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Section: Understand PTSD
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The Ups and Downs of Healing from Trauma
Many of us imagine that healing from the emotional effects of trauma is
like healing from a physical wound. Each day, a healing wound is a little
smaller and less tender, until it disappears. If a physical wound grows
bigger or more tender at some point during the process, it is considered
a setback, and a sign for concern.
Stuck in the closet
By contrast, healing from trauma is more like slowly moving out of a
cramped, crowded closet. During the traumatic event, the small enclosed
breathless space feels life-saving. After the emergency is over, however,
it can feel like a limiting, unending entrapment, where
change is impossible and self-blame is very loud.
A physical state
There are physical changes in both brain function and hormonal activity
that correspond to life in the trauma-reaction closet.
The nervous system is in a highly agitated state, leading to restlessness,
powerful anxiety, and
self-critical, racing thoughts. Several key parts
of the brain shut down, including the section responsible for perceiving
the passage of time, and the part that allows for self-reflection.
Meanwhile, adrenaline causes shallow breathing, rapid heartbeat, and increased
blood flow to major muscle groups. While
the closet does not have physical walls, it is nevertheless a physical
state.
Gradually reconnecting
Healing comes from gradually, gently reconnecting with the
experiences that were overwhelming and/or unacceptable
while they were happening, so that the body can realize that the
emergency is over.
Brief reprieves
As emotional healing begins, there are short visits outside the closet. The
constant agitation of an over-stressed nervous system quiets down.
Breathing expands all the way into the belly, and sighs out gently.
The world sparkles with renewed color and detail. Hope arises for
steady improvement.
Back in the closet after the short excursion is over, nothing has
changed, including the feeling that nothing will ever change. The
brief reprieve feels like an unrepeatable fluke, with the added despair
of "backsliding."
A turning point
As emotional healing continues, the excursions lengthen and happen more
frequently. A turning point comes when, back in the closet with
feelings of timeless entrapment, the memory of being outside the
closet is also present. Eventually, a brief stint in the closet
becomes a reminder of how much healing has occurred, and how much
better life usually is nowadays.
Practicing the transition
When recovering from trauma, the goal is to remember how to make the
transition from agitation to calm, rather than achieving a state of
calm and never leaving
it again. From that perspective, each sojourn in the closet, as
uncomfortable as it is, gives an
opportunity to practice the transition back into a more comfortable,
calm state.
To make the closet more bearable:
-
Remember that experiencing the closet
does not represent a failure, nor a life sentence. It is a perfectly
normal response to traumatic stress, and it will change with time.
-
Give yourself permission to heal slowly, with a lot of back and forth
between feeling better, and feeling just as bad as you did before.
-
Celebrate your strengths.
List all the things you did to survive the original trauma, and
all the things you're doing now to survive the difficult time you're
going through.
-
Keep a mood log to help you track the changes you're going through.
It can be on the computer or on paper, brief phrases or extended journaling. Read
it over when it feels like nothing will ever change.
-
Anxiety is often a big part
of the closet experience. Make a list of all the ways you've learned to
manage anxiety and bring peace into your life.
Post your list in a prominent place, and refer to it often.
-
Some people find help through medications. For people with sensitive
systems, homeopathic remedies such as Bach's Rescue Remedy
tincture or ointment can be helpful.
- Seek out support. Notice the people, events, and activities
that help you feel calmer, and
seek them out. Stay aware of the difference
between calmness and
numbness or dissociation.
Numbness can give you a welcome break from
feeling awful, but it won't help you re-learn how to become calm.
-
If you notice over time that you're still stuck in the
closet as often as before, consider getting trained assistance in gently
and gradually re-negotiating the trauma. EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization
and Reprocessing),
Somatic Experiencing,
and neurofeedback have been shown to be effective techniques.
Give yourself time
As much as you can, observe the ups and downs of your healing process
with gentle curiosity. Luxuriate in the reprieves, endure the hard times,
and above all honor yourself for surviving and healing from a traumatic
experience.
Learn more
Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, Founder and Medical Director of the
Trauma Center in
Boston,
describes some of the physical changes in brain function and hormonal
activity during trauma responses in his article
Clinical Implications of Neuroscience Research in PTSD (pdf) .
Let me know what you think!
Did this article spark a response in you? I'd love to hear about
it! Call or email to
share your thoughts.
Buy the book
This article is part of Wellspring of Compassion: Self-Care for Sensitive
People Healing from Trauma, available from
WellspringofCompassion.com,
Powell's Books, or Amazon.
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Free Consultation
For a free phone consultation about whether supportive
bodywork can help you resolve past trauma, call Sonia at
503-334-6434 or
email today.
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Copyright © 2009 Sonia Connolly
Section: Understand PTSD
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