- Post starter
- #13
D
Deleted member 1860
I am at a different point in my healing, I believe. I struggle with negative thoughts for the most part and I'm using CBT for dummies right now.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I have certainly done so too @MadhatherI pretty much live my life dissociated,
I don't believe it is how everyone experiences these things at all but I don't think it's odd at all. It is a normal adaptive way of dealing with experiences that are not normal and you are not alone. I have heard others say they are the gatekeeper.. I guess that sounds very odd.
I have made huge progress with this but was also very disconnected throughout my life. Mindfulness helped and is helping a lot. Writing the days events and looking for emotions did too. I recommend Dead Link Removedrecognize emotions and physical feelings for what they are.
Most of my life feels like it happened to someone else. It is about a character in a story and I have no ownership of it. And then a big chunk of my childhood is a total blank.
The three most valuable books I've found are "Hope and Help for Your Nerves". "Healing the Trauma: A Survivor's Guide to Understanding Your Symptoms and Regaining Your Life " by Cori (also a few years old), and the first 3/4th of Waking the Tiger, by Levine. On a spiritually orientated healing level, I'd recommend The Positive Psychology of Personal Transformation, by Garbarino (it's expensive; rent it from a library if you can); and online materials by Pema Chodron [DLMURL]http://www.shambhala.org/teachers/pema/shenpa3a.php[/DLMURL] and learning Mindfulness Meditation have/are helpful to me also.
I struggle with negative thoughts for the most part and I'm using CBT for dummies right now.
I have no attachment to my traumas as in I do not own them emotionally. When I talk about those events it is a narrative, as if I am telling someone else's story