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#1
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Is the purpose of therapy to be able to work with our feelings? Is the reason why I find myself seeing a T because I have never developed "normally" in terms of emotions / feelings?
Or is it trauma that leads to such over whelming feelings that a switch has turned off my ability to feel? Or is it both, trauma and a developmental issue? ![]()
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Soup |
![]() BonnieJean
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#2
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I think it can be bothl
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![]() SoupDragon
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#3
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Trauma does stunt emotional development as well as development in other areas.
Yes to both
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There’s been many a crooked path that has landed me here Tired, broken and wearing rags Wild eyed with fear -Blackmoores Night |
![]() SoupDragon
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#4
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Yeah, I think trauma can definitely affect our ability to feel. On the other hand it's also true that for some people who have faced trauma and recovered their ability to feel, they're more open and compassionate as a result. Cold comfort, at least for me, because I feel that trauma costs me a lot..but there is also something hard won, to be gained. Others may feel differently. I am not talking from theory here, but tough personal experience. Just sayin!
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![]() SoupDragon
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#5
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But if you're just talking about "way back when," at the beginning, when all of the crud was taking shape, the "problems" probably were all emotional. There may have been cognitive consequences, but unbearable "affect" is what starts all the balls rolling. "Trauma" is just shorthand for emotionally unbearable states of being created in reaction to situations imposed from the outside. Trauma causes developmental issues. It's wrong to think that trauma issues and developmental issues are different categories. Anything in anyone's development that leads to later problems of feeling or functioning is called trauma. Surely there are all sorts of non-traumatic early influences on everyone's life that play a serious role in making us who we are. But if pathology results, I can't see that the cause can be anything other than either trauma or genetics. Many of the most serious mental illnesses (autism, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, etc.) seem to have a significant genetic (chemical? viruses?) causative element. But if the pathology is just a reaction to things that happened (or didn't happen) when we were very small, then I think those happenings are trauma. Even with oedipal issues. Just one man's opinion. ![]()
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We must love one another or die. W.H. Auden We must love one another AND die. Ygrec23 ![]() Last edited by Ygrec23; Aug 24, 2011 at 03:23 PM. |
![]() skysblue, SoupDragon, Wysteria
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#6
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A person could learn to never express their feelings if they had a neglectful parent who didn't pay any attention to them or a parent who literally stopped the child from expressing feelings. I suffered from #1 and never had anything traumatic happen to me. Being ignored sucked big time, though and caused a lot of problems.
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Don't let your problems or the world make you feel small. Stretch your arms out over your head. Take a deep breathe. Tell yourself that you are big. You are big, not small. You always have space, you are not trapped........ I'm an ISFJ |
![]() skysblue, SoupDragon
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#7
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Also if two people are exposed to the same event, the outcome for them in terms of thoughts / feelings may be different - (although neither would find the event pleasant) are these differences therefore due to "nature", previous experiences? So is the reason I am seeing T, not specifically because of traumatic events, but because I didn't have the capacity to deal with them. which is about me as a person?
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Soup |
![]() Sannah
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#8
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I am so into theory - have read so many books over the last year (30ish) - but actually it has taught me very little. I think T has sat there patiently with me until I have tired that bit of me out. I am reading less now and it is now when I think I am truely starting to look at "me" rather than things "out there".
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Soup |
![]() Sannah
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#9
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I think there could be many reasons for seeing a T, those you gave and more including what you have in your status "it's time to stop hiding in her cave."
Perhaps part of seeing T is to learn how not to hide; to learn it's ok to come out of the cave, to learn how to survive outside it and how not to want to run back inside? |
![]() SoupDragon
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#10
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[quote=Ygrec23;1998263]. "Trauma" is just shorthand for emotionally unbearable states of being created in reaction to situations imposed from the outside.
Trauma causes developmental issues. It's wrong to think that trauma issues and developmental issues are different categories. Anything in anyone's development that leads to later problems of feeling or functioning is called trauma. " __________________ Thank you for this explanation, Ygrec23, ...I understood this better than I have many other explanations...I wouldn't even let my therapist say that overused,stupid word...I called them "situations that I didn't handle well" ...nice euphemism, huh??? lol ![]()
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![]() Your vision will become clear only when you can look into your heart. Who looks outside, Dreams... Who looks inside, Awakens... - Carl Jung |
#11
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We must love one another or die. W.H. Auden We must love one another AND die. Ygrec23 ![]() |
![]() skysblue, SoupDragon
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#12
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Hmmmmm. Very, very interesting questions, SoupDragon!
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I'm sorry. I went off on my own tangent there. My real answer to your question is this: the reason you're seeing T is neither "because" of traumatic events, nor "because" you didn't have the "capacity" to deal with them as a very young person. The reason you're seeing T is because the manner in which you dealt with traumatic events in childhood, as it continues manifesting itself in your adult life, limits you in what you can do, feel, think or enjoy. And what you're doing with T is cleaning things up so you can do, feel, think and enjoy with the greatest freedom possible. I think!!! ![]()
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We must love one another or die. W.H. Auden We must love one another AND die. Ygrec23 ![]() |
![]() skysblue, SoupDragon
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#13
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__________________
Don't let your problems or the world make you feel small. Stretch your arms out over your head. Take a deep breathe. Tell yourself that you are big. You are big, not small. You always have space, you are not trapped........ I'm an ISFJ |
![]() SoupDragon
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#14
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So, going back to your first question up there ^ - I think that it is the feelings that are generated which make it unbearable. People who train to be navy seals can take a lot and this is because they are well trained and they don't generate the feelings to bad situations.
__________________
Don't let your problems or the world make you feel small. Stretch your arms out over your head. Take a deep breathe. Tell yourself that you are big. You are big, not small. You always have space, you are not trapped........ I'm an ISFJ |
![]() SoupDragon
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#15
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Soup |
#16
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Thank-you Sannah - I never learned to express my feelings in a healthy way - dad's feelings were always more important than anyone elses and our purpose was to please and appease him and my mother just never shown nor talks about feelings. It was my birthday this week and she gave me a little card with a heart and a beautiful poem - words that she could never say to me herself. I forgive her, I think she did the best she could and actually herself maybe never learned to express feelings as a child.
I haev two kids and like you say they are sooo different. I can see myself in the younger one, he feels things so deeply and will get very upset about those same things several days later if reminded. I cuddle and acknowledge hsi feelings regardless - my mother and father talk about how I was like this as a child and how they laughed at me and would bring painful things up in the company of others, like putting me on show to perform. I am so glad I can show my own son a different way. Wysteria - I like what you wrote about emotionally unbearable states in reaction to events - yes I think I can generate unbearable feelings.
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Soup |
![]() skysblue
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#17
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Thank-you for this I think it is a good explanantion and entirely correct ![]() I also note what you write about a Dyad and being untied in therapy - how does that happen? Is it just through opennes, trust and trying out new things with T? Ultimately I agree with another of your comments in that maybe the difference / distinction is unimportant. I do live in my head, yet am slowly learning that I can't do this thing called life via a text book - I need to get into my body (somehow?) and feel. However I think knowing more theory helps me to feel a little safer making that journey. Thank-you for sharing this - SD
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Soup |
![]() skysblue
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#18
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SoupDragon asked:
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It's my understanding that one loosens and finally unties that connection by, first, becoming able to feel (not think, not intellectualize) one's way back into the original situation - both the original event(s) and the original feeling(s) - and, second, by going over and over those original event(s) and feeling(s) with T until you really fully absorb what happened way back then and finally understand and accept (no mean feat) that what was terribly threatening to you as a small child is no longer threatening to you as an adult. The emotional significance of the original "event(s)" then loses its potency and power over you and you can see those events as just historical things that happened to you when you were a small child that have no more present importance to you than the memory of your first dolls or your first remembered Christmas. In other words, instead of those events (and their connected feelings) being as real to you now as they were then (which is a large part of the problem for sick people), they become pictures in an old family photograph album that you can view with interest and nostalgia, but without any severe emotional reaction right now. You can then close the album, put it away, and go on to whatever else you need or want to do without the album contents limiting what you do, think, feel or enjoy. In all of this, your T's work with you is absolutely key. He or she is intimately familiar with this process, and very gently guides you - a little hint here, a little question there - so you can figure it out all by yourself ("by yourself" is very, very important) under your T's benevolent gaze. Hope this helps! ![]()
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We must love one another or die. W.H. Auden We must love one another AND die. Ygrec23 ![]() Last edited by Ygrec23; Aug 25, 2011 at 03:48 PM. |
![]() rainbow8, rainbow_rose, Sannah, skysblue, SoupDragon, Wysteria
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#19
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The tricky part is dong it isn't it? Thank-you Ygrec23 ![]()
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Soup |
![]() Wysteria
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#20
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Ygrec23 - thanks for stating this so clearly. It's exactly what my T and I are working on now
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#21
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Yes on reflection I think that is also my T's plan - I think he is just a little candid. ![]()
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Soup |
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