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Invisible Scars: Surviving, Healing, and Finding Your Voice with Christopher Carazas
Some of the deepest wounds are the ones no one can see.
In this powerful and vulnerable episode, we explore invisible scars with survivor, storyteller, and global development and social impact leader Christopher Carazas. Christopher shares his deeply personal journey of being diagnosed with autism as an adult—and how years of masking his true self left him feeling like he never truly belonged.
Instead of receiving understanding and compassion after his diagnosis, Christopher was met with psychological, emotional, and verbal abuse. He was told he wasn’t good enough, that he should be ashamed of his existence, and that he didn’t deserve the space he took up in the world. These cruel and dehumanizing messages led him to attempt suicide—twice. Thankfully, Christopher is still here.
Those experiences became the foundation for his memoir, Now That I’m Still Here, a raw and honest exploration of trauma, autism, grief, abuse, and survival.
Christopher describes his life as a “mosaic of shifting landscapes and invisible scars.” Growing up across continents, he learned to adapt constantly while rarely feeling accepted. Masking his autism became a survival strategy—until abuse weaponized his differences and pushed him toward collapse and silence. Healing did not come dramatically or heroically, but breath by breath.
Through profound loss, grief, and rebuilding after devastation, Christopher found his way back to himself through writing. His story speaks to anyone who has survived emotional abuse, lived with grief as a daily companion, or struggled to reclaim their voice—especially men and neurodivergent individuals who are often taught to stay silent.
This episode is a reminder that survival itself is meaningful—and that telling our stories can be a powerful act of healing.
In this episode, we discuss:
Connect with Christopher:
🌐 Visit his website: https://chriscarazas.com/
If you or someone you love is struggling, please remember: you are not alone, and help is available. Your story matters—and so does your life.
Thanks for listening to Linda’s Corner. Please share this episode, subscribe, and leave a rating and review—it helps us spread more hope and healing.
Visit lindascornerpodcast.com and follow @lindascornerpodcast on YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest.
For free resources to boost happiness, confidence, and emotional well-being, visit hopeforhealingfoundation.org.
Remember—you are stronger than you think. Become the champion of your own story.
By Linda Bjork5
107107 ratings
Invisible Scars: Surviving, Healing, and Finding Your Voice with Christopher Carazas
Some of the deepest wounds are the ones no one can see.
In this powerful and vulnerable episode, we explore invisible scars with survivor, storyteller, and global development and social impact leader Christopher Carazas. Christopher shares his deeply personal journey of being diagnosed with autism as an adult—and how years of masking his true self left him feeling like he never truly belonged.
Instead of receiving understanding and compassion after his diagnosis, Christopher was met with psychological, emotional, and verbal abuse. He was told he wasn’t good enough, that he should be ashamed of his existence, and that he didn’t deserve the space he took up in the world. These cruel and dehumanizing messages led him to attempt suicide—twice. Thankfully, Christopher is still here.
Those experiences became the foundation for his memoir, Now That I’m Still Here, a raw and honest exploration of trauma, autism, grief, abuse, and survival.
Christopher describes his life as a “mosaic of shifting landscapes and invisible scars.” Growing up across continents, he learned to adapt constantly while rarely feeling accepted. Masking his autism became a survival strategy—until abuse weaponized his differences and pushed him toward collapse and silence. Healing did not come dramatically or heroically, but breath by breath.
Through profound loss, grief, and rebuilding after devastation, Christopher found his way back to himself through writing. His story speaks to anyone who has survived emotional abuse, lived with grief as a daily companion, or struggled to reclaim their voice—especially men and neurodivergent individuals who are often taught to stay silent.
This episode is a reminder that survival itself is meaningful—and that telling our stories can be a powerful act of healing.
In this episode, we discuss:
Connect with Christopher:
🌐 Visit his website: https://chriscarazas.com/
If you or someone you love is struggling, please remember: you are not alone, and help is available. Your story matters—and so does your life.
Thanks for listening to Linda’s Corner. Please share this episode, subscribe, and leave a rating and review—it helps us spread more hope and healing.
Visit lindascornerpodcast.com and follow @lindascornerpodcast on YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest.
For free resources to boost happiness, confidence, and emotional well-being, visit hopeforhealingfoundation.org.
Remember—you are stronger than you think. Become the champion of your own story.