May/Mental Health Month - PTSD: The Mind’s Way of Remembering What the Body Can’t Forget
PTSD isn’t just about flashbacks or nightares. It’s about memory—how the mind and body remember danger long after the danger is gone. People often think PTSD means being “stuck in the past.” But for those who live with it, it feels more like the past being stuck in them. A sound, a smell, a tone of voice—anything can open the door to a moment that never really ended. PTSD is not weakness. It’s not drama. It’s not a refusal to move on. It’s the nervous system doing its job too well—protecting, scanning, bracing, even when safety has returned. For some, it comes from a single event. For others, it’s the accumulation of many small ones: chronic stress, emotional neglect, repeated loss, or living too long in survival mode. And for many, it’s invisible. They look calm, competent, even cheerful—but inside, their body is still negotiating with ghosts. Healing from PTSD isn’t about erasing memory. It’s about teaching the body that the present is not the past. It’s about learning that ...