Refactoring the legacy code of childhood trauma and the silent cost of hyper-vigilance.
♦Concept illustration of “The Ghost in the Machine,” representing mental burnout, complex trauma, and internal system errors through a broken robot head and chaotic wiring. (Image by Geralt via Pixabay)The “System Scan” at 11 PMIt’s a quiet Tuesday night. The refrigerator hums with that low, constant vibration you only notice when everything else is still. Somewhere far away, an ambulance drags its siren across the dark — fading in, fading out.
You’re on the couch, phone in hand, half-reading something you won’t remember tomorrow, when the door opens and your partner walks in.
They don’t say much. Their shoulders dip — just slightly, but enough. No “Hey.” Just the soft, heavier-than-usual thud of their keys hitting the table before the kitchen light flicks on.
I glance up. “Long day?”
“Yeah,” they say, already reaching for a glass. No eye contact. Just that one-word answer, flat, functional.
It should end there.
It doesn’t.
Something shifts.
Not in the room. In me.
The change is almost immediate, but not dramatic — more like a tightening. A subtle internal shift where everything starts to orient toward a single question: what just went wrong?
My brain doesn’t wait for evidence. It starts building a case.
Fragments come first. Tone, timing, the way I said something earlier that might have landed wrong. That joke. That pause.
Was I too much earlier?
Did I sound off?
Did I miss something?
The questions don’t arrive gently. They stack, one on top of the other, until they stop feeling like questions and start feeling like conclusions waiting to be proven.
And underneath all of it — quieter, older — there’s a voice that doesn’t quite sound like me, but has lived in my head long enough to feel familiar.
That’s the ghost.
Not something you see.
Something you run.
I remember a night like that.
They were quiet because of a deadline. That was it. Just work. Just pressure. Just a long day.
But I lay in bed replaying a joke I made three days earlier like it was evidence in a case I had already decided I was guilty in. I even rehearsed how I would apologize for it — rewriting the tone, softening the edges, making it smaller, safer.
A small joke. A forgettable one.
Except in my head, it didn’t stay small. It stretched, warped, attached itself to everything else that felt slightly off, until it became the most logical explanation available.
Not their stress. Not their day.
Me.
By midnight, my body had already escalated the situation. My heart was beating faster than it needed to, and my breathing hovered too high in my chest, like my system had flagged this as something urgent and refused to downgrade it.
My sympathetic nervous system didn’t care about context.
It cared about threat.
And it had already decided where to look.
♦A dramatic black and white spiral staircase symbolizing a deep dive into childhood memories, the recursion of thought patterns, and the journey into the subconscious. (Image by Pexels via Pixabay)The First Script Ever WrittenThis didn’t start here.
It never does.
It starts in environments where emotional stability isn’t consistent — where silence carries meaning, and tone matters more than words.
You don’t get taught how to navigate that kind of space.
You learn by watching closely, by adjusting quickly, by noticing what changes the atmosphere and what makes it worse.
I was eight, sitting at the top of the stairs while my parents argued downstairs. I couldn’t make out the words. Just the rhythm of it — sharp, repetitive, like something stuck and grinding.
But there was one sound I remember clearly.
My mother sighing between sentences.
Long. Slow. Like air leaking from a tire that no one was fixing.
That sound meant things were getting worse.
So I went back to my room and started unplugging things.
My lamp. My radio. The small digital clock blinking 8:42.
I remember the faint click each plug made coming out of the socket, one by one, like I was shutting something down piece by piece — as if reducing the load might stabilize the system.
I sat there in the dark thinking:
If I stop using electricity, maybe this will stop.
I was eight years old trying to solve a broken marriage with a power outlet.
It was absurd.
It was desperate.
And it felt completely logical.
Because if I was the variable, then maybe I was also the solution.
That belief didn’t stay in that room.
It followed me — quietly, consistently — into places that looked nothing like where it started.
Running Legacy Code (With a Ghost Attached)Years later, everything looks different on the outside.
Different home. Different people. Different life.
But internally, something keeps executing.
I realized, slowly, that I wasn’t just reacting to the present. I was running legacy code — scripts written in a completely different environment, one where scanning, adjusting, and preemptively fixing were necessary for emotional survival.
Now those same scripts run automatically, even when the environment no longer demands it.
A quiet partner becomes a runtime error.
A delayed reply feels like a broken dependency.
A slight shift in tone triggers a full system check that escalates far beyond what the moment actually requires.
And the ghost — because it’s always there — feeds the same instruction it learned years ago:
Find what you did.
So I do.
I replay conversations. I analyze tone. I reconstruct entire interactions, searching for a moment where things might have gone wrong.
Even when nothing actually did.
♦A broken mirror in a desolate landscape as a metaphor for fragmented self-identity, the “ego of the victim,” and distorted self-perception caused by chronic self-blame. (Image by Geralt via Piaxabay)The LoopHere’s how it unfolds.
Something feels off — barely noticeable, but enough to register.
The way they close a cabinet is a little sharper. The way their fingers hit the keyboard carries a slightly different rhythm. It’s subtle, but my body reacts as if it’s meaningful.
That’s all it takes.
The loop begins, not as a clean sequence but as an overlapping cascade of thoughts that build on each other faster than I can interrupt them.
Something is wrong, and if something is wrong, there must be a cause, and if there is a cause, it is probably me, so I need to find it before it gets worse.
I scroll back through messages. I replay my tone. I mentally rewrite sentences I’ve already said, adjusting wording that can no longer be changed.
Maybe I shouldn’t have said that.
Maybe I sounded dismissive.
Maybe I’ve been too much lately.
Eventually, I’m not searching anymore.
I’m circling.
Same thoughts, slightly reworded. Same conclusions, slightly intensified. The same quiet pressure sitting under my ribs, waiting to become something sharper if I don’t resolve it.
And underneath all of it, one belief keeps everything running:
> If I can just find what I did wrong, I can fix this.
But the truth is harder to sit with:
> I wasn’t trying to fix the situation.
I was trying to fix being the problem.
And there is no resolution for that — only repetition.
When Your Body Is Still Living in the PastEven when nothing is actually wrong, my body reacts as if something is.
My chest tightens before my mind catches up. My breathing shifts — slightly shallow, slightly faster — and my attention narrows toward anything that might confirm what I’m already starting to believe.
It feels almost clinical.
A system prioritizing threat over accuracy.
My nervous system doesn’t ask whether something is real.
It asks whether it needs to act.
And for a long time, the answer was always yes.
Because waiting used to mean risk.
So now, even in safe environments, my body moves first — fixing, adjusting, explaining — before anything has actually happened.
The Ego of the VictimThere’s a part of this that’s uncomfortable to admit, and it took me a long time to even see it clearly.
Believing everything is my fault also means believing everything is about me.
Someone is quiet → I caused it
Someone pulls away → I did something
Plans change → It must be me
On the surface, this looks like humility — like I’m being self-aware, responsible, careful.
But underneath it, there’s something else.
A quiet form of control.
Because if I am the cause, then I am also the solution.
If I can identify the exact moment I got it wrong, I can correct it. I can adjust myself just enough to prevent it from happening again. I can stabilize the system.
That belief is powerful.
And more importantly, it’s comforting.
Because the alternative is much harder to sit with:
That sometimes things shift for reasons that have nothing to do with me.
That sometimes people are distant because of their own internal worlds.
That sometimes I am not the variable at all.
And if I’m not the variable — then I’m not in control.
Self-blame, in that sense, isn’t just pain.
It’s a strategy.
A way to feel powerful in situations where I actually have very little influence.
And if you grew up as a girl, this wiring often came with an extra layer.
You weren’t just learning to stay safe — you were learning to be agreeable. To read the room. To smooth things over before tension had a chance to escalate.
So the scanning didn’t just become a habit.
It became part of your identity.
Not just something you do.
Something you believe you are.
The First Time I Didn’t Fix ItThe first time I tried not to fix it, it didn’t feel empowering.
It felt wrong.
They were quiet.
And I felt it instantly — the pull to say something, anything, just to change the air.
My brain started firing instructions like alarms layered on top of each other.
Say something. Fix this. Don’t let it escalate. Don’t let it turn into something worse.
My body followed.
Heart faster. Hands restless. A low hum of urgency under my skin that made stillness feel unnatural.
But I stayed still.
Not because I felt calm.
Because I was tired.
I let the silence exist without trying to reshape it.
It stretched longer than I liked — long enough for my thoughts to start filling it with imagined meanings, long enough for my body to push back against the decision not to act.
But I didn’t fix it.
And nothing happened.
No explosion. No accusation. No delayed consequence revealing itself.
Just two people in a quiet room.
And slowly — almost imperceptibly — my body began to recalibrate.
The urgency softened. The tightness eased.
Not completely.
But enough to notice something new:
Maybe this wasn’t about me.
Refactoring the SystemYou don’t delete code like this.
You refactor it.
You learn where it runs.
You notice the triggers.
You question whether the output still matches the environment you’re in now.
And over time, you begin to override it.
Not perfectly.
Not consistently.
There are days when the loop comes back exactly as it was, when the ghost is loud again, when I catch myself apologizing for something that was never mine in the first place.
There are moments when I know better — and still react the old way.
Refactoring isn’t clean.
It’s repetitive.
It’s frustrating.
It’s catching the same pattern again and again and choosing, sometimes too late, to do something different.
But gradually, something shifts.
The reactions slow down. The gap between trigger and response gets wider.
And in that gap, there’s room to choose.
♦A serene and organized workspace symbolizing mental clarity, successful “refactoring” of internal habits, and the peace found in emotional regulation and self-acceptance. (Image by NickyPe via Pixabay)What It Feels Like to Put It DownThe silence is still there.
That part doesn’t change.
But my relationship to it does.
For the first time, it doesn’t feel like it’s pointing at me.
It doesn’t feel like evidence waiting to be interpreted.
It just feels like… silence.
My chest doesn’t tighten the same way.
My thoughts don’t rush to explain it.
I don’t immediately adjust myself to make the moment easier.
I just sit there.
Not fixing. Not shrinking. Not scanning.
Just present.
It still feels unfamiliar.
Sometimes uncomfortable.
And sometimes, if I’m being honest, the urge to go back into the loop is still there — quiet, persistent, waiting for the right moment.
But there are also moments now where the quiet doesn’t feel like a warning.
It feels neutral.
And those moments don’t last forever.
But they last long enough to show me something I didn’t believe before:
That not everything is mine to carry.
And that learning to put it down isn’t a single decision.
It’s a practice.
One I’m still in the middle of.
One that, most days, is unfinished.
And somehow —
that feels more real than any clean ending ever could.
♦The Ghost in the Machine: Why I Blame Myself for Everything was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.