I like this thread! It’s something I been thinking about lately too. I guess there’s this concept of the “primary event” which is the thing that happens in a persons life at a young age where they are humming along and then BOOM (could be a million different things: car accident, potty training, sexual abuse, illness, injury, loss, attack, and so on). Many facets of the event get tucked away and “forgotten” (but not forgotten) as a way to endure the continuing life. And then…
So much of my hyperarousal/hypervigilence can be set off by "seemingly unrelated events"?
It feels unrelated. It’s something that happened during the primary event—the smell of a soap, the feeling of clothing, the look someone gave us—and then BOOM it’s happening again. And our response might be rage, collapse, flee—and people around us might think we are overreacting. In those times where the same sensation is experienced we are rarely able to say, “Oh yeah, this is just like when I felt trapped that time as a young kid when that thing happened.” Instead we tend to deal with it in some way that sidelines or pushes it away—some repetitive act that soothes us—maybe addiction or self harm or projection
if you follow a pattern when confronted with anxiety inducing events,
The pattern of soothing itself can become something that we turn to, even long for—which is why some of us have felt ourselves spinning in rumination over trauma.
the energy from the event
I like that theory of releasing the trapped energy. I used to do trauma-release massage and it really did help me a lot—felt like metabolizing. I think words and dreams can also help us when we are able to SAY clearly—this happened to me and it affected me greatly.
a kind of voodoo thing where you know something happened but you are not sure what.
I can see how somatic work would feel that way. When there’s no ego-centric declaration what is uncovered and what is happening, the healing feels hidden or obscured. I feel that way about the work on the unconscious that I’m doing in psychoanalysis. I have to just blah blah blah free association about whatever comes up and then she says something like, “I noticed you used this word… can you tell more about what that means to you?” And then I notice connections with that word and it gets me thinking—kind of like seeing pictures in clouds. Then afterwords I tend to feel a sense of having been “buttoned up” and when that word comes up between sessions I feel more “positioned” rather than floating like seaweed. Idk if that makes sense!
I was hoping someone had more info because I apparently did something really well in therapy, but have no idea what it was.....
Seems like you have the info inside yourself! Somatic stuff that bypasses the psychotherapeutic relationship works on you in an effective way. When the ego doesn’t get a say in doing things well it can get a little miffed but sounds like you are able to soothe it well enough!