framed as a solution to complex social issues, policies that empower the state to institutionalize individuals deemed in need, even those already housed, threaten to unravel decades of progress in mental healthcare and civil liberties. This approach risks re-establishing a system where individual autonomy is sacrificed for perceived public order, potentially leading to widespread human rights abuses and the erosion of fundamental freedoms.
By Sai Marie Johnson8 months ago in Psyche
Surrounded Yet Invisible: The Loneliest I’ve Ever Been Wasn't When I Was Alone
I used to think loneliness only looked like empty rooms and unanswered texts. I thought it meant quiet Friday nights, vacant seats across the dinner table, or crying into your pillow at 2 a.m. because no one thought to check on you.
By Azmat Roman ✨8 months ago in Psyche
Is Anxiety a Disability? How to Secure Disability Benefits
Anxiety disorders are more than emotional distress; they can severely impact on a person to work in his/her normal life, including being able to hold a job. There are a lot of questions by many people with anxiety disorder that wonder whether or not they are disabled enough to receive disability aid. In this post, we will answer the question “Is Anxiety a Disability? whether anxiety disorders would enable you to obtain disability benefits, and how to apply to receive help.
By PURE HEALTH BLOGS8 months ago in Psyche
Therapy Didn’t Heal Me — It Helped Me Start Over
I used to believe that healing meant going back to who I was before everything broke. That somehow, through therapy, I would find a way to become her again—the girl who laughed easily, trusted quickly, and didn’t wake up every morning with a knot in her stomach.
By Azmat Roman ✨8 months ago in Psyche
I Didn’t Know It Was Trauma Until I Couldn’t Breathe
I used to think trauma looked like something dramatic. A car crash. A violent assault. War. The kind of stuff you see in movies, raw and loud. I didn’t know trauma could sit quietly inside you, like a sleeping dog. Until one day, it wakes up, snarling.
By Azmat Roman ✨8 months ago in Psyche
Crawling Back To You
More times than I can count, I've sat wondering who I truly was beneath all of the shame. I wondered if I was brilliant or if I was truly destined to remain in this child-like state of confusion. Walking the world wondering my purpose as I hide in the shadows of who I knew I wasn't, yet who I'd always been. I'd been dripping in a victimhood so carefully built by those around me who claimed that their love for me meant more than what society views love and friendship as today. I spent so much time in the comfort of being the victim that I hadn't paid any attention to the fact that while these people were building this victimhood, I was handing them the nails and hammer.
By The Darkest Sunrise8 months ago in Psyche
Memory, Trauma, and Healing:
Trauma leaves more than scars—it rewires the brain, reshapes our memories, and lingers in the body long after the moment has passed. Whether it’s a single catastrophic event or prolonged emotional abuse, trauma can alter how we store memories and experience the world. But the good news is: science now offers deeper insights into how healing can happen.
By Shoaib Afridi8 months ago in Psyche









