People sometimes wonder why I react so easily. Why a tone shift, pause, or subtle power move can instantly affect my body. They want to know why I notice things others miss and why my system seems to live so close to the edge. Complex PTSD makes sense when understood as sensitization to cues of danger.
I did not become this way because I am weak or fail to “let go.” My nervous system learned hypervigilance from environments where harm was real, repeated, and often wrapped in authority, expertise, or supposed care. It learned that danger did not always look dramatic. Sometimes it seemed polite, wore a white coat, or arrived as dismissal, control, silence, or being overridden while being told it was for my own good.
When danger is ongoing and relational, the nervous system adapts. It detects tone changes, shifts in hierarchy, that autonomy is about to be taken, or needs will be ignored. This is not fearfulness, but accuracy shaped by experience.
From an Interpersonal Neurobiology (IPNB) perspective, Complex PTSD is not a disorder of thinking or a failure to be rational. It happens when a human nervous system has spent too long in conditions that demand constant vigilance. The system becomes sensitized. It starts to respond to cues that resemble past threat because, historically, missing those cues came at a serious cost.
This is why telling someone with complex PTSD that they are safe does not help. Safety is not a concept or decision. It is a lived, repeated experience. My body does not respond to reassurance, but conditions. Does this environment reduce hierarchy or reinforce it? Do I have choice, or am I being managed? Is repair possible, or will harm be denied? Are signals consistent or unpredictable?
Healthcare professionals and family blamed me for my responses. They said I was anxious, thinking the wrong thoughts, focused on the wrong things, needed to forgive, or just needed to take up yoga. They ignored and bypassed the real issue. My nervous system was doing exactly what it had been trained to do: scan, prepare, protect, and react. The problem was not my sensitivity, but that my environment demanded that I take the hits and act like nothing was wrong.
Complex PTSD arises when a sensitized system does not receive enough sustained relief to recalibrate. Healing does not emerge from desensitizing people through exposure or teaching them to tolerate more. It requires reducing the load: fewer threats, less coercion, reduced hierarchy, and more predictability, dignity, and support.
As those conditions change, the nervous system changes. Not because it is convinced, but because it learns through experience that vigilance is no longer required at the same intensity.
This is why I focus on Interpersonal Neurobiology (IPNB). It supports the truth of what happened to us. It explains our responses without shaming. It makes clear that recovery is not an individual failure or success story. It emerges when sufficient safety and connection exist for the nervous system to recognize that the environment no longer requires hypervigilance.
