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Healthy Coping Skills?

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fellowsufferer

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Is it possible that with help of therapy you can overcome destructive coping skills(for me: isolation, alcohol abuse, smoking,...) or is it solue a personal behavioral issue that you must change on your own. I mean this in the context of complex trauma!! Thanks for your replay's. It means a lot to me to hear your experiences!!!
 
smile on face, tool in hand, job in front of me, eyes on the goal.

or: eyes on the goal, mind on the path, hands on the task

or: legs in motion, mind on hold

or: butt in recliner, meds on board, mind absorbing television and not ruminating

The first option is the best, the last one is the easiest, they all beat the alternative of anger and bitterness to the point of adrenaline and destructive thinking and self punishment through the use of illegal substance or alcohol followed by a quagmire of guilt and the knowledge that I have just slipped another notch.

@fellowsufferer
therapists are like cartographers, they know how to read the map and find the "you are Here" arrow and lay out the path to where you want to be. You have to do the walking/ climbing/ tunneling through the mountains of crap in the way. I wish I could remember that 24/7.
 
Well okay... @enough nailed it. :)

But yeah, it does really help in tandem with each other. Ultimately a therapist can only show you the way; but you must walk it yourself. There are no shortcuts and most of it will be uphill.. But it's totally worth it. Just remember that getting started and building up inertia is the hardest part.
 
It's sort of a therapy + working all the hours outside of therapy on this stuff, in manageable bits, maybe for quite a while. I've dropped the majorly destructive behaviors one at a time (cutting, alcohol, anorexia...still smoking sometimes and pretty rarely burning myself). I couldn't push this stuff unless it was deadly (like HAD TO quit drinking and had to gain weight when I did....and in those cases swapped for other destructive ways of coping because I just sort of had to, I guess).

I'm working through complex trauma too. In therapy we work on regulation stuff and gaining awareness of my body and being okay with sensations and feelings. It helps to try to do this also on my own. I fail sometimes but growing awareness helps a lot. I've gotten creative with replacing destructive responses to stress with healthier ones like drumming, certain forms of exercise, art, even wrapping my arm with compression tape when urge to cut (not sure how that works, but just noticing the inner feelings and what can calm me and lessen intensity so I can make better choices).

This might not be a common experience, I don't know, but I do not tolerate good feelings well. My therapist is understanding of this. So it's been a gradual process of responding in healthier ways but not focusing too much on feeling "good" or making drastic changes that freak me out. But I do like that I'm learning new ways to deal that feel more creative and still help me feel like I'm in control. You can talk about this stuff with your therapist and pick one or two things to try to work on or just notice a little more, or new things you might try to help cope (exercise, yoga, meditation, music, support groups, nature, etc). It helps me to keep some notes about what helps...how I felt later and the next day...helps too to notice that I can "change" (slowly, gradually) and am not forever trapped in the destructive patterns.
 
I think you CAN overcome isolation and smoking and alcohol abuse on your own, but you also CAN overcome these things with therapy. Some people are indeed motivated enough to do it on their own, but others need the help of others. If its just a matter of motivation, then its perhaps a bit easier to overcome on your own, but if its a matter of not knowing good coping skills, the therapist route may indeed be a bit better.

I think if the alcohol abuse is more along the line of misuse and hasn't crossed the line into dependence or addiction, then its easier to overcome on your own. But, once you become dependent or addicted, then outside help may indeed be the best way to go.
 
@Chava
Wow, to me you are doing very well on your own with your healing. I'm just taking babysteps on my own. I just started traumatherapy today and did nu first homework (breathingexercise) i take prozac 20mg for now. I wish in the future i can do without as i am very tired on it!! For me it's all about these healthy coping skills i find those very hard to integrate but i keep on trying!!! At this moment i am reading a very book:emotional sobriety by tian dalton!
 
@anonymous. Thanks for your support. I think i have used alcohol and ciggs to numb painfull feelings. I want to feel it with healthy coping skills. I think in healthy development we use them naturaly. But as we experience trauma, we lose them. TOUGH i am not shure on this because people without trauma can become hooked on substances?
 
I think that drinking can indeed be a social thing that people engage in responsibly. Then again, I've known more than a few people who claim to be "social" about the whole drinking bit but they're definitely abusing it or dependent upon it or addicted to it. I used to drink in social settings but gave it up because the effects were horrible for me....alcohol gives me night terrors. (SO not worth it...!) I gave up drinking quite a few years ago and I don't miss it at all.
 
I understand the concept that you don't stop a bad habit, you replace it with a new one. If you can't replace it yet, you aim at least to delay it.

For me the trick was to have a list of healthy behaviors to draw on and then crucially for me I need to use them early on well before I'm drawn to the "bad" habit.

Hope that helps.
 
I'd say that after 5 years of therapy and coming to know Jesus as my Savior I made it to a livable place in my life. Before that I was homeless for 3 years and in an abusive relationship. The choice was hard, because I had tried to get away from the abusive boyfriend 16 times before Jesus made the difference that 17th time. I spent 3 months praying constantly that the abuser would not find me and threaten me back into his dragon's lair. I am eternally grateful. When he finally found me a year and a half later, I was strong enough to stand up to him and say NO! convincingly in Jesus' strength.
 
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