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- #37
I totally agree Abstract that a component of processing is about finding the various elements of memories (autobiographical, sensory, emotional etc) from where they have been far flung and misfiled in our brains, and somehow assimilating them back together again so that the linkages are accurate. I know that fragmented memories are something I struggle with, and while linking the various memory parts together isn't possible in all instances and isn't the only part of processing, I do think that a lot of that reinttegration does take place as productive trauma therapy progresses, and it's much easier to begin to confront and accept the impact and consequences of the trauma when you have some structure and connectedness to the memories.
And a big part of the brain's misinformation during PTSD is the sense that the trauma is still happening or is repeatedly occurring. Teaching yourself, over time, that the events took place in the past and can be experienced just as memories (albeit upsetting and regrettable ones) really is critical in reducing and controlling the intrusive and reliving symptoms of PTSD.
Anything less complicated than true processing and we'd all have mastered it long ago!
Maddog
And a big part of the brain's misinformation during PTSD is the sense that the trauma is still happening or is repeatedly occurring. Teaching yourself, over time, that the events took place in the past and can be experienced just as memories (albeit upsetting and regrettable ones) really is critical in reducing and controlling the intrusive and reliving symptoms of PTSD.
Anything less complicated than true processing and we'd all have mastered it long ago!
Maddog