🚨 National Domestic Abuse Helpline (Refuge) – 0808 2000 247

🌈 Galop – LGBT+ Domestic Abuse Helpline – 0800 999 5428

☎️ Samaritans 116 123 (free, 24/7)

Mankind Freephone 0808 800 1170

NAAVoices was not created from certainty, but from lived experience and professional insight. As I migrate earlier work from the original platform, this post has been reviewed and approved for transfer. It remains true to its original context, with only minor clarity edits where needed. Some moments do not require rewriting to remain honest.

There’s a particular kind of exhaustion that comes with surviving trauma — not just the initial impact, but the daily reality of living in a world that no longer feels safe.

For me, trauma arrived in two devastating waves. The first was domestic abuse that shattered my sense of home. The second was police corruption that destroyed my trust in the systems meant to protect us.

Both left marks that don’t fade.

The Weight of PTSD

Over the last nineteen months, I’ve watched my children reclaim joy and safety. They laugh again. They sleep. They play. They are healing.

My own path is far less straightforward.

Trauma doesn’t politely fade. It lingers. It demands to be processed, only to tear you open again. Some days, surviving means nothing more than showing up — carrying pain that no one else can see.

PTSD has dragged me through depths I never imagined. My body buckled under the strain: weight loss, sickness, collapse. There was no pause to heal — only the relentless fight to protect my children. Help was out of reach. No one understood the betrayal or the scale of what I was living.

I blasted loud music just to drown out the memories, but they still crept in from every angle. People saw me functioning — talking, working, pretending.

Flashbacks began in 2022, long before I escaped. Memories of control, threats, and fear overwhelmed me. My pain was dismissed, mocked as “night-time problems,” when all I wanted was rest. Leaving should have been freedom, but West Mercia Police’s failures forced me to relive everything I had survived.

Living Behind a Mask

People miss the mask — the “I’m okay” that hides the chaos.

Some days, I laugh and even connect. For a moment, I feel a fragment of the person I used to be. Not whole, but present. A tiny piece of me that still exists.

But fear lurks beneath the surface. One unexpected call, one stray thought, and everything unravels.

Other days, every smile is forced. Every word is exhausting.

Night-time brings its own dread. I’m too worn from faking normality to fight the torment carved into me by others’ actions. The memories replay with a clarity no sleeping tablet can touch — vivid, real, alive behind my eyelids. Every detail. Every mannerism. Every email. Every date. Every police interaction.

PTSD never rests.

Triggers strike without warning — a scent, a voice, or nothing at all. Good days trick me into believing a future free from this torment might exist. I try to plan, but without hope, planning feels pointless.

Bad days stretch endlessly. Nights loop his words and the police’s failures on repeat. Sleep evades me because my body still doesn’t believe it’s safe.

Nineteen months later, it’s worse than when I left.

Unless you’ve lived this, “moving on” sounds hollow. If people could see the injury to the brain — the neuroplasticity — the way they see a broken bone, maybe I wouldn’t feel guilty for hurting invisibly.

Dissociation: A Mind Adrift

A patient unknowingly gave me the missing puzzle piece. They don’t know what I’ve lived through, but their words helped me understand my own life more than they’ll ever realise.

They described something they experienced and named it: dissociation. And suddenly, everything clicked.

It’s more than triggers. It’s worse than triggers.

I can recall every time it’s happened, but I never understood it until now. My mind checks out, leaving me hollow. I’m behind glass — present but detached. Emotionally numb. Watching life from the outside.

I don’t feel.

Music, once my lifeline, now overwhelms me. Anything emotionally charged feels impossible to let in. What once protected me has become a barrier I can’t lower.

When the Brain Shuts Down

I wrote three times more than this. But I can’t keep going.

That’s the reality of PTSD: when my brain shuts down, everything shuts down — thoughts, words, feelings.

And that’s the part no one sees.

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