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How Do You All Do Those Trauma Diaries?

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It's been really, like REALLY helpful when needing to give myself a reality check to write stuff down.

Don't want to write it down usually. So much easier to not think about it, not deal with it, and if there's no record of it anywhere, I can kid myself that whatever it was, it wasn't that bad. Works for my past, and works for the way I deal with stuff now.

Once it's written down somewhere, it takes on a certain reality. Like saying things out loud to your T, only with journals, you have more control. About what you write, and how and when you revisit it. Every now and again, you go back to something, the idea becomes clearer, you realise "I've been here before", or sometimes, hurray! "At least it's not like that any more.

You wrote stuff down and it made you feel bloody awful. Why? In theory, nothing actually changed by you writing it down. Only something did change - the emotions you have connected to what you wrote had a chance to come out. And that felt godawful. But the alternative was continuing to carry them around, pretending they're not there, and all the endless suffering that goes along with pretending they're not there.

If you found that journalling brought out a lot of tough emotions. That's a reason to take it slowly. But it's also a reason to consider that maybe (just maybe) journalling may be an incredibly helpful way for you to connect with, processs, and move past, some of those really intense emotions inside that currently have no form of expression.
 
But it's also a reason to consider that maybe (just maybe) journalling may be an incredibly helpful way for you to connect with, processs, and move past, some of those really intense emotions inside that currently have no form of expression.

Probably. I wouldn't deny or doubt that. It is next to impossible for me to write anything. Another good reason to get back into the DBT book. Practice writing down stuff.

I don't know why it's so hard to write stuff down. I guess it makes it more real.

It helps to have a diary here for sure.
 
I've been on and off the forum for yrs. What I like, is going back and reading the very first few pages of my old diary and seeing just how far I have come. Yes, I still mess up at times. Yes, I still fall into depression, yes I've still had suicide attempts. But I'm so much more regulated with my emotions. I learned so much about myself. Why I behaved the way that I did. How I've had to change things. Boundaries. Learning triggers, coping skills. Writing everything down kind of makes you accountable to yourself.

You don't have to do this now. Maybe in a month, or 6 months, or maybe never. It's up to you, if and when, and if ever.....
 
Maybe just start by saying whatever you want to say.

Write about how much you love bananas.

Write about your love of your favorite tv show/movie/music.

Write about anything!

Who says the trauma diary has to be only about trauma stuff?

Dip your toe in with something easy. Later, start getting into your PTSD struggles.

Whatever gets you there-----

:)
 
Avoiding emotions is something we learn from trauma. But it's not something that we apply only to our trauma once we learn how to do it. And all the emotions we're avoiding, whatever they relate to, are contributing to our issues.

Love the above suggestions to journal about anything at all. Working on other stuff, rather than going straight into the centre of the hurricane might be a good way to start the experience of letting the emotions out.
 
The trauma diaries help us who don't have the courage to go there. I see their struggles and many similarities and realize we all run through the same bullshit machine of parents, relationships, hard knocks and come out multifaceted in our take on events and our approach in dealing with it. So l thank those people that help me see things clearer.
 
I use mine as current stressors & trigger exposure, sort of a planner of things I can't think of to trauma and feel insecure with, a place to grab hope and emotions that don't come easily to me, ditto attitudes (trust / joy / speaking up about anything at all).

'How do you' ... with much shaking & puking exercises in all of the meantime. Also avoiding the very existence of the thing for weeks on end, depending how I'm doing.
 
I don't. I don't know why y'all do it


Aside from this piece right here? Link Removed

The following few posts are all about writing a diary, what will happen, how to decrease issues from exposure therapy work (writing about your trauma) and how to construct and maintain a self-help style where you benefit and not just chase your tail in circles.

The things I can talk about, I've got a handle on. The things I can't talk about have a handle on me. I get stubborn about that.
 
Just looking at it from 3rd person perspective. Detach from emotions at moment you are writing the diaries.
 
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