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Now I have to figure out how to control these triggers .
It depends on whether it was stress cup overflow, or triggers/stressors, or both. Most of Stress Cup management will be in the 2 links (PTSD Cup explanation esp)... In bleeding off stress so that "a toilet paper roll on backwards" doesn't immediately kick into WWIII !
Triggers & stressors, meanwhile, are things that we have to intentionally blunt over time (totally possible! :D) instead of "simply" (Ha!) managing our stress. One of the first steps there is Identifying triggers & stressors as they pop, so you can both be aware of them & work on them. Triggers & stressors can literally be anything... The way the sun happens to hit the grass, to a cologne you or someone else was wearing, to an emotion you were feeling. Any kind of sensory input from either the accident itself, directly before the accident, or directly after. Something you're brain has linked to OMFG!!!! DefCon 1!!!! and that we have to gradually UN-link. Good news is that's totally possible! Bad news it it generally takes time. :wtf:
Examples of what may have triggered you (or may not affect you at all... Just to get you started thinking) :
- If you were screaming & other people were shouting? It's very possible that you will kick into / trigger off any time you're shouting or raising your voice, or someone is shouting at you. The "fix" on this (and all triggers & stressors) will not be to avoid them, but to build your way back up to having a normal response instead of a trauma response. So raising your voice / or having other people raise theirs at you... On purpose... Gradually... Until you are in complete control no matter what volume is come out your own mouth or anyone else's.
- If you or someone else flipped a dog a scrap of food right before the accident, or you saw someone do it as they were loading you into the ambulance, etc.
- If someone was following you & berating you right before the accident.
- If you'd had an argument about money, or had been thinking about it right as the accident happened.
- If the news on the radio in the car mentioned factory or farm equipment accidents
- If the squak of the drive through speaker was the same as the one on the factory floor
- If your wife was wearing the same perfume that day as the EMT who loaded you up, or you'd had a burger for lunch that day and still smelled the grease, or, or, or..
There are literally hundreds of tiny details to glaringly obvious (in retrospect) things a person can trigger over. When it hits? We kick into fight/flight mode & waaaaaaaay overreact physiologically (and therefore also mentally/emotionally) to a situation. It may feel very random, and very uncontrollable in the beginning; but the more you pay attention the less random things will become, and the more we are able to manage our stress & blunt triggers.
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