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- #13
Thanks Pime No!
I was thinking about the thread and after I read your response I went back and read it again from start to end. I still feel like a stressor does not really explain the experiences I am talking about somehow. Not after reading Anthony's examples.
There are many things that partially relate to things that make me draw breath and feel panicky but that I would see as a stressor.
Thanks again! It made me think...
I was thinking about the thread and after I read your response I went back and read it again from start to end. I still feel like a stressor does not really explain the experiences I am talking about somehow. Not after reading Anthony's examples.
That's the way I understand it too but what happens if it is a complex combination of emotions and it is directly connected to trauma? There are a mass of things that would really instantly send me into flight and fight and from which it would take me a while to come down from but that I would clearly see as stressors.From what I understand, the key difference between the two is the fact that if it is a trigger, it must be directly connected to the trauma itself, causing symptoms like a flashback, whereas a stressor can cause you e.g. to get nervous, a panic attack but the cause of the stress in that situation is not directly connected to your past trauma.
Ha! :playful:(they exist, I do have one!)
I totally understand what you are saying here and I too would describe that as a stressor.. So, the fact it's still a frying pan may well cause you to feel panicky, overwhelmed, ready for flight, but since it's NOT DIRECTLY RELATED to your past trauma, it is a stressor. Also, the person who does the cooking is a woman, and there is not THAT PARTICULAR MOVEMENT that could trigger you.
There are many things that partially relate to things that make me draw breath and feel panicky but that I would see as a stressor.
And this is relevant as well as sometimes its as if things just click into position in a strange and unexpected way.I, personally, would never say someone who went through that assault with a steel frying pan could not get triggered by someone with a teflon pink-colored frying pan.
And this is relevant because I think this is what happens when I don't realise it is a trigger. If I know things are triggers then I think my mind finds ways to try to process it and protect me.This is, I think from introspection and self-awareness, because I am more "there", in the sense
Thanks again! It made me think...