Many people living with complex trauma don’t realize that’s what they’re experiencing. They often describe feeling anxious, overwhelmed, emotionally exhausted, disconnected from themselves, or constantly worried about what others think.
Some struggle to trust others.
Some struggle to trust themselves.
Many spend years wondering why life feels harder than it seems to be for everyone else. If this sounds familiar, there may be a very real reason you feel the way you do.
What Is Complex PTSD?
Complex PTSD (CPTSD) can develop when someone experiences ongoing stress, trauma, neglect, abuse, or emotional harm over a period of time.
For many people, it begins in childhood. It might involve growing up with emotionally immature parents, chronic criticism, emotional neglect, family conflict, narcissistic abuse, scapegoating, or feeling like you had to take care of everyone else’s needs while your own went unnoticed.
Often, it wasn’t one big event. It was the repeated experience of not feeling safe, seen, understood, protected, or emotionally supported.
How Does It Show Up?
Complex PTSD affects much more than memories. It can shape the way you see yourself, relate to others, and move through the world.
You might find yourself:
Many of these patterns began as ways to survive difficult experiences. What helped you cope as a child may now be creating challenges in adulthood.
A System of Protective Parts
Over time, these patterns often become more than habits. They can feel like different “parts” of you that show up in different situations, each trying in its own way to help you cope or stay safe. It isn’t just one experience or one emotional response—it’s often a system of protective parts that developed to help you survive what felt overwhelming, unsafe, or too much to hold at the time.
You might notice:
None of these parts are wrong. They are adaptations, shaped by experiences where you had to find ways to cope, protect yourself, or stay connected to others.
Healing is Possible
These patterns can be understood and changed. Therapy is not about blame or staying stuck in the past. It is about making sense of what happened, understanding how it shaped you, and helping your nervous system learn it is no longer in survival mode. Together, we work toward greater self-understanding, healthier boundaries, safer relationships, and a stronger sense of internal stability.
You Are Not Broken
Many people with Complex PTSD carry a deep belief that something is wrong with them.
More often, what they’re experiencing are understandable responses to experiences that shaped them long before they had the words to describe them.
Healing begins when you stop asking, “What’s wrong with me?” and begin asking, “What happened to me, and what do I need now?”
I’m Adrie-Anne Gamble, MPCC, CCC, and I offer compassionate, trauma-informed therapy for adults. My work is informed by specialized training in EMDR, inner-child/reparenting approaches, Internal Family Systems (IFS), and complex trauma (CPTSD).
If you are living with CPTSD, I help you begin to make sense of what feels confusing, overwhelming, or hard to explain. I help you understand how past experiences may still be showing up in your nervous system, emotions, relationships, and the way you see yourself. This is not just about talking through what happened, but gently noticing how your system learned to survive and respond.
In our work together, I support you in processing painful or overwhelming experiences at a pace that feels safe. I also help you work with the body-based and emotional responses that can arise in the present moment, so you are not facing them alone or trying to manage them by yourself.
Together we work to help you heal from what happened and also develop what may never have been fully nurtured—self-trust, emotional regulation, healthy boundaries, and a secure sense of self. Through experiential, trauma-informed work, we create opportunities for new experiences of safety, connection, and confidence that can gradually become part of daily life.
Over time, therapy becomes less about simply surviving what happened and more about creating new internal experiences of safety, steadiness, and self-trust. Many people begin to notice they feel more grounded, more connected to themselves, and less defined by what they went through.
My role is to stay present with you in this process, offering both steadiness and structure as you move through it.
Therapy works best when there is honest connection and genuine care for what you’re going through. I offer a free 15-minute consultation so we can explore whether working together feels like the right fit for you.