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#1
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Hi
I'm asking people, how do you deal with flashbacks? My T suggests grounding techniques - being in the here and now, using my five senses in the now, pressing my feet on the ground, telling myself I'm in the present, etc. What I have been doing is just sitting with the new memories as they come up. Often I find out more truth about what happened and it can be liberating to know the truth. It's like a storm and I just sit with it until it passes. Sometimes its so overwhelming and intense that I can't do anything. What are your thoughts? PH |
![]() Anonymous59125, shezbut
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#2
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((((Purple Heart))))
Yes, grounding techniques are necessary in those times. I find myself looking away (from the trigger) and looking at wherever I am, trying to tell myself that I'm NOT there. It's over. I am okay. Sometimes, that reassurance only lasts a couple of moments and I "fall back" again. It's weird and very scary! I do take medications, which do help a lot with preventing flashbacks (somehow). Very gentle hugs to you. ![]()
__________________
"Only in the darkness can you see the stars." - Martin Luther King Jr. "Forgive others not because they deserve forgiveness but because you deserve peace." - Author Unkown |
![]() Purple Heart
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#3
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I don't know if I have actual flashbacks...I have moments where I feel I'm in the thick of it but I always know I'm not. Reminding myself I'm here and not there wouldn't be necessary. I replay them and see what I can learn from them if I'm able, or talk out my feelings with someone, or give myself a moment to grieve over it all and remind myself it wasn't my fault and I didn't deserve it can help. Other times I distract with whatever is working at the time. Books, movie, puppy tickles, hot bath with epsoms. I think I kinda hyperventilate sometimes and then I sit with my head kinda between my knees and focus on breathing while hubby rubs my back. Whatever works. I will consider the tips you suggested too. I'm sorry you have these so severely. (((Hugs)))
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![]() Purple Heart
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#4
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Thanks for your replies and I hear what you say. Grounding techniques for me have little impact. The flashbacks for me usually reveal truth about what happened. So I see grounding techniques as avoiding the content of the flashback. As said I usually sit with the flashback and let it happened. A T told me if you try to fight it, the flashback gets worse. I have flashbacks all the time since I have complex-PTSD.
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#5
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![]() Purple Heart
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#6
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Quote:
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![]() Anonymous57777
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#7
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It is rare that my flashbacks are a visual retelling of events. Like my dreams my flashbacks and memories don't play like a movie of which I am an unwilling participant. In stead they are about the flashing memory of emotions at the time and immediately following of the events. Fear of the unknown. Fear of being hurt. Guilt. Shame. Sensation of being filthy both figuratively and literally. Sickening knowledge it must be kept a secret. Nausea and abdominal trouble will immediately ensue. All this happens out of the present. It is as though time stops. My psychiatrist thinks I might be dissociating because I for a few moments seem to lose track of what is happening. When I do become aware, I can taste bile in my mouth I am so disgusted - with myself as much as what had happened.
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![]() Anonymous57777
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