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News Interesting Ted Talk - Childhood Trauma

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adriftatsea

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I saw a good TED talk on childhood trauma and health impacts across a lifetime.

There really is such a lack of knowledge in healthcare providers about the profound effect trauma at a young age has on the whole body.

If anyone has enough posts to share a link and would care to look it up and share, the information for the TED talk is below. (It was from Sept 2014, so if it has already been posted you can ignore this or check it out if you haven't seen it)

Nadine Burke Harris:
How childhood trauma affects health across a lifetime

TEDMED 2014 · 15:59 · Filmed Sep 2014
 
You're quite welcome. I did an ACE (?) test... and remember it was more than four but not the actual number. I'd have to dig around to locate it... Someone here brought the topic up maybe a couple years ago. My memory is not very good.

Edited to add a link: http://acestoohigh.com/got-your-ace-score/

Not sure if this is the one I did before or not but the graphs look familiar. By that link I'm a 7. At the bottom is a "Resilience score"... by that one I'm a 9. Pretty sure that's the same link I saw before.
 
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Yeah, NH... even maladaptive habits (cig smoking for me) not withstanding... the altering DNA thing gave me pause. Sobering to see the statistics, but the talk itself given by Ms. Harris... was sort of inspirational. Good for her. I hope it gets a wide viewing among the medical community.
 
@Nighthawk Risk factors are not absolute factors... physical health problems can be linked to trauma, nothing to do with trauma, or a mixture of both if you had prior risk. Risk is just that, risk... and should not be construed as an absolute reason as to why you endure something in adulthood.

If there are no other medical reasons as to why something has happened, then you could with some accuracy assign it to early childhood risk escalation as the cause, thus mental health has caused the physical health issue. But one should certainly not link everything physical health based to their mental health or prior risk.
 
@anthony My answer should not have put ito the context of black and white and more in the context of. I understood that Ted talk way too well. I am would not be surprised if some of my medical issues are due to my traumas and ongoing PTSD.

Thank you for calling it out I need that every now and then :)
 
aces 9 resilient 8. age 44. male .. everything except the sexual. long term depression, anxiety, sleep, alcoholism. relationship problems, fired from almost every job. but super intelligent. owned my own business cause you cant fire yourself. had my grandparents take care of me and my brother from 8-18 during the summers. abusive dad died when 7 same with my uncle and my niece. all 3 months apart. cant remember anything except a few horrible memories before 8. step father divorced at 16. best friend died at 17.. grandparents was the best part of my life and i guess the resilient part of my life.. didnt have any physical problems til last year at 43 had a spinal stroke and was paralyzed from the chest down. i told the drs it was cause of ptsd and panic attacks and they pretty much laughed at me. but couldnt find a single reason for the "actual" cause. from the day it happend up til about 4 months after i was calm for the first time in my life. had no anxiety, no fear, no paranoia, or insomnia, nothing it all went away. sure i was upset about being paralyzed but so relieved from the mental war... but i also started drinknig coffe like it was going out of style and loved sugar. which i hated and couldnt handle up to that day of the stroke. and my blood pressure went from 140/90 to 120/80 over night and stayed that way. a few years earlier i had blood work that put me at the 90% of epiniphrine and norepinephrine. so i was continally in flight or flight i knew it and felt it. but i think the stroke at the t-6/7 cut off my adrenal glands. i tried to get drs and neurologists and psychiatrists to notice. but no one cared.. ive been making slow and steady progress. and can sit up and can stand on my left leg for a few seconds and have just regained some control of the right leg. im working towards a full recovery. but as i recover so too is my ptsd. after 3-4 months. it started coming back... and my craving for coffee and sugar was gone by 6 months. if i drink coffee its like smoking crack and andim high as shit for about an hour and a half and then i crash and have to sleep for 3-4 hours. if i dont i am worthless, cranky irritable, seeing geometric colors like im coming down off a 3 day long bad trip. same with sleeping if i dont get 6 hours of sleep i start going even more insane. for the last few weeks i havent slept more than 2-4 hours at a time do ok for 3-4 hours then have to sleep again. so iget 3-4 days in a day which really screw you up. the daizepam and trazadone dont work anymore and i think are causing more harm than good now and want to get off them... and now 10 months later the PTSD symptoms are full force. even more than before especially since not only am i trapped in my mind. my body didnt heal as fast and im trapped in my body too. living at my moms. cant go out. and isolated. trying to stay positive but fighting mental and physicial battles at the same time can prove tooo. much. i hope my body heals before i give. up. good luck to any and all survivors..
 
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