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- #25
@theshadowoftheliving that is really interesting as I have done the opposite. I think I became more skilled at leaving my body so in effect the later trauma didn't happen to me.
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What I've noticed having had this happen is that it does not necessarily cause as much distress as what happened the first time but over time emotional or body memories link. Sometimes when something triggers me a long while past when it happened a small memory from that experience will join in with the others.
Biology at play, to put it as simple as possible. Amygdala, Hippocampus, Pre-Frontal Cortex -- between the three, that is PTSD and its effect. Biology is unique per person, DNA, along with psychological makeup.Why is it that someone can be witness to horrific things and not all of them have the same effect?
I don't think you lacked resilience, maybe just didn't know the skills at the time to deal with what you were going through.
Kept captivity and domestic violence, already meet criterion A... so I would think that logic is sound based on existing psychological evidence.tied up/held down, or a social construct, as in domestic violence
Do you think it is also the attachment in the family of origin? If people have attachment that is strong they are kind of PTSD proofed? My psychiatrist once said to me that people are primed for PTSD by their families. That attachment has a role to play.Biology at play, to put it as simple as possible. Amygdala, Hippocampus, Pre-Frontal Cortex -- between the three, that is PTSD and its effect. Biology is unique per person, DNA, along with psychological makeup.