This is thread is as a result of another that is on at present and made me think. What do we need to do to get better when we have had childhood trauma? If others who have adult trauma want to pitch in as well then that is great.
These are things that immediately come to mind:
From a positive perspective I see it as a life finding journey. Sailing down the river and gathering wellbeing or healing along the way. Every step we take is a victory and something we should be proud of. As a concept of course as I mostly spend my time beating myself up in a quite deranged way! ;)
These are things that immediately come to mind:
- Removing unhealthy means of coping such as self harm, alcohol and drug dependence, eating disorders, OCD and sex or other addictions etc.
- Developing healthy coping skills and self soothing skills.
- Learning to identify emotions and moderate them through healthy means.
- Processing the trauma by creating a narrative, processing the emotions and changing related distortions. Creating a self with trauma integrated.
- Managing dissociation so that self/selves are present and life functions smoothly.
- Learning to manage and tolerate flashbacks and intrusions and address them through processing the trauma.
- Development of trust of self and situation-appropriate trust of others (not undertrusting or overtrusting)
- Development of a sense of self and self awareness.
- Developing healthy attachment patterns.
- Desensitising self to triggers and stressors through careful exposure.
- Learning to manage and be aware of projection, mindreading and other interpersonal saboteurs.
- Learning assertiveness and how to avoid passiveness, passive aggressiveness and aggression. Managing boundaries.
- Learning to avoid caretaking, saving behaviours, Stockholm, codependent, victim or abusive/victimising behaviours.
- Learning to tolerate healthy intimacy rather than avoidance, learning to tolerate healthy intimacy rather than being enmeshed, or learning both if both problems cycle.
- Retraining the brain to develop new healthy patterns of thinking and responding through consistent practice and resultant rewiring of the brain through brain plasticity.
- Learning to express anger healthily (not suppressing or acting out) and acknowledging and expressing pain.
- Learning to change depressive thinking and depression, or to effectively manage their illness for those who have bipolar or other organic or long term mental health issues.
- Learning to celebrate the positive or achievements for us, and others when relevant, and to defeat perfectionism.
From a positive perspective I see it as a life finding journey. Sailing down the river and gathering wellbeing or healing along the way. Every step we take is a victory and something we should be proud of. As a concept of course as I mostly spend my time beating myself up in a quite deranged way! ;)
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