excel is my friend!
I started with every time someone has said to me "wtf? what happened to you?!!"
One column for how old I was, one column for what happened. Just a title - not the whole scenario
I didn't use MY definition of trauma (because, well, minimizing and what not LOL)
I used the reactions I've gotten from other people over the years.
Plus it took off the pressure of me actually looking at them at once and getting swallowed up.
I thought it would be 4 or 5.
Ended up being 32.
That made my brain hurt. But since I had set the parameters I had to take it into t and say ok, here's what I think might be trauma but I think some of them are just melodrama.
She said, " Freida, when I have people do this exercise they usually come back with 4 or 5. You had 32. Can you see the difference?" Que the blah blah, denial, minimizing, and so on
The thing I didn't realize I had also done? A third column with something good that had happened at the same time. Ya. Didn't even notice, she had to point it out to me. Yep, that's been fodder for a lot of sessions!
I go back every so often to look at it, and it has really helped because separating them out like that lets me work on them one at a time. Plus I could pull out the "smaller" ones and build from there. As we solve the little ones I can check them off the list, which helps build my confidence.