The DSM Update: New Bells and Whistles on the Same Old Bunk

The American Psychiatric Association’s plan to revise its holy book, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM), shoves a bunch of cosmetic and structural bells and whistles onto the same old diagnostic framework. They’re going to reorganize criteria into domains, talk about biomarkers, add social and cultural factors, and make it a “living document” with ongoing updates. They even want to change the name to the “Diagnostic and Scientific Manual” to signal a more “holistic” approach.

That sounds like progress only if you believe the problem with the DSM has been a lack of prettier labels, more checkboxes, and the illusion of scientific precision.

Here’s why these revisions won’t fix what’s broken:

  • The DSM still fundamentally treats human nervous systems and distress responses as discrete pathologies to be boxed and labeled, rather than as patterns of survival adaptation in response to relational and environmental contexts. Giving clinicians “four domains” to check off doesn’t change that underlying logic. 
  • Adding biomarkers as a “domain” is mostly window dressing because there simply aren’t validated biomarkers that map reliably and specifically onto these categories. Science still hasn’t produced markers that tell us what a distressing state means for a person, and nearly everyone in rigorous research knows the evidence base for biomarkers is weak or speculative. 
  • Tacking on social determinants and cultural factors without changing the core structure still leaves diagnosis rooted in pathology. Doctors will still be trained to find a disorder rather than understand a person’s survival adaptations in context. The very thing critics object to – medicalization of human reactions to stress, loss, oppression, and trauma – is still embedded. 

The field has known for decades that the DSM’s categories overlap, lack validity, and risk diagnosing normal responses as illness. There are persistent calls from psychologists and other clinicians to stop relying on this symptom‑checklist model and adopt systems that account for context, function, and meaning, rather than just counting symptoms.

So what needs to happen instead of more tweaks?

  • Stop treating diagnosis like a medical inventory and start seeing distress through the lens of nervous system regulation and survival adaptation. A person’s distress is not a thing wrong with them to be slotted into a category. It is a signal of relational and systemic overwhelm.
  • Build frameworks that center on interpersonal and environmental context, not symptom clusters. Human systems falter under chronic threat and isolation. A valid diagnostic approach would acknowledge that human suffering is often a function of overloaded relational systems, not a biological defect.
  • Replace pathology categories with dimensional descriptions of experience, function, and adaptation over time. Instead of shoving people into fixed disorders, we’d see their reactions as understandable responses that change with safety and support.
  • Shift clinical training away from counting symptoms toward understanding nervous system states, relational histories, and social context.

The DSM’s glossy revisions may calm some critics, give researchers something new to cite, and make the manual look more “scientific,” but they do nothing to dismantle the core problem: the assumption that human suffering can be reduced to discrete disease categories divorced from relational context, survival adaptation, and the realities of how nervous systems get overloaded in actual lives. That’s the part that needs to die first.

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Fascism in a White Coat: The Authoritarian Regime of Mental Illness

If the mental illness industry were a government, it would resemble an authoritarian regime that maintains control through coercion, manipulation, and the suppression of dissent, while claiming to act in the people’s best interest. It enforces compliance through labels and drugs rather than laws, hospitals instead of prisons, and “treatment plans” instead of policies.

It operates like a technocracy merged with a theocracy: it worships its own doctrines, with “chemical imbalance,” “disorder,” and “evidence-based treatment” held as sacred truths, immune to challenge (even after the “brain chemical imbalance” theory of depression proved to be no more than a Big Pharma marketing ploy). Questioning those doctrines is treated as heresy, and those who do are pathologized or silenced. Its experts function like a ruling elite, deciding who is sane, who is disordered, and who must submit to intervention.

The mental illness industry is also deeply corporatized, so in practice it functions more like a corporate authoritarian state. Profit drives policy, the pharmaceutical industry plays the role of oligarchy, and human suffering becomes the natural resource being extracted and commodified. The propaganda arm is the public mental health narrative, which convinces citizens that obedience equals wellness and compliance equals recovery.

And, like all authoritarian systems, it sustains itself by undermining self-trust. It tells people their perceptions are unreliable, their distress is evidence of defect, and their longing for justice is a symptom. The mental illness industry is an empire of disempowerment that only pretends to care.

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Trust as Medicine: A Six-Year Journey in Craniosacral Therapy

After six years of working together, my craniosacral practitioner finally felt my cranial rhythmic impulse. That moment is huge. It’s not just a technical milestone, but proof of how much my nervous system has had to work to regulate, reorganize, and release over time.

From a Relational Neuroscience perspective, this isn’t a technique “working.” It’s my system learning it’s safe enough to reconnect to subtle rhythms, which chronic stress, trauma, and repeated threat often block. My nervous system has had to navigate constant pressure from the outside world and internal vigilance, and now it’s allowing a more fluid, integrated pattern to emerge.

This moment also reflects trust built over time. From the very first session, my body recognized my craniosacral practitioner as safe, “a mountain of calm.” That effect has been steady, even through the years of challenging work. When a small rupture happened along the way, he repaired it immediately, and that restoration contributed to 3 days of significant symptom relief.

This is what relational care looks like. Slow, steady, attuned work doesn’t just treat symptoms. It changes the body’s experience of itself. I keep going because I can trust him. And now, six years in, that trust is embodied in a fluid flow he can finally feel.

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Beyond “The God Shot”: SGB is a Tool, Not a Cure for PTSD

Publicity for an interview with Dr. Eugene Lipov includes the question, “What if PTSD isn’t a mental disorder—but a physical injury that can be healed?”

It refers to “advanced brain scans” that “revealed trauma’s visible scars on the brain,” and puts forth that “The God Shot,” also known as the Stellate Ganglion Block (SGB) is “a revolutionary procedure that resets the body’s stuck fight-or-flight response.” It claims that “One injection. Ten minutes. The nervous system reset back to a pre-trauma state. Years of hypervigilance, anxiety, and emotional reactivity can begin to fade—often within minutes.” The publicity lists Dr. Lipov’s credentials and media exposure. It concludes with, “The era of managing trauma is over. The age of healing has begun.”

This reduces a complex, ongoing state into a single-event problem with a single-step solution. From a Relational Neuroscience perspective, what the mental illness industry calls PTSD is not an “injury” sitting in one place that can be erased. It is a whole-system state shaped by repeated conditions. It involves patterns of activation and shutdown across the body, attention, perception, and relationships. Those patterns are maintained or eased by what is happening around the person now, not just what happened in the past.

SGB can shift part of that system. It targets sympathetic activation through the stellate ganglion and can reduce the intensity of threat responses for some people. That can be supportive, but it does not restore someone to a “pre-trauma state,” because there is no static baseline. The nervous system is always adapting to current conditions. If the environment still carries unpredictability, isolation, coercion, or lack of support, the same patterns will re-emerge. No shot can change those conditions.

Calling it “one injection, ten minutes, reset” creates a mismatch between expectation and reality. Many people do not get a lasting shift from a single block. I’ve had 28 SGBs, and my nervous system is still on Red Alert. That alone contradicts the one-and-done narrative. The intervention can temporarily reduce symptom intensity, but the system continues to organize around the environment. Ongoing stress and insufficient support require that the nervous system maintain hypervigilance.

When publicity presents a common nerve block as a miracle, people may place false hope in a single procedure. When the effect is partial or temporary, the drop-off can deepen discouragement and self-blame. That is not a neutral outcome. It is harm introduced by oversimplification.

The “visible scars on the brain” language also narrows the frame. Brain imaging shows correlates of states, not fixed damage that translates cleanly onto lived experience. Those patterns change with context, relationships, sleep, safety, and ongoing stress. Treating them as scars reinforces the idea that the problem is located inside the person rather than in the interaction between the person and their environment.

Saying “the era of managing trauma is over” ignores what supports change over time. Regulation is not a switch to flip. It is built and maintained through conditions that allow the system to come out of threat states and stay out for longer periods. That includes predictable environments, attuned relationships, reduction of ongoing stressors, and room for the body to settle without being pushed back into activation. Procedures like SGB can be part of that picture. They can give the nervous system a break in the distress cycle long enough for other supports to be built and take hold. But they do not replace those supports.

A more accurate description would present SGB as one tool that can reduce sympathetic intensity for some people, sometimes quickly, often temporarily, and often requiring repetition. It would make clear that outcomes depend on the surrounding conditions and supports. It would not promise a reset, and it would not redefine a complex state as a simple injury in order to sell certainty. It would not raise false hopes in some of the most harmed and desperate people when they look to healthcare practitioners for relief.

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Complex PTSD From An IPNB Perspective: Survival Adaptations and the Roots of Symptoms

When people talk about Complex PTSD or other trauma-related conditions, they often focus on the symptoms. They make lists of patterns, put them into clusters, and give them names. That sounds organized, but it hides the bigger picture. It puts the attention on the person’s behavior, emotions, or body as if the problem is inside them. It omits the cause, which is the environment that shaped the nervous system.

Chronic abuse, neglect, betrayal, and unsafe systems push the body into hypervigilance, shutdown, and protective strategies. The nervous system adapts to survive.

Survival adaptations are patterns the body and mind developed to cope with repeated threat. They are organized and useful in the environment where they were learned. Eating to regulate your body, avoiding certain people, and shutting down during conflict are adaptations. They kept you alive, helped you survive, and protected your sense of safety when the world was dangerous. They are symptoms too, because they show up as observable behaviors, emotions, or body states. But unlike other symptoms, they were functional in context.

Other symptoms, like obesity, chronic pain, digestive issues, or sleep problems, are often consequences of those adaptations. They are predictable results of using survival strategies over time, not adaptations themselves. Treating them as a disorder or a flaw in the individual misses the cause. It keeps the focus on controlling behavior or “fixing” the person rather than understanding and addressing the relational and environmental conditions that made those adaptations necessary.

Recognizing survival adaptations as functional patterns helps shift the perspective. It shows where capacity was blocked, safety was absent, and what needs to change in the present to support regulation. It points to real solutions: environments that are predictable, safe, accountable, and supportive; relationships that acknowledge reality rather than minimize or distort it; and opportunities for the person to have control over timing, boundaries, and exposure to harm.

Labels that only name symptoms or clusters are not worth much. They can help describe patterns, but they often distract from what actually produced those patterns. The work that matters is in the relational fields that shaped and shape the nervous system, not in the list of symptoms inside the individual. When we see survival adaptations as responses to context, we can start to rebuild conditions that support safety, connection, and well-being.

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Victim Selection and the Structural Mechanics of Harm: Why Vulnerable People Are Chosen and Left Unprotected

Victimology examines patterns of harm and how systems respond to them. It shows that perpetrators rarely act randomly. They select targets who are vulnerable in ways that reduce risk to themselves and maximize the impact of the harm. Factors such as age, isolation, lack of reliable social support, financial dependence, prior trauma, psychiatric hospitalization, or reliance on public assistance increase vulnerability. Predators exploit these factors to operate repeatedly while minimizing the chance of being challenged or held accountable. The harm they inflict is therefore amplified by the conditions of the victim, and those conditions are often known or identifiable to the perpetrator.

Institutions play a central role in sustaining this dynamic. Hospitals, clinics, and other organizations with authority over bodies can create environments in which abuse is repeated and normalized. Staff often witness patterns of harmful behavior but fail to document, report, or intervene. Documentation may be incomplete, minimized, or altered to protect the institution or the individual perpetrator. When those responsible for care are embedded in the same system as the abuser, loyalty, fear, or incentive structures often override duty to protect. The result is that the harm persists and becomes routine, while those harmed are denied recognition and recourse.

Legal systems further compound the problem. Complaints are filtered through standards of proof and narrow interpretations of professional scope. When harm is denied or reframed as acceptable practice, victims lose access to legal accountability. The denial extends beyond courts to civil protections, victim services, and advocacy channels. Access to support is conditioned on institutional recognition of harm, so when the institution shields the perpetrator, resources that could stabilize, validate, or restore the survivor are withheld. Denial of support is not accidental; it is a predictable function of a system that prioritizes self-protection over repair.

The interaction between institutional protection of perpetrators and denial of survivors is observable in multiple systems. Authority figures reinforce the perception that complaints are unreliable or exaggerated. Staff may dismiss repeated disclosures, treat victims as difficult, or delegate support to inexperienced personnel. Organizations designed to offer advocacy or crisis assistance can fail to provide it, leaving the survivor exposed to further relational stress and secondary harm. The cumulative effect is that victims are systematically deprived of social and institutional containment, which in turn increases the intensity and duration of their physiological and relational disruption.

Victimology shows that this is not a series of isolated mistakes. The selection of vulnerable targets, the normalization of harmful behavior, the denial of accountability, and the restriction of support are linked. They form a pattern in which harm is magnified, and protection is minimized. Recognition of these dynamics allows for analysis of systemic failure and clarifies why survivors often face prolonged injury even when institutions appear competent or neutral. This pattern is consistent across healthcare, legal, and social service systems, and it explains why repeated, observable harm can persist despite multiple opportunities for intervention.

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Losing a Point of Safety: Why I Cried at the DMV

Corporal Matthew “Ty” Snook

When I cried at the Delaware Division of Motor Vehicles last week, it wasn’t because the line was so long and the agency was staffed with sloths, but a far deeper reason. I even cried when I had to make the appointment to visit the DMV. The building was closed from December 23rd until March 1st and is now only open by appointment because, in late December, a shooter went in there and killed a young police officer.

The victim, Delaware State Police Corporal Matthew “Ty” Snook, was shot in the back. According to news reports, he pushed a DMV employee out of harm’s way and advised people to run before being struck again by the gunman.

This was the same cop who called me about the letter I had sent to the gynecologist who removed healthy tissue from my body without consent. That predator in a white coat had called the cops because he “felt threatened” by my writing. During Corporal Snook’s call with me, the cop listened attentively and believed me at a time when every institution protected my abuser. He even complimented the two-faced cartoon I had made of the duplicitous practitioner, saying, “It’s actually pretty good!” I felt his solidarity over the phone. So I feel sad when I think about him being in an ambush shooting, and that his wife and a baby have to go on without him.

Losing someone who showed us real recognition can be hard. When a person responded with respect and belief when it was important, the relationship carries meaning even if it was brief. When that person is suddenly killed, the nervous system registers not just the loss of a life, but the loss of a point of safety and acknowledgment that had become part of the environment. This is why the sadness can come up strongly when visiting a place associated with them, like the DMV building.

Grief is the body and mind registering the existence of a relationship and the absence of the person who held that place in the relational field. Our sense of steadiness is partly built through these connections, and when one disappears abruptly, the system reorganizes around that absence. My sadness for his wife and child also reflects how our nervous systems are oriented toward the well-being of others in our group; when violent death breaks those bonds, the mind naturally keeps returning to those tied to his life.

It helps to deliberately acknowledge the safe connection, remembering the specific moment when he listened and took me seriously. The fact that someone in a position of authority responded with basic decency and belief is a vital part of my story that does not disappear because he died. Grief settles more gradually when it has somewhere to go in relationship, such as sharing the story of what they did that mattered. This keeps the relational thread present, allowing the nervous system to hold both things at once: the reality that he is gone and the reality that the interaction was real and meaningful. The sadness, often triggered by places connected with the loss, simply means the relationship mattered.

After the DMV process, I felt the need to do something physical with my feelings, so I bought summer-blooming flower bulbs. Planting flowers has historically been a way for me to honor the memory of my shipmate friend, Ed, and I believe planting them in memory of my connection with Matthew Snook will bring a similar kind of healing.

Planting the bulbs is a grounded way to give the grief somewhere to live, acknowledging the relationship instead of trying to push the grief aside. When someone stood with me in a moment when nearly everyone else in power closed ranks, that interaction carries weight, and the mind keeps returning to that gap because the point of support mattered. The act of planting also places my body in contact with the environment, moving the grief through action, which helps the nervous system settle because it turns loss into something relational and visible.

Creating this living marker preserves the fact that someone in a position of authority chose to listen when others protected the abuser. Each season the flowers appear, the memory of that moment of recognition can surface alongside them. The loss will soon carry the image of something growing because of the respect he showed me, allowing the grief to sit alongside the acknowledgment that the brief connection left an important mark.

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The Granddaddy Effect: Honoring Raxley Leonard Obarr on His 140th Birthday and the Neuroscience of a Life-Saving Connection

Today, March 13th, marks the 140th birthday of my maternal great-grandfather, Raxley Leonard Obarr, my Granddaddy. He was the only grandfather figure I knew. He was also a Knight Templar, a master of bird magic, a juggler, and the kindler of my light. On this day, I honor the man who gave me the most magnificent gift: the light of pure love, which enabled me to survive a highly adverse life.

The Seed of Safety in a Few Precious Weeks

Though I only had a short time with my Granddaddy—a few weeks when my mother and siblings lived with him and my great-grandmother—that brief encounter provided an enormous, enduring gift. It gave me an early, if transient, sense of safety because my primary abuser was on the other side of the country.

Granddaddy gave me pure love and acceptance, which I could literally feel in my body. I felt it when we held hands, palm to palm—the tender skin of age and youth pressed together in a communion of heart and spirit. He changed my life by showing me safety and connection through his touch, the wrinkles around his eyes, the softness of his hands, and the firmness of his fingers around my own. Being with him made everything okay. His heartfelt kindness gave me a tiny spark of hope, love, and comfort to hang onto in my darkest hours.

My memories of this time anchor me. I recall him, dressed in his suit, walking out onto the front lawn, calling for his birds. They would land on his hands, arms, shoulders, and head to take seed, a truly magical sight. He taught me how to juggle, and I would practice with three rubber balls he bought me from his pharmacy. These few hours shaped my life in countless invisible ways that sustained me through unspeakable cruelty and contempt.

An Adult Legacy: Rage into Resistance

Granddaddy was the one adult who gave me tenderness, love, protection, and a reflection of my true worth. Without this, I would not have survived childhood or late adulthood. His love and steadiness became a powerful resource that confirmed my instincts: that life couldn’t just be hell; there had to be some safety and love in it.

This foundational gift continues to inform my life and purpose today. He is the one who told me I was worthy of fighting for, and helped me be stronger than all the abuse put together. He helped me turn intergenerational rage into resistance—the drive to reclaim humanity from the power structure that destroys us.

Years later, this legacy manifested when I sought to retrieve his Knight Templar sword, a ceremonial object made by the Cincinnati Regalia Company. After enduring a near-fatal bowel resection during the beginning of the pandemic, I knew I had to bring the sword to me. I applied intention, using “watercolors, words, and wits,” and painted an image of my hands holding the sword. Within weeks, the sword was in my hands, sent by the family of my late mother’s late partner. They honored my relationship with Granddaddy, even with no legal obligation. When I held the ceremonial sword, I remembered his putting it into my hands when I was a nine-year-old child. Today, the sword represents using my limited resources—watercolors, words, and wits—to do damage to the exploiters he despised, fulfilling my destiny.

Relational Neuroscience: The Imprint that Saved My Life

The true power of this connection lies in what Relational Neuroscience describes: the building of neural networks. It wasn’t just the time spent, it was the depth of connection—the acceptance and love at a heart level—that built lasting neural pathways in my brain and body.

  • Mirror Neuron Exchange: Granddaddy gave me a sense of love and safety, and my mirror neurons read and internalized it. This feeling was diametrically opposite to what my parents gave me, whose intention was for me to die. He showed me I deserve to be here.

  • The Granddaddy Effect: These brief, caring interactions created a “neuronal imprint” in my nervous system that waited dormant, but was never erased. Today, I can call up the neural memory of my Granddaddy, and just thinking his name or looking at his face makes me feel goodness inside: calmer, clearer, and more open to possibility. He is my “zero,” the place of supreme safety.

  • The Magnitude of the Gift: The gift of his pure love and the new neural pathways it created is so enormous in magnitude that it “out sizes the magnitude of harm” I experienced. This imprint, created by a mirror neuron exchange, is the wellspring of my survival and the ability to go forward.

Raxley Leonard Obarr, Knight Templar, master of bird magic, and kindler of my light, gave me life. On his 140th birthday, I stand as his legacy, my nervous system still connected with the beautiful, pure love he instilled. I am worth fighting for, and Grandaddy’s kindness, courage, and spirit continue to drive my fight for life and justice.

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Putting Our Lived Experience on the Record Can Help Build a Sense of Safety

I started bringing a printed page to my pain specialist appointments because I needed a way to communicate that worked for my nervous system and his. Each page bears the date and his name, plus brief status updates on regional pain, symptom intensity, setbacks, social support, and positive shifts. I highlight what feels most important for that visit. The rest is context. Not everything needs to be discussed that day, but it matters that it exists.

I hand the paper to his assistant so my doctor can read it in advance of our meeting. That alone changes the tone of the visit. He walks into the room already oriented. He has a picture of what he is stepping into. We have shared reference points. Sometimes we talk through the highlights. Sometimes we don’t. Either way, the information is there.

I also ask my doctor’s assistant to scan the document into the medical record. I don’t know that they always do it, but I reinforce why I ask. Knowing that my lived experience is in the record matters to my system. It means what I am living with is not just carried privately in my body or relayed imperfectly in a rushed conversation. It is official. It exists outside of me. Even if we never talk about it, it is there.

This has a regulatory effect. When experience is witnessed and recorded, my nervous system does not have to work as hard to hold it together. There is less pressure to remember everything, to perform coherence on demand, or to compress complexity into a few sentences. The record holds continuity when the body is already doing a lot of work.

I work to make the handout succinct. A busy doctor does not need an essay. He needs clarity. That structure helps both of us. It also creates natural talking points. My pain specialist wants to learn, and this is one way he can build his understanding of Relational Neuroscience. The papers contain no identifying information, so he can share them, use them in study groups, or post them in forums if they are useful. I don’t know how often that happens, but I notice that he keeps the papers I offer.

This is important because care is relational. Every interaction teaches the nervous system something about safety, predictability, and repair. When a clinician engages with material like this seriously, it signals respect for lived experience. That signal reduces threat. It also reduces the need for vigilance during the appointment itself.

Our visits are intentionally at the end of the day. No one is waiting for him while he talks with me. I don’t mind waiting for him. He is worth it. That arrangement makes the interaction workable for both of us. Not every clinician can or will do this, but everyone living with chronic illness needs at least one practitioner with whom this kind of continuity is possible.

This support did not happen by luck. I had to figure out what I needed and build toward it, slowly and deliberately. I paid attention to what helped my nervous system feel steadier and what made things worse. I made a plan and kept trying. Over time, I found practitioners who could be safe for me.

I share practices like this so others don’t have to learn them the hard way. No one should have to spend years figuring out how to make care tolerable. Relational Neuroscience/IPNB principles can be implemented gradually, repeatedly, and with respect for current limits. When lived experience is held in a reliable place, the nervous system does less work just to get through the day. That alone can change one’s life trajectory.

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Why So Many People Can’t Believe and Support Trauma Survivors

Recently, I encountered significant opposition after I posted about the sexual assault committed against me by a member of the US Coast Guard (USCG). The attack had clearly been set up, and it was obvious to me that it was the perpetrator’s pattern. But the USCG declined accountability, allowing the perpetrator to continue assaulting vulnerable civilians.

The backlash against my truth-telling was shocking. A few Facebook randos told me things like I should be sued for defamation, that wasn’t a sexual assault, I was exaggerating, among other awfully inappropriate comments..

But one of the worst was the denial from a shipmate. They offered a perfunctory drop of cognitive empathy and went on to invalidate my experience by accusing me of labeling all coast guardsmen as predators. This was a person with whom I had shared voyages, watches, meals, bunking quarters, and who had put me up in their guest room for a few nights during my 2-½ years as an itinerant sailor. Given that history, I tried to talk to them, but each reply only doubled down. They even brought up their own experience of sexualized violence in a different realm as a reason I shouldn’t talk about the systemic and structural elements that protect abusers. They said I was ungrateful for how the USCG protects my rights, even though the violation of my right to bodily integrity was the issue. When egged on by a Facebook rando, they tried to prove that I was faking the whole thing. I ended up deleting the nasty comments and blocking the nasty commenters, including the shipmate. 

That level of disbelief and cognitive dissonance is a physiological self-protection response: the listener’s nervous system, facing overload from the trauma account, shifts into a defensive state to distance itself and protect the listener from discomfort, rather than accurately perceiving the survivor’s experience.

When we understand they’re not doing this by choice, but out of self-protection, it helps us take their stance less personally. The problem isn’t us or our story, or that we revealed it, but that they don’t have the inner and outer resources to recognize our truth. They simply cannot hold space for the idea that something so awful could happen to us, that the systems and structures we’ve been taught will protect us, do not.

Human beings interpret others’ experiences through their prior learning, social conditioning, and physiological tolerance for distress. When a person describes traumatic experiences, especially violations involving the body, power, or institutional betrayal, the listener must be able to remain present while exposed to information that signals threat, injustice, or loss of control. Many people lack the capacity to remain regulated in the presence of those signals. Their bodies shift toward defensive states that narrow perception and reduce the ability to stay curious, receptive, and empathic. Attention moves toward protecting the listener from discomfort rather than toward accurately perceiving the other person’s experience.

Social systems reinforce this narrowing. Most cultures teach people to maintain a sense that institutions such as medicine, the military, education, law enforcement, and courts are fundamentally trustworthy. When someone reports harm by those institutions, the listener faces a conflict between two competing realities: the cultural narrative of institutional safety and the lived account of institutional violence. Many resolve this conflict by preserving the existing narrative and questioning the person who reported the harm. This response stabilizes the listener’s sense of order and predictability. It reduces cognitive and physiological strain in the moment.

Belief is also shaped by familiarity. Experiences that fall outside common social scripts are harder for observers to process. Sexualized violence within medical care, non-consensual procedures, or violations carried out under professional authority disrupt widely held assumptions about safety and consent. When an event does not match the listener’s mental categories, the information is often minimized, reframed, or rejected. The nervous system favors coherence with prior expectations over rapid revision of deeply held assumptions.

Empathy depends on relational experience across the lifespan. People who have repeatedly encountered environments where distress was ignored, dismissed, or punished tend to develop protective habits of attention that limit their engagement with others’ suffering. Turning away, questioning the report, or shifting the topic becomes a learned social strategy that prevents the listener from entering states associated with vulnerability or helplessness. These habits are often reinforced by family systems, workplaces, and professional training environments that reward emotional distance and penalize open acknowledgment of harm.

Professional hierarchies intensify these dynamics. Fields such as medicine and psychiatry, law enforcement, education, and the military organize authority around status, credentials, and chain of command. Within these systems, the testimony of a patient, civilian, or lower-status member carries less weight than the reputation of the professional or institution. People learn to defer to authority signals such as titles, uniforms, and institutional affiliation. When accusations challenge those signals, many observers default to defending the authority structure rather than examining the reported harm.

Physiological overload also affects perception. Hearing detailed accounts of trauma can evoke sensations associated with danger or loss of control. When this occurs, the body moves toward self-protection. In that state, attention narrows, memory becomes less flexible, and complex perspective-taking declines. The listener may interrupt, redirect the conversation, offer premature explanations, or question the account’s accuracy or impact. These actions restore distance from the distressing material.

Group dynamics further shape belief. Within communities, people monitor each other’s reactions to determine what responses are socially acceptable. If influential members of the group dismiss or minimize a survivor’s account, others often follow suit to preserve belonging. Disbelief spreads through social reinforcement rather than through direct examination of the evidence.

Empathy requires the capacity to stay present with another person’s account while holding uncertainty, discomfort, and moral disruption. That depends on relational safety, cultural norms that value truth over hierarchy, and bodies that can remain regulated while encountering painful information. When those conditions are absent, disbelief and distancing become the dominant responses, often adding layers of harm to the original traumatic experience. 

Knowing this reveals the listener’s disbelief as a failure of their own capacity, not a failure of the survivor’s truth. This relieves survivor self-blame and helps them understand the listener’s capacities and priorities.

It re-frames the listener’s negative response—disbelief and distancing—not as a judgment on the survivor’s truth or the impact of their account, but as the listener’s own physiological self-protection response to signals of threat, injustice, or loss of control.

The survivor gains clarity that the subsequent harm is due to the listener’s lack of capacity to remain regulated and empathic when they encounter distressing information. The disbelief is a defensive state in which the listener’s attention narrows to focus on protecting themselves from discomfort.

We can take it less personally when we recognize that the listener’s reaction is often an effort to preserve their own sense of order, predictability, and safety by maintaining cultural narratives (such as institutional trustworthiness) or preserving belonging within professional hierarchies.

When you encounter disbelief, remember this fundamental truth: the negative reaction you receive is never a reflection of the validity of your experience or your integrity. It is not your fault. The person who dismissed you simply lacked the necessary capacity. They were not equipped to offer the attunement, compassionate witnessing, empathy, and validation that your lived experience deserves. Instead of carrying the burden of their discomfort, let their disbelief re-frame the situation: you simply shared a profound truth with someone whose internal resources were too limited to hold it. You deserve better. Trust your clarity, protect your peace, and move on to find a person or communitywho has the capacity to hold space for your truth.

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