You could not think your way out of the pattern. That is not a failure of insight. That is the nature of complex trauma.
In this episode, Jennifer Wallace and Elisabeth Kristof return to one of the most resonant threads in Trauma Rewired's history: complex post-traumatic stress. Several years ago they recorded a series on CPT that changed how thousands of listeners understood themselves. This is the revision. Not a replacement of what came before, but a deepening, one shaped by advances in trauma research, neuroscience, and by the hosts' own continued growth.
The reframe at the center of this episode is one that matters: complex trauma is not a disorder. It is not something wrong with you. It is a predictive nervous system pattern, an intelligent set of adaptations shaped by prolonged relational stress, often beginning in childhood, that made complete sense in the environment they were formed in. The question is not what is wrong with you. The question is what did your nervous system learn and how can it learn something new?
Elisabeth and Jennifer trace the history of CPT as a clinical concept, from Judith Hermann's early naming of what PTSD could not capture, through Pete Walker's lived experience framework, into the current neuroscience of predictive patterning, interoception, and the body as the site of both the wound and the healing. They explain why complex trauma has no single memory to point to, why it often lives in sensation and state rather than narrative, and why that means healing looks different here than it does for single-event trauma.
The episode also goes deep on something that does not get named enough in healing spaces: the trap of the healing vortex. The way that understanding complex trauma can become its own form of nervous system activation, another thing to fix, another layer to excavate, another reason the system cannot rest. Real growth, they argue, requires repetition and safety and time, but it also requires rest, play, and the gradual experience of being okay in the present moment without urgency.
This episode opens the new CPT series and previews what is coming: the inner critic, toxic shame, social anxiety, emotional flashbacks, and self-abandonment, each explored not as pathology but as nervous system strategies that once served a purpose and can now be worked with differently.
Why complex trauma is better understood as a predictive nervous system pattern than a disorder
The difference between CPT and PTSD and why that distinction matters for healing
Why there is often no single memory in complex trauma, and why the experience lives in the body instead
How interoception becomes disrupted in the context of chronic relational stress
Why the nervous system seeks familiar environments, even harmful ones, and how that perpetuates the cycle
How systemic and cultural trauma shapes the nervous system in the same way interpersonal trauma does
What neuroplasticity actually requires: repetition, safety, and time, not insight alone
Why pushing too hard into somatic work can backfire, and what pacing actually looks like
How the healing vortex keeps people stuck and what stepping out of it makes possible
What observer capacity is, why it is one of the most important markers of growth, and how it develops
A preview of the five distinguishing characteristics of CPT that will be explored throughout the series
0:00 - CPT Shows Up Most Clearly in Relationships
1:13 - Welcome: Revisiting the Complex Trauma Series
2:04 - Why We Are Updating This Framework Now
4:25 - What Complex Trauma Is and Where the Term Came From
6:19 - Judith Hermann, Pete Walker, and Why This Language Matters
7:15 - Why We Use CPT Instead of CPTSD
8:07 - The Distinguishing Patterns: How Complex Trauma Shows Up
10:16 - DSM vs ICD-11: The Diagnosis Question
11:38 - CPT vs PTSD: Different Patterns, Different Healing
13:08 - When There Is No Memory: Implicit Patterning and the Developing Brain
15:20 - CPT as a Predictive Nervous System Pattern
17:09 - The Five Distinguishing Characteristics of CPT
18:07 - Trauma Lives in the Body, Not Just the Story
20:56 - Complex Trauma Is Fundamentally Relational
22:21 - Re-Patterning Secure Attachment Through Somatics
26:35 - Embodied Presence as the Foundation
29:55 - Systemic and Cultural Trauma: This Is Not Only Individual
34:24 - Pacing, Rest, and the Healing Vortex
37:24 - The Role of Play and Pleasure in Nervous System Re-Patterning
41:18 - Building Observer Capacity: The Shift From This Is Who I Am to This Is Happening in Me
43:22 - What Is Coming in the Rest of the CPT Series
NSI Foundations Bundle for coaches and practitioners: neurosomaticintelligence.com/foundations
Two week Rewire Trial of guided neuro somatic training: rewiretrial.com
Learn more about Elisabeth's work at brainbased.com
Learn more about Jennifer's work at her YouTube channel: Sacred Synapse https://www.youtube.com/@sacredsynapse-23
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