I was recently discussing trauma work in a different thread with @Justmehere and others, and I decided to create this thread in hopes of gaining more understanding as to what trauma work entails. Many sufferers have a lot of experience with therapy and I'm looking forward to hearing from all those who would like to explore this any further and perhaps share some of their experiences.
I have heard that that when a sufferer is seeing a counselor, PTSD can oftentimes get worse before it gets better. I am not quite sure why it is that way... but is it because the sufferer openly talks about things that hurt thus the painful experiences come to the surface? I would guess that they learn to be more in touch with themselves and their emotions. This is just my perspective and I hope that some of your can offer some insight regarding this.
What do you think is important for the loved ones/supporters to remember while the sufferer doesn't communicate as much during this time and creates immense space? It would certainly make sense to give them their space so they can work through things. What can you do if the sufferer doesn't respond or receive the offered help? should you communicate at all or just let it be while they go through this on their own? I know that every person is different, but what have your experiences been? What has helped and what hasn't?
What do you think should the supporter know abut trauma work and what their sufferer may be experiencing at that time?
I have heard that that when a sufferer is seeing a counselor, PTSD can oftentimes get worse before it gets better. I am not quite sure why it is that way... but is it because the sufferer openly talks about things that hurt thus the painful experiences come to the surface? I would guess that they learn to be more in touch with themselves and their emotions. This is just my perspective and I hope that some of your can offer some insight regarding this.
What do you think is important for the loved ones/supporters to remember while the sufferer doesn't communicate as much during this time and creates immense space? It would certainly make sense to give them their space so they can work through things. What can you do if the sufferer doesn't respond or receive the offered help? should you communicate at all or just let it be while they go through this on their own? I know that every person is different, but what have your experiences been? What has helped and what hasn't?
What do you think should the supporter know abut trauma work and what their sufferer may be experiencing at that time?