I wish I had a silver bullet for you brokendollparts - I was there. Clinical depression and CPTSD.
I can only offer what helped me along the way and hope you get the help you need to not feel defeated.
I thought I was a fortress of faith and mindfulness until discovery day. Nothing made a dent until about three years in.
I was very mad at myself for not being able to get out from underneath my own feelings, so I get that too.
Ultimately, I was able (very slowly) to change my focus.
The trauma and recycled thoughts can stay in that pattern because your brain is certain it can fix the outcome, that it can calculate a path out of the trauma if it re-lives the trauma just ONE more time — but it doesn’t. Your brain is trying to protect you by overthinking. At least that was the answer in my case.
So, I had to change the endless thought patterns. Those changes were measured in minutes. As in when I started, the negative thoughts took up 55 minutes of an hour. Then after a few weeks, only 50 minutes of the hour. Now, negative trauma thoughts can still trigger, but I tackle them within in a minute.
I picked distractions to ‘buy’ time.
Comedy on TV, or music (music previously was all I needed, but the A changed that, it took years for it to be helpful again), a movie, a walk, a work-out, drive, lunch with a good friend.
Those distractions led to more activities to get more positive moments out of each hour.
All of that helped the daytime, but the nighttime then became the nightmare.
Like a little kid, I kept the TV on, or music on, some white noise, anything I could focus on instead of the repetitive thoughts. My pre-A sleep pattern has NOT returned 7.5 years later. I have some decent nights, five hours of sleep is the post A record, but it is still the frontline battle with negative thoughts to THIS day.
Somewhere along the line, I understood that I have a vote, I have control over where my brain goes. Even if it brings up the trauma every minute, there is a half a second where I get to decide to change the channel - to distract the pattern myself.
The flip side of it is, if it is a very specific flashback or memory, I will allow it in to understand what it is my brain is telling me. Usually, it is a part of the trauma I hadn’t processed. And that process is, yes, it happened, it’s over, and now I need to mow the lawn and get on with today, in the now. Bad stuff isn’t happening in the now.
I finally am able to help my brain understand past and present. It sounds silly to some, but our brains are not linear storage. It’s all one big jumble of thoughts of all of experiences all at once.
We can carve out some new neural pathways, it takes a lot of distractions to rebuild a new focus.
Your post sounds frighteningly normal to me, there is no deadline for recovery, you will recover at your own pace.
These days, I appreciate my progress, focus on what I can control, which is that half second to decide how I respond to adverse thoughts.