- Post starter
- #13
The trigger is unusual. It's not dogs but I don't want to say what it is.
It's not fear, but it's like interpretation. It's kinda like the user who mentioned they associate snow with blood.
It's like I see a dog but my mind associates it as though it were a rat. I am literally looking a dog and there's no doubt I am seeing a dog, and I can absolutely tell the difference between rats and dogs if you lined up 10 dogs and 10 rats and you asked me which is which, but when I see a dog it's like my mind is afraid it's actually a rat. I don't see the dog any differently, as if I'm imagining it has whiskers or something. It's just a strange symptom where my mind is saying "It's a rat. It's a rat. It's rat. Stay away. It's a rat".
So it's like I'm afraid of dogs but I'm not actually afraid of dogs. I'm afraid of rats. But for some reason, dogs seem to imply rats. I believe that's because of a recent traumatic event that involved rats and dogs in some way I don't really understand.
Limbic memory is considered a kind of "lost" memory according to EMDR. It doesn't get properly processed by the left side of brain. The amgydala just encodes "DANGER. DOG. RAT" and the left side doesn't receive the necessary information to process that correctly ("A rat jumped at me and a dog chased after it. I was really scared"). If I could access that limbic memory, the symptoms would go away. A dog would just be a dog again.
It's like those soldiers which have symptoms that a beeping car or beeping microwave sends their bodies into a panic. For them "beep sound" = "explosion". They know it isn't and if you asked them to listen to both and answer which is which, they'll be able to tell you accurately, but they are still affected by it. That's limbic memory.
When EMDR works, it's because the left brain and right brain are activated at the same time and the limbic memory is finally processed. Limbic symptoms go away because the memory is finally integrated properly. EMDR isn't the only way to achieve this, but it's one method.
So in the Soldier's case. Let's say his trauma was that he was with his friend, he heard a beep and an explosion went off, his face was burnt and his friend died. His limbic memory is the emotions and sensations he felt during that incident that weren't properly processed. The trigger is "beep = explosion". He has PTSD. If he can process that limbic memory, it doesn't change that he'll still feel sad that his friend died, that's normal, but he won't be affected by the limbic memory symptoms anymore.
It's not fear, but it's like interpretation. It's kinda like the user who mentioned they associate snow with blood.
It's like I see a dog but my mind associates it as though it were a rat. I am literally looking a dog and there's no doubt I am seeing a dog, and I can absolutely tell the difference between rats and dogs if you lined up 10 dogs and 10 rats and you asked me which is which, but when I see a dog it's like my mind is afraid it's actually a rat. I don't see the dog any differently, as if I'm imagining it has whiskers or something. It's just a strange symptom where my mind is saying "It's a rat. It's a rat. It's rat. Stay away. It's a rat".
So it's like I'm afraid of dogs but I'm not actually afraid of dogs. I'm afraid of rats. But for some reason, dogs seem to imply rats. I believe that's because of a recent traumatic event that involved rats and dogs in some way I don't really understand.
Limbic memory is considered a kind of "lost" memory according to EMDR. It doesn't get properly processed by the left side of brain. The amgydala just encodes "DANGER. DOG. RAT" and the left side doesn't receive the necessary information to process that correctly ("A rat jumped at me and a dog chased after it. I was really scared"). If I could access that limbic memory, the symptoms would go away. A dog would just be a dog again.
It's like those soldiers which have symptoms that a beeping car or beeping microwave sends their bodies into a panic. For them "beep sound" = "explosion". They know it isn't and if you asked them to listen to both and answer which is which, they'll be able to tell you accurately, but they are still affected by it. That's limbic memory.
When EMDR works, it's because the left brain and right brain are activated at the same time and the limbic memory is finally processed. Limbic symptoms go away because the memory is finally integrated properly. EMDR isn't the only way to achieve this, but it's one method.
So in the Soldier's case. Let's say his trauma was that he was with his friend, he heard a beep and an explosion went off, his face was burnt and his friend died. His limbic memory is the emotions and sensations he felt during that incident that weren't properly processed. The trigger is "beep = explosion". He has PTSD. If he can process that limbic memory, it doesn't change that he'll still feel sad that his friend died, that's normal, but he won't be affected by the limbic memory symptoms anymore.