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Trauma Therapy, What To Expect?

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Thank you @brokenEMT for your support. It has been so hard, I just want to shut dow...

It's all good @Gia1019 , we're all here to give & receive support. If not your T, or your ostrich.... oops I mean your husband.... then hopefully you have someone you can share with who can support you.

Ooohhhhh, shut down is so comfy & cozy, and protective. But causes so many issues.
 
The way I think of it:

General therapy is a lot like the ER pathway. People go in feeling shit, maybe on their own 2 feet maybe BIBA, and may or may not know what's wrong, and leave more or less patched up. Then follow up with their GP, physical therapy, etc. It's all about what's wrong now, how can we fix it, and at each stage of recovery feel better as they go through.

Trauma therapy (when dealing with PTSD, as opposed to acute trauma, & other trauma schtuff) is a lot like reconstructive surgery. Something happened a long time ago that is seriously f*cking up your life now, and requires major surgery to go in and start breaking bones to reset them, and skin grafts, and burn abraiding, and all kinds of things that -quite frankly- make you feel so much f*cking worse than when you first gimped your way into the office, that even knowing you'll be a zillion times better after all the surgeries and reconstruction and rehabbing and reconditioning, there are times when <insert screaming no-no-no just f*cking stop! I'm done! Done! here> happens.

There's a lot more planning that goes into both reconstruction & trauma therapy. Because you know in advance things are going to get worse for awhile. So there need to be skill sets & coping mechanisms in place. Lives need to be fairly stable (income, housing, meds if any, etc.) in order to be able to absorb the blow. Immediate problems (suicide, depression, emotional instability, substance abuse, etc,) need to be sorted, before you can start the trauma specific stuff. The whole restore the breathing, stop the bleeding... Before even thinking about setting, much less rebreaking & setting a bone, repairing tendons, etc. First things first. And there's a whole lot of the same stuff with regular therapy (Getting to know you, kicking knowledge, dealing with day to day stuff). But, in general, I think of trauma-therapy vs regular therapy as the difference between just got hit by a car & can't walk, vs got hit by a car 10 years ago and the bones were never set properly, and can't walk.
 
Yes, to what @Friday said, especially re prioritizing stabilization, i.e., dealing with self-harm, s/i, basics such as safety, housing, drugs/alcohol, etc., then making sure you have a good set of proven coping and distress tolerance skills, before diving into the trauma.

By proven, I mean that, if I slip up and self-harm, the trauma-focused therapy needs to be stopped or paused or can't start until I've gone a certain amount of weeks/months without self-harming. I have to prove to myself and to my T that I will be able to handle the distress of confronting the trauma head-on without resorting to seriously self-destructive faux "coping" skills.

My understanding is that all evidence-based forms of trauma-focused therapy, once you are stable, has some element of exposure to it. That includes EMDR, as well as Prolonged Exposure (PE), narrative therapy, etc. By exposure that means, at a minimum, being able to talk about the trauma without either completely dissociating, going numb, or falling apart.

That does NOT mean it's easy, or that you won't struggle with over- or under-emotionality. It just means you are exposing yourself to the memory(ies) of the trauma, without running away or becoming completely unglued. A good trauma therapist will be able to help you "titrate" (find the right balance) your emotions so that you stay within your window of tolerance.

Exposure can also mean you approach other things you avoid. I don't know if EMDR includes any homework or if you work on exposing yourself to things irl that you avoid because it reminds you of the trauma, like people, places, and things.

I recently finished 10 weeks of PE, where the protocol is to recount the traumatic memory week after week (called imaginal exposure), feeling the fear and anguish, yet pushing through it to desensitize yourself to it. NOT desensitize yourself in the sense of going numb or not caring, but for the physiological arousal and fear response to decrease. In PE you monitor your distress level to make sure that it is going down over time and not escalating. You also expose yourself to things you avoid irl, called in vivo exposure. For example, I avoid certain yoga positions because they give me flashbacks and my hypervigilence goes through the roof. My in vivo exposure was just to go to my yoga class, and work up to certain poses on my own at home.

PE was in-f*cking-tense! But it damn well worked, at least for that particular memory. I trust my T a lot, and she was very skilled in pushing me to connect with the memory and emotions when I was numbing out, yet helping me stay present when I got so caught up in the past and was starting to dissociate. It did get worse before it got better.

I think the main difference with "regular" therapy and trauma therapy is that during PE our check ins for the previous week were really about the in vivo homework. There wasn't time to meander about how my week was in general. In the 75-90 minute weekly sessions we spent about 15 minutes reviewing HW, then 30 minutes doing the imaginal exposure (brutal), then the rest of the time processing the traumatic memory. Each week it was a little different.

EMDR has an exposure component, I believe, in that you are exposing yourself to the traumatic memories you'd rather avoid. You have to be able to tell your T what happened, and what is going on for you internally. To the best of my knowledge, EMDR and PE are the only two evidence-based (meaning well-researched with proven results) trauma-focused therapies that many insurance companies, HMOs, and the VA prefer. There are other therapies out there, they just haven't been widely researched.

Hope this helped give you some insight and context! Good luck with the new T!
 
I am just beginning my abuse therapy, I am on my 3 week session, in that short time a lot has been accomplished, but it also has left me overwhelmed almost 24/7, when I am not distracted my mind goes right back to processing my trauma, and I can't turn it off other than to distract myself. It's like having flashbacks stuck between trauma time and disassociated and the here and now. It's given me the impulse to cut to get relief, but I have used DBT skills to resist those impulses.

I want to do this trauma therapy, and absolutely have to do this. But I also don't want it to break me in the process. I am going to get the sessions spread out, but I don't think that is going to change anything other than spread the stress out more. It might be worse as I may be suffering with my mind processing for the entire time between sessions.

What i need is a containment strategy to use in between sessions.
 
Good for you for using DBT strategies to resist those urges!!! Me, too, I know how hard it is to have it all stirred up, and to NOT self-harm. I'm proud of you, you are doing such good, hard work!
 
@amosmorris I can explain containment, containment is taking something distress, be it a flashback, intrusive thoughts, images, stressful issue, anger, etc. and in your mind putting it somewhere, so it can be looked at and processed at a better time. Some people write it down in a book, some use symbolic movement, like putting it in a box (actual box), or a bag, or some container you imagine in your mind.

Imagery can be a very powerful tool to stay safe, I used it almost daily when I was in the hospital, at first I thought I can't do that, it's silly, but once I got past my own ego, I found I could not do without it. I still use it now.

Try it one day, take something that is bothering you that is staying with you, and use the imagery to contain it for later.

If you have been following this thread you will notice I have been struggling with safety from the abuse therapy. Something I have to do to get better. But it also has given me flashback content 24/7, if it had not been for what I learned at sheppard pratt and DBT skills, I would be cut to pieces by now. This stuff works if you want it too.
 
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