D
Deleted member 23044
I myself believe that it is better for a person in the long run to face the pain of a trauma, connect the emotions to a trauma, feel the emotions that were birthed from a trauma, in order for a person to truly heal and move on.
In my personal experience and understanding of dissociation, traumatized people disconnect from their emotions revolving around a trauma and while this is... understandably, a survival mechanism and I'm glad for it(specially for children, as children can not intelligently understand what is happening during the time a traumatic event takes place), I feel that until all the emotions can be felt, accepted, understood and connected to where they belong... the initial trauma can't be fully "processed" as there would be missing pieces. If one continues to stay disconnected emotionally regarding a trauma... then there are missing pieces, so to speak, and the trauma can not be fully processed...? Even if the dark days upon "waking up" puts the person or others at risk(in which case they should be watched closely/admitted/helped for the period of time that this connecting goes on).
In this way I understand where your life coach is coming from. It seems that some people are SO drugged up(prescription-wise) and their attitude about it is... essentially, escapism, and or hoping that drugs will fix them. It's an easy out, just pop a pill and feel better! Right? And this kind of drug use can essentially keep a person disconnected from themselves(because they focus more on medication to try and help them instead of emotionally and mentally connecting themselves). But I myself am not opposed to prescribed drugs, either, like you. Sometimes I do believe it's needed, as I am open to the idea of an anti-depressant if I should ever become scarily dysfunctional and feel that I need the extra help. I would not want it to be a permanent thing, though.
Sorry if this offends anyone!
I think your life-coach meant that it's case dependent and in order to carry on he'd need specific details about everything involved when he said "if we're not talking about a hypothetical situation." You could, if you wanted to support your side, find case's(articles and etc) where medication truly helped a person process their trauma, and that person is healed today, or something like that. Idk though! I think, like you said, he already agreed that it depends. So... maybe it's over.
In my personal experience and understanding of dissociation, traumatized people disconnect from their emotions revolving around a trauma and while this is... understandably, a survival mechanism and I'm glad for it(specially for children, as children can not intelligently understand what is happening during the time a traumatic event takes place), I feel that until all the emotions can be felt, accepted, understood and connected to where they belong... the initial trauma can't be fully "processed" as there would be missing pieces. If one continues to stay disconnected emotionally regarding a trauma... then there are missing pieces, so to speak, and the trauma can not be fully processed...? Even if the dark days upon "waking up" puts the person or others at risk(in which case they should be watched closely/admitted/helped for the period of time that this connecting goes on).
In this way I understand where your life coach is coming from. It seems that some people are SO drugged up(prescription-wise) and their attitude about it is... essentially, escapism, and or hoping that drugs will fix them. It's an easy out, just pop a pill and feel better! Right? And this kind of drug use can essentially keep a person disconnected from themselves(because they focus more on medication to try and help them instead of emotionally and mentally connecting themselves). But I myself am not opposed to prescribed drugs, either, like you. Sometimes I do believe it's needed, as I am open to the idea of an anti-depressant if I should ever become scarily dysfunctional and feel that I need the extra help. I would not want it to be a permanent thing, though.
Sorry if this offends anyone!
I think your life-coach meant that it's case dependent and in order to carry on he'd need specific details about everything involved when he said "if we're not talking about a hypothetical situation." You could, if you wanted to support your side, find case's(articles and etc) where medication truly helped a person process their trauma, and that person is healed today, or something like that. Idk though! I think, like you said, he already agreed that it depends. So... maybe it's over.