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As an alienated parent, you've probably noticed an unsettling side effect: foggy brain. Ever have it where you can't remember your wedding date in court, you blank when someone asks 'how have you been?', or you walk into rooms forgetting why you're there — yet, the moment your child rejected you plays in vivid, painful detail on repeat. This isn't early dementia. It's not you losing your mind, either. It's complex PTSD & prolonged grief physically rewiring how your brain stores memories. Here's why it happens — and what you can finally do about it.
MAIN TALKING POINTS
Memory fragmentation is a symptom, not a character flaw — Complex PTSD and prolonged grief physically alter how your brain stores and recalls information
Three types of memory affected by alienation:
Why you sound "scattered" when explaining your story — Your nervous system is in survival mode, scanning for threats while trauma fragments interrupt chronological recall
The "yearning" feeling explained — Your body is addicted to the dopamine and oxytocin rewards from parent-child connection; when cut off, you experience withdrawal
Trauma memories intensify over time — Unlike normal memories that fade, PTSD-stored memories become MORE vivid because they're stored as "present moment" in the amygdala
You can rewire this — Through CBT, EMDR, tapping, mindfulness, and intentional recontextualization, you can move memories from the danger center to processed history
KEY TAKEAWAYS
✓ Forgetting dates, times, and sequences is normal after complex trauma — Your hippocampus struggles to timestamp events when your nervous system is under siege
✓ Body memories (tight chest, nausea, numbness) are stored separately from factual memories — that's why a smell or sound can trigger intense emotions without context
✓ You're not "crazy" for sounding disorganized when recounting your story — trauma fragments memories into sensory pieces rather than coherent narratives
✓ The solution isn't avoiding painful memories — avoidance reinforces the danger signal; intentional processing helps move them from "present threat" to "past event"
✓ Self-supplied love is the long-term answer — Learning to activate your own reward system means you're no longer dependent on external validation
✓ Recovery is possible — Through trauma-informed therapy, EMDR, tapping, mindfulness, and recontextualization, you can restore cognitive function
✓ You get to choose how you tell your story — Reframing your narrative in a way that supports your healing is not denial — it's empowerment
By Shelby Milford4.9
5050 ratings
As an alienated parent, you've probably noticed an unsettling side effect: foggy brain. Ever have it where you can't remember your wedding date in court, you blank when someone asks 'how have you been?', or you walk into rooms forgetting why you're there — yet, the moment your child rejected you plays in vivid, painful detail on repeat. This isn't early dementia. It's not you losing your mind, either. It's complex PTSD & prolonged grief physically rewiring how your brain stores memories. Here's why it happens — and what you can finally do about it.
MAIN TALKING POINTS
Memory fragmentation is a symptom, not a character flaw — Complex PTSD and prolonged grief physically alter how your brain stores and recalls information
Three types of memory affected by alienation:
Why you sound "scattered" when explaining your story — Your nervous system is in survival mode, scanning for threats while trauma fragments interrupt chronological recall
The "yearning" feeling explained — Your body is addicted to the dopamine and oxytocin rewards from parent-child connection; when cut off, you experience withdrawal
Trauma memories intensify over time — Unlike normal memories that fade, PTSD-stored memories become MORE vivid because they're stored as "present moment" in the amygdala
You can rewire this — Through CBT, EMDR, tapping, mindfulness, and intentional recontextualization, you can move memories from the danger center to processed history
KEY TAKEAWAYS
✓ Forgetting dates, times, and sequences is normal after complex trauma — Your hippocampus struggles to timestamp events when your nervous system is under siege
✓ Body memories (tight chest, nausea, numbness) are stored separately from factual memories — that's why a smell or sound can trigger intense emotions without context
✓ You're not "crazy" for sounding disorganized when recounting your story — trauma fragments memories into sensory pieces rather than coherent narratives
✓ The solution isn't avoiding painful memories — avoidance reinforces the danger signal; intentional processing helps move them from "present threat" to "past event"
✓ Self-supplied love is the long-term answer — Learning to activate your own reward system means you're no longer dependent on external validation
✓ Recovery is possible — Through trauma-informed therapy, EMDR, tapping, mindfulness, and recontextualization, you can restore cognitive function
✓ You get to choose how you tell your story — Reframing your narrative in a way that supports your healing is not denial — it's empowerment

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