DogwoodTree
Platinum Member
Once you've resolved a memory, how does it feel different?
Does it not intrude into your thoughts anymore? Does it not overwhelm you with the experience of remembering it? Does it not interfere with your ability to do normal things?
Haven't quite been able to wrap my mind around what this could look like...
A few years ago, I lost two babies to miscarriage within a few months. For about a year, it was extremely painful to think about the losses, to where I would lock myself in my closet for hours, or go driving and not come back for several hours, and I had extreme suicidal ideation. But I faced "into" those feelings, and felt the grief and pain and sadness and despair, instead of stuffing it and pretending that it didn't affect me. About two years after the losses, I got to a point where I could think about them and, even though I might cry a little, it wasn't overwhelming.
Now, 6 years after the losses, I can think about them without even getting all that sad. I wonder about those babies, and I can "tap into" the sadness when trying to relate to someone else who has experienced a loss, but it's not at all overwhelming. But there are people I talked with during that time right after the losses, who would get very upset about their own losses from decades earlier. It seemed like they had never really processed the grief. (But then...I might be handling my own losses very differently because I have Asperger's, and it might not really have anything to do with who has processed their grief and who hasn't...I just don't know.)
So...is it possible to expect a similar level of resolution on childhood trauma memories? Could I reach a point where I know those things happened, I accept them, and it no longer affects me so deeply? Or are those things buried so deeply in my psyche that this is simply not a reasonable goal?
Does it not intrude into your thoughts anymore? Does it not overwhelm you with the experience of remembering it? Does it not interfere with your ability to do normal things?
Haven't quite been able to wrap my mind around what this could look like...
A few years ago, I lost two babies to miscarriage within a few months. For about a year, it was extremely painful to think about the losses, to where I would lock myself in my closet for hours, or go driving and not come back for several hours, and I had extreme suicidal ideation. But I faced "into" those feelings, and felt the grief and pain and sadness and despair, instead of stuffing it and pretending that it didn't affect me. About two years after the losses, I got to a point where I could think about them and, even though I might cry a little, it wasn't overwhelming.
Now, 6 years after the losses, I can think about them without even getting all that sad. I wonder about those babies, and I can "tap into" the sadness when trying to relate to someone else who has experienced a loss, but it's not at all overwhelming. But there are people I talked with during that time right after the losses, who would get very upset about their own losses from decades earlier. It seemed like they had never really processed the grief. (But then...I might be handling my own losses very differently because I have Asperger's, and it might not really have anything to do with who has processed their grief and who hasn't...I just don't know.)
So...is it possible to expect a similar level of resolution on childhood trauma memories? Could I reach a point where I know those things happened, I accept them, and it no longer affects me so deeply? Or are those things buried so deeply in my psyche that this is simply not a reasonable goal?