Dealing With Childhood Trauma As An Adult, Especially Social Anxiety

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If social situations feel dangerous, your body may be replaying old lessons, not reporting the present.

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Trauma often trains you to scan faces for threat, so “small” things like a pause or a look can feel like rejection.

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Name what is happening in the moment: “This is an old alarm,” because naming gives you a little space to choose.

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Give your body a quick proof of safety: feel your feet, lengthen your exhale, and look for three ordinary details in the room.

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In conversations, aim for contact not performance: one honest sentence, one curious question, then a breath.

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Set tiny boundaries that protect you without hiding you: arrive late, leave early, or step outside for two minutes.

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Choose relationships that make repair possible, because healing is less about never getting triggered and more about being met kindly afterwards.

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