11/28/2025
Regaining connection to your own clarity is hardly ever talked about in trauma healing.
Many people lose access to instinct and intuitive knowing after trauma. Even as kids, we can feel when something isn’t right. But when those signals are ignored, dismissed, or gaslit, we learn to second-guess ourselves instead.
Over time, that sense of “something’s off” gets buried under fear, confusion, and everything it took to get through what happened.
If you’ve lived through trauma, especially the kind that made you doubt your own perception, it makes sense that self-trust feels far away. You might ignore your gut, question your needs, or assume others see things more clearly than you do.
Healing invites something different: slowly rebuilding your connection to your own inner signals, the ones that got disrupted in the process of surviving.
That clarity isn’t gone. It’s just been overshadowed by the protective habits that helped you cope.
So what helps? 👉 It often starts with noticing how protection shows up in your body compared to how clarity feels.
🔹Protective reactions tend to be fast, urgent, or all-or-nothing.
🔹Clarity usually feels quieter and more grounded. And when your system is stressed, it’s much harder to access.
As your nervous system feels safer, you regain access to the parts of the brain that support perspective, calm decision-making, and a more reliable sense of what feels right for you.
And we don’t do this alone. Self-trust is shaped both internally and through relationships. We heal by listening to our own signals and by being with people who are safe to lean on — people who help us name what we’re feeling, make space for our perspective, and never override or shame us in the process.
The goal isn’t to always trust your gut or never trust it. It’s learning to tell the difference between fear and genuine insight. That’s what real self-trust becomes over time — not certainty, but a clearer inner sense of “this feels right for me.”