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Teasel

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Just came across this quote I had written down from Pete Walker -
"Recovering the anger of the fight response is essential in healing Complex PTSD."
Wondering if it rings true for any here?
Thanks
 
Just came across this quote I had written down from Pete Walker -
"Recovering the anger of the fight...
i definitely relate to the anger and fight response. I can go from 0 to 100 in 60 seconds as regards rage anfd intense anger. I found Dialectical Behavioural Therapy was good for helping e understand it but i struggled to apply what i learned,Mostly because of self doubt that it really was trauma and not just something I shoud be able to control. But I am realising now I can't just snap out of it and that trying to control it by ,myself makes it worse. I have to physically remove myself from the situation in most cases. Else I actually explode and do something I later regret, either to myself or someone else.
 
Doesn't sound you like you need to recover the fight response? Sounds like to you are very much in touch with it already?
 
I do agree. For a long time I did not really have anger, could not get in touch with. Once I did it helped in shifting guilt, some shame, helped reframe my thinking. Next is learning what to do with the anger, getting it out in healthy way.
 
Thanks @Joan
Sounds good
I wonder about self defence classes
Or boxing or something
Or maybe is there a difdetent way to use anger, as an energy to create something maybe.
I have been feeling quite angry lately :coffee:
 
Hmmmm....cool quote. For me, the recovering process involved digging deep, and then a little deeper than that, to find the actual roots of my rage and anger. I finally understood why I was feeling so strongly about certain things......now what? I still wanted to slap the taste out of a few mouths in my daily interactions and my filter didn't (doesn't) work well in preventing me from saying exactly what I thought.

Then came trying to learn how to stay aware enough during the heat of the overwhelming emotional moments so I could learn how to better redirect all those high-energy feelings into healthier outlets that left me feeling more empowered and less enraged. The trickiest part, by far, and it remains very much a challenge at times.

Continually reaching for external means left me falling short, and those means all too often complicated issues instead of providing any relief. Those things could also be easily snatched away at any given moment, and some simply weren't safe for my biology, so now what?

Turning inward, with the guidance and help of several different very generous practitioners who also struggle in their own existence and had forged their own path to wellville in all the ways I'd been taught to avoid, provided answers to questions I never even knew I needed to ask and finally produced more effective and sustainable results than I knew were even possible.

I had to learn how to keep my relief real (artificial anything doesn't jive well with my biology), keep it fun, keep it interesting, and keep it accessible at all times. Breath, energy, purposeful movement, gratitude, nature and what I fuel my body with are the foundations of relief that I rely on now. Arranging my environment to meet these needs daily was key in that having a safe space to exist in and to escape to is very necessary.

Unlearning all I thought I knew to make room for all the nurturing things I never received before has been the hardest thing I've ever learned to do, because, dammit, I spent a lot of money being taught many inaccurate and outdated things, and so did all of those highly paid professional advisors I'm supposed to be trusting with my life. Talk about anger, that right there pisses me off, too. Anger management continues to be a challenge, and I wouldn't expect anything less in such a twisted world.
 
My anger and rage stemmed from my helplessness. I couldn't do anything to stop what I saw my father doing to these homeless boys he'd kidnap. When I realized I was powerless because of my age, I stopped feeling helplessness over the past situation. The same with the abuse by my parents. I couldn't stop them because I was a child. As an adult I chose to move away from my abusers. That was the first step in healing.

I still deal with anger and rage at times especially when any situation which looks like helplessness surfaces. Dealing with something like that right now. Writing about it helps/has helped me address the real reason for the anger/rage.
 
My anger and rage stemmed from my helplessness. I couldn't do anything to stop what I saw my father...
I can relate to that. remember feeling helpless all through my childhood.....i stil feel very anxious at times like my life isn't my own and i have limited autonomoy . if i try to talk about trhe abuse i am silenced. or rejected...
 
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