...it is the emotions and the impact and consequences of the trauma that require processing, and just giving voice to those isn't enough on its own.
I'm truly sorry for what you're going through.
I've been thinking a lot about processing. After needing some time away from trauma work, I'm now talking with my T about how to restart it soon and have tried saying a tiny bit to test the waters. I feel hit by a tidal wave of the feelings. Especially, as always, fear, fear, fear.
I've been wondering how I'm going to be able to do this and how I did any processing before. I've realised that it's because I'm at a different stage now and getting closer to the entirety of what I need to face. I'm also having to hold on to the belief that the most painful revelations and most intense emotions represent the greatest progress.
I've never agreed when people have tried to encourage me by saying that I survived. Physically, yes, but not in mental, psychological, emotional and spiritual terms. I dissociated and split off from myself because I couldn't survive it. I think the processing
is the surviving. This is the point at which I have to survive the fear.
Maddog, this may not apply in your case - if not, please ignore it. I just wondered if it's possible that intellectualising was a necessary first step for you in processing, for a time? Maybe it was necessary so you had enough distance and stability to manage what you've done so far. Particularly if self-blame is an issue, perhaps initially you could only allow yourself to face things in a harsh and unforgiving way.
I'm wondering this because for a long time I was quite split off while I talked about what had happened (for example, I always talked about myself in the third person, about what happened to "her"). Later I saw that as a negative thing, failing to really process it, but now I think it was needed to make it possible to speak about it at all. I could never have said "I" later if I hadn't done that first.
I might have stayed in the third person for longer than was helpful. But it was essential before I could do any other sort of processing. It kept me safe enough to do what would otherwise have been impossible. I think if I was starting at the beginning again now, I'd still do exactly the same thing. It was the only way I could tell my story - to myself as much as my therapist. When it was time to start saying "I" it triggered a crisis, but in my case I think that crisis was not because it had been wrong to have been saying "she" and avoiding the full realisation that it was my own reality. It was because it was now time to move to the next stage of processing, which was so real, close and terrifying.
I'm sorry this is so terrible to go through. I want so desperately to be on the other side of all this, and I wish all of us were.