Re-doing because I want to re-title my post and add a video. Hope that's okay. Maybe mods need to take down my other own.
Just read the chapter in "Healing Developmental Trauma" about the "connection" survival style and underlined almost the entire chapter. It's validating because it pretty much explains my life, my struggles, and even why my current therapy feels so important (a therapist who "gets it" and is very much from the somatic and "bottom up" approach camps of Lawrence Heller, Peter Levine, Bessel van der Kolk...).
Some main points (which I relate to at perfect pitch). I'm paraphrasing small snippets because I don't love quoting large portions of books. If you relate, I recommend the book. These are traits of earliest traumas. Usually "globalized" in effecting every part of our tiny organism:
Earliest shock and/or attachment trauma
Disconnected from self and others
Simultaneously shutdown and highly activated
Freeze Response
Core fear: "I will die or fall apart if I feel"
"Self" anchored in a role (musician, boss, mother,...)
shame over needs (anorexia seemed to help ease this for me)
Disembodied, disconnected from and out of touch with their bodies
Spend most time in their heads or spiritual pursuits
Use physical distance as substitute for normal boundaries
Ambivalence....Simultaneously crave connection and extremely afraid of it (I live in a hole in the bottom of the ocean)
Energy is of globalized high-intensity activation (how my therapist describes my stuff), seemingly low energy and sensation, dorsal vagal dominance
Shallow breathing, frozen thorax (yes, painful)
Extremely sensitive...to feelings and also sensory experience like sound and touch...(why I have symptoms that can appear rather autism spectrum at times...have to be careful about what I bitch about at work)
Limited range of tolerance for good or bad feelings, very vulnerable to later traumas (instead of talking to anyone after being sexually assaulted as an adult I tried to kill myself a few times, then just relied on lots of vodka since I didn't dare to live or die
My body memories are all extremely immobilizing (like if I move, feel, or even breathe too deep I will die).
Therapy includes recognizing the ambivalence towards connection and working with it carefully (I'm currently working on this), gradually and safely feeling and tolerating body sensations. And all the regulation stuff. Bottom-up approaches (body, nervous system based) or bottom-up plus top-down together (body + cognitive). Research shows CBT alone is of limited value for early shock and relational trauma, which is my experience too. Thought distortions ease up as regulation is restored.
Anyway, not sure if others relate to some of this experience...or if you've read the book. Just wanted to share. One less way I feel like I'm a fundamentally f*cked up human reject. I'm smart, caring, and actually have a decent level of awareness. I'm just horrified by the experience of being in my body or close to others...at one point that shutdown made very good survival sense, likely why I'm still here. I just need to learn how to live beyond the deeply ingrained survival patterns.
Just read the chapter in "Healing Developmental Trauma" about the "connection" survival style and underlined almost the entire chapter. It's validating because it pretty much explains my life, my struggles, and even why my current therapy feels so important (a therapist who "gets it" and is very much from the somatic and "bottom up" approach camps of Lawrence Heller, Peter Levine, Bessel van der Kolk...).
Some main points (which I relate to at perfect pitch). I'm paraphrasing small snippets because I don't love quoting large portions of books. If you relate, I recommend the book. These are traits of earliest traumas. Usually "globalized" in effecting every part of our tiny organism:
Earliest shock and/or attachment trauma
Disconnected from self and others
Simultaneously shutdown and highly activated
Freeze Response
Core fear: "I will die or fall apart if I feel"
"Self" anchored in a role (musician, boss, mother,...)
shame over needs (anorexia seemed to help ease this for me)
Disembodied, disconnected from and out of touch with their bodies
Spend most time in their heads or spiritual pursuits
Use physical distance as substitute for normal boundaries
Ambivalence....Simultaneously crave connection and extremely afraid of it (I live in a hole in the bottom of the ocean)
Energy is of globalized high-intensity activation (how my therapist describes my stuff), seemingly low energy and sensation, dorsal vagal dominance
Shallow breathing, frozen thorax (yes, painful)
Extremely sensitive...to feelings and also sensory experience like sound and touch...(why I have symptoms that can appear rather autism spectrum at times...have to be careful about what I bitch about at work)
Limited range of tolerance for good or bad feelings, very vulnerable to later traumas (instead of talking to anyone after being sexually assaulted as an adult I tried to kill myself a few times, then just relied on lots of vodka since I didn't dare to live or die
My body memories are all extremely immobilizing (like if I move, feel, or even breathe too deep I will die).
Therapy includes recognizing the ambivalence towards connection and working with it carefully (I'm currently working on this), gradually and safely feeling and tolerating body sensations. And all the regulation stuff. Bottom-up approaches (body, nervous system based) or bottom-up plus top-down together (body + cognitive). Research shows CBT alone is of limited value for early shock and relational trauma, which is my experience too. Thought distortions ease up as regulation is restored.
Anyway, not sure if others relate to some of this experience...or if you've read the book. Just wanted to share. One less way I feel like I'm a fundamentally f*cked up human reject. I'm smart, caring, and actually have a decent level of awareness. I'm just horrified by the experience of being in my body or close to others...at one point that shutdown made very good survival sense, likely why I'm still here. I just need to learn how to live beyond the deeply ingrained survival patterns.
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