Thanks all for your thoughtful responses. First of all, it's just nice knowing that I'm not the only one this is happening to. This is why this forum is so helpful - friends and family do not necessarily understand any of this, and it would be hard to convey the experience to someone who do not share it.
@OliveJewel, thanks for saying this:
I know you were asking hypothetically, to understand your own perspective, but I feel compelled to answer: because they were bad evil sadistic and/or immature people.
Yes, I just threw it out to describe what happens, but your reminder is much appreciated. Also thanks for the reminder that callous behavior deserves a proportional reaction. It's much easier to react more fairly though when I'm not swamped with the entire history of abuse, and here is my boyfriend in front of me acting callously. If I'm feeling really swamped, I pause for a very long time to figure out what he can help me resolve, and try to distinguish that from the huge load of shit that he could never help me unshovel in that moment. That pile is for me to keep on unshoveling over time (with his continued support).
This is so interesting:
Without communication it's more likely the only one you'll be communicating with is yourself, and a lit up amygadala won't be worried about looking for evidence to the contrary of what you've been triggered by and what you fear (are certain) it likely means or foreshadows. It connects many dots quickly and trips the alarm.
I didn't think of my boyfriend's feedback in quite this way, but I see what you're saying. By trusting him and allowing his words to soak in, I am preventing my head from becoming an echo chamber where my traumatized responses are the only voices. But that is really hard to do in the midst of a trigger. The way van der Kolk describes it, trying to hear reason while re-experiencing trauma would be just like trying to talk oneself down while facing down a lion who is about to attack. It is a mortal fear that takes over, just as we as children thought we would literally die because our care-takers might abandon us. So I do think it will continue to be a challenge, but it definitely has gotten better over time. I think trust is a big one. I feel like it's key for healing in other ways as well. I've been aware of and working on my betrayal trauma.
being able to 'peer around the feeling'
I think I know what you mean by this, and I think I do this in my own way. With experience, I've developed this small, little voice that reminds me that this could be a remnant from the past and not a part of actual reality, and so maybe we shouldn't go full force in acting on this "reality". In my 20's, I so wholly bought into the traumatized reality when I was triggered that I had no distance between myself and the reactions I was having, which were frequent. That was so gut-wrenching, and it deepened and added to my trauma because I acted in the world guided by this alternate reality.
Also, remembering that feelings pass. So hard to remember, or at least I found it hard, when triggered and overwhelmed.
I think this is really important. But when you are re-experiencing trauma as something that is your reality forever, it's very hard to conceive of the idea that there is any other reality or time than the feeling you are having. But I do think that is the right path to try and grow the distance between the traumatized reality and you.
i am currently wondering if a memory is just a memory and the difference between a flashback and nostalgia is how i react.
I'm not sure,
@arfie. To me, memory is cognitive, but a flashback is a mind-body, visceral experience. I wouldn't want to interpret my reactions to flashbacks as a choice I make over and above a staid, cognitive memory. From my understanding, flashbacks are literal re-experiences of "trapped" trauma. I am not a psychologist, but I've read extensively, and what I gather is that unresolved trauma are driven into the unconscious realm where they live intact and permanently until they somehow find resolution. They can only find resolution when they get satisfied in reality which is why they keep recurring. They are attempting to reenact what happened so that it can finally find fulfillment. I think successful re-parenting can go a long way in providing lasting resolutions.
i work to look past the monsters and find those tragically neglected precious gems. they are worth digging for, whatever the muck and mire they are buried in.
Thanks for these thoughts. The way I would incorporate these insights would be in re-parenting. If you were denied love and safety, giving that to your inner child by foregrounding the gems and maybe saying that this is what you deserved and should have gotten more of. I think that's beautiful, and I think your ability to do that despite your crazy bitch wolf moments is beautiful and says a lot about you.