I have became aware recently that I am developing an aversion to any books/ tv / movies of a dark and heavy matter. been replacing it with light fluffy cute things. Do feel a lot calmer....it got me thinking do you recon that the primitive brain does not recognise that the horror movie with all the people being murdered in very creative ways is not really happening and is responding accordingly..setting you off letting out the stress chemicals e.t.c
I have found the same thing has happened to me.
I can't watch horror movies, suspenseful action stuff, things involving traumas basically.
I tried watching season 5 of orange is the new black. It gave me flashbacks because of how much it reminded me of my own trauma (forced to do things at gunpoint)
As a result of all the gun trauma it's become harder to watch things involving guns, though some reprocessing and some exposure has helped me get better at dealing with seeing them, and I've gotten to a point where I don't get sick looking at my own pistol.
Now I struggle to watch the news.
Same here - especially since the news always seems to be talking about sexual assault and such things, these days.
What really gets to me is seeing people not being believed. Seeing people defend rapists, attack victims, harass them. It makes me more afraid of opening up.
what do you mean "change the ending of the story to one of empowerment and the bran thinks it actually happened" ? How do you do that? with hypnosis?
For me, that can be accomplished with successful EMDR.
A reprocessed memory can become an empowering one. I'll give an example.
I was cornered in a liquor store, by a very thuggish man, strong, violent, angry, threatening to beat the shit out of me and kill me, coming closer. I was intensely afraid. Both of what he might do, and what I might have had to do.
I was carrying a concealed firearm at the time. He got closer and closer, slammed his hand down, and I put my hand under my shirt, used the other hand to pull my shirt down and obscure what I was doing, and I fully gripped the grip of my pistol, shooting grip, while still holstered.
Here is what reprocessing did for me:
It made me realize that when I did that, and he backed off, flung his arms out and was like "WHAT YOU GONNA DO?!?!?! WHAT YOU GONNA DO HUH?!?!" - he had some fear in his voice. My pdoc helped me realize that. He was probably hit hard by adrenaline and fear the moment I obviously went for a hidden gun. He backed off and put his hands up. At that point, he was reduced to all bark and no bite, and me grabbing my gun was what got him the f*ck away from me, and out of that building.
I pulled my hands out, put them up, and just repeated "I don't want any trouble" despite him trying to provoke me.
I thought I had handled it poorly - I thought I was defenseless - my gun felt like a toy, like it was worthless, in that time. I felt like I'd be to paralyzed by fear to pull it out and shoot him if I needed to (if he had crossed the barrier that told me he 100% was going to attack me) - but reprocessing the memory made me realize, that I actually defended myself successfully
That realization, that reprocessing of the memory, was empowering. It made me feel a little less weak - it made me stop feeling like I let those people walk all over me, and more like I asserted and maintained control over the situation. Me sitting there and taking their insults and threats and provocations, and showing -restraint- and extreme self-control in the moment, was empowering, made me feel better about myself.
It made me laugh - and still makes me kinda smirk, to think of how he was afraid when I had my hand on my gun.
So, simply reprocessing something can be empowering.