It was proposed in group today that rigid patterns in thinking (specifically regarding shame) were instilled in us from early childhood on. I at first rejected this idea saying that I lived a fairly "normal" childhood and my shame didn't come until my trauma in adulthood. My shame was a result of the freeze response (fight/flight/freeze). However, after group I got to thinking...
I was raised in a physically abusive household. I took on the role of the "hero" at an early age. I would divert my father's attention to beat on me, less he wouldn't beat on my mother and my brother. Of course this approach didn't always work as you can imagine. Did I start to shame myself with feelings of failure at an early age every time that my mother and brother were beaten? This would add credibility to the theory that we can be predispositioned for PTSD.
To those that suffered their trauma in adulthood, do you think you developed rigid patterns of shame in childhood, or do you think they came with your trauma? What do you think?
I was raised in a physically abusive household. I took on the role of the "hero" at an early age. I would divert my father's attention to beat on me, less he wouldn't beat on my mother and my brother. Of course this approach didn't always work as you can imagine. Did I start to shame myself with feelings of failure at an early age every time that my mother and brother were beaten? This would add credibility to the theory that we can be predispositioned for PTSD.
To those that suffered their trauma in adulthood, do you think you developed rigid patterns of shame in childhood, or do you think they came with your trauma? What do you think?