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Childhood Imaginal Exposure?

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Stills

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My therapist wants to try Imaginal Exposure therapy next week. What are your thoughts/opinions/experiences with this? I find myself a bit disoriented after sessions and I haven't even begun this type of therapy yet.. My therapist gave me a piece to read on it, which I did, but I thought I'd take it to the forum. Is it intense? I'm kind of anxious/nervous about it...
 
Depends what you do. My therapist used google earth to locate "the house of hell' and i flipped out. If its just imagining things in your head, he will keep you aware that you are in control. Like hynosis but be careful of it not being hypnosis as its suggestion. Im sure it wont be and will be just you imaging and thats fine but keep in mind you control it.

For me, it all freaks me out so your therapist will likely also try to keep you grounded. Its important to stay grounded as well as keep reminding yourself that you control it and you are safe as you can loose yourself and really freak.
 
When any "actual" / physical exposure therapy is too much? That's where I start. Just thinking about XYZ. For just a moment or until I begin to spike. Then back away. Then flirt up to it again, and back away. Then come at it again, and again, and again. Moments, minutes, however long it needs be to only just kiss the edges of anxiety, remain in complete control, and back away.

The biggest trick with THIS one, in my experience, is not "falling in". Aka obsessive thoughts, or ruminating, or racing thoughts, etc.

Once I can think about a thing, and remain calm? Not fall in, go sideways, disassociate, or any other "too much" or out of my control? Then I go onto my more usual step 1.

***

I use crowds as an example of exposure therapy an awful lot. My Step 1 there equalled spending a lot of time of rooftops. I would sit on my roof, far far away from the crowd. Above it. Completely outside of it. In the beginning my chest would vice, my skin would slick with sweat, my vision would blur and tunnel. Mad anxiety. Wasn't even in or near the crowd, but a serious spike. It did NOT, however, kick into an actual anxiety attack or panic attack. And the moment I stepped away? My anxiety backed down immediately. So I spent a lot of time on roofs. In the beginning of that, I'd spike, then lean back and feel the wind on my skin, smell the air, watch the sky, completely ignoring the crowd below... Until I felt steady enough to walk... Then I'd go take a shower (always always always wash off the stink of fear and aggression whenever possible!). But that wasn't all I'd do on the roof. Not just spiking hard, but also reading a book, smoking, star watching, drawing. Glancing at the crowd when Inthought about it. Eventually the crowd became both boring (ding ding ding! That's whatcha want!) and kind of oddly fascinating. In part because it no longer causes the anxiety spike, so I could actually see it clearly. Watch the patterns of people as they moved. So I started spending more and more time watching them. Completely chill.

And then I moved down. Found lower buildings, balconies, scaffolding, etc. Mad. Anxiety. Same as when I first started. And same as higher up? The response started to wear off. So then I gradually moved closer and closer to the crowd. Until I was on the same level. But still outside of it. And then on the edges of it. And then in the thick of it.

But where it all started? Step 0? Thinking.

Okay. I f*cking hate people, and it's bloody exhausting, and, and, and, and... I wonder how I might change that? What would make the crowd less everything bad and maybe sorta kinda okay?

I thought a lot about it. It wasn't until I stopped getting furious at even the thought of crowds that I took my ass up on the roof :p And the roof wasn't the first thing I tried. It just happened to be the best / still triggered anxiety, without triggering an anxiety attack.

...

Some things in my life? Are big enough that in order to "start" I can't just "do it". I have to flank it. Thinking. Talking. Normalizing in other ways before I just dive in. LOL And diving in is extremely relative. Diving in wasn't just going and being in the middle of a crowd. It wasn't thinking about them for hours on end, either. Diving in was spending 3 seconds looking at a crowd, and then an hour doing something else, and 3 more seconds.

Crowds? That whole process from the roof onwards? Took me about 6mo. It was reeeeeally slow. But I probably thought about it for around a year ahead of time. It wasn't super pressing, I was back of beyond far far away from crowds most of the time, and avoided them like the plague the rest of the time. It was just a musing. Like a sore spot in my mouth I'd poke at from time to time. Until one day it became "Huh. I wonder...." ;)

Other triggers and stressors I've chipped away at? Have taken as little as a few weeks. They melt away fairly fast. Others are stubborn motherf*ckers & take years. I have no timeline for how long any of them will take, or how long I'll spend on any stage. I just do them, as they annoy me, in little pieces. Chipping away.
 
Is it intense?

If it's intense I'm doing it wrong! :roflmao:

***

Unless... I have done some fast & dirty exposure therapy. I don't generally recommend it, because done wrong it just makes things worse. Like much much much worse. As in retraumatizing & burning new triggers/stressors worse.

It was the first exposure therapy I ever learned... And it's what made me come at other triggers & stressors knowing they could be sorted, but wondering if I could do it easier&gentler, instead of fast&dirty.

An example of that kind of exposure therapy is that I would kick into a panic attack if there was a loud noise by my head. So myself and several mates spent a long weekend triggering me. Over. And over. And over. Dozens/hundreds of times over 3 or 4 days. All day and most of the night. Even while I was sleeping. In the beginning that meant I'd get triggered and they'd tackle me, pin me to the floor, until I could calm down. Several million years later I'd learned to recover faster. Instead of an hour, half an hour. Instead of half an hour 5 minutes. A millenia or two after that they no longer had to tackle me and hold me. A few centuries later? And so on, and so on. Not every time, but consistently, getting more control. Until Bang! And Inwouldnt be halfway across the room, or at anyone's throat, or wearing a jackhammer for a heart, or puking my guts out, or collapsed in a shaking mess, or frozen and unable to move. Bang! And my mind stayed clear. I was alert, but I was responding, not reacting. Oy. It was hard. Extremely very excruciatingly hard. And for the next several weeks we reinforced those days of constant triggering by random triggering. But it worked.

I've seen it not work. I've seen this go very, very wrong. Hence the Not Recommended. Even when it works, though? It's brutal. Can't underscore that enough. Intense doesn't begin to cover it

But the other way? Like a frog boiling in water... It really is the opposite of intense. The whole point is to go eeeeeeaasy :D If it's intense I'm moving too fast, trying to do too much, staying too long.
 
I haven't done it yet but I was told it will be important to do it to heal the trauma. I was told it's not a guarantee for the trauma memories to be healed completely. But at the very least they won't affect me as much as now I guess. I might give it a try in a few sessions time
 
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