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Author ORCID Identifier

https://orcid.org/0009-0004-8456-060X

Abstract

This white paper extends the Reclaiming Model of trauma recovery by examining what follows critical consciousness when trauma persists and systems remain largely unchanged. Building on Reclaiming My Story, which framed healing as a Freirean act of reclaiming authorship through naming harm, dialogue, and praxis (Bryan, 2026), this paper addresses how reclaimed consciousness is sustained under ongoing emotional, relational, and structural strain. Drawing on critical pedagogy, trauma scholarship, and a first-person case narrative, it reframes post-trauma survival not as incomplete recovery but as ongoing praxis. The analysis challenges resolution-based and individualizing models of healing by conceptualizing emotional sobriety, relational regulation, and ethical presence as sustaining practices that prevent re-silencing after awakening. Anxiety, ambivalence, and substance use are interpreted through a trauma-centered lens as intelligible survival responses rather than moral or clinical failures, with abstinence understood as a possible outcome of addressing underlying trauma rather than its primary target. By extending Phase Two of the Reclaiming Model, this paper offers a framework for survivors, practitioners, leaders, and institutions seeking to support post-awakening survival without demanding closure, concluding that liberation is not an endpoint, but a practice continually renewed.

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