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maggyjo
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Default Jul 28, 2013 at 10:15 AM
  #1
I am not seeing a trauma T. I am in therapy for so much more and I am not ready to admit what happen was trauma.
Anyways T asked if I wanted to tell a childhood story. And I did. But I was wondering if anyone could shed some light on to her method or knew more about it. She wrote done what I said word for word and then read it back to me. Then she asked what about that do I bring into my present life.
She mentioned some author or something but of course I forgot.
Any ideas?

Maggy Jo
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unaluna
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Default Jul 28, 2013 at 10:31 AM
  #2
It would be interesting to know who the author was she liked. As for the story, we may have a tendency to see current life situations thru the past. Like a person who was ignored as a child, might see someone cutting him off in traffic as ignoring him and have a really strong road rage reaction, whereas another person, who didn't feel ignored as a child, could be cut off in traffic and think, "oh that person must have been distracted, good thing he caught it in time." So you look at your story, and try to find similar reactions in current life that might be less than ideal.
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MoxieDoxie
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Default Jul 28, 2013 at 12:42 PM
  #3
That's interesting. Sounds better than what T1 tried with me. I had a hard time relaying childhood stories. I would tell them in the present tense and would be emotional, triggered, foggy and after I was a puddle on the floor he would say I had to trust him and to go ahead and tell him the same story again. NO Idiot! I am not doing that.

Apparently that is called exposure therapy. I could not imagine a poor woman who was violently raped, in the therapist office, having to recount that story over and over until it she could do it without being upset.

Has that worked for anyone. Well I can see if your afraid of spiders or something to constantly expose your self to the spider with a therapist.

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When a child’s emotional needs are not met and a child is repeatedly hurt and abused, this deeply and profoundly affects the child’s development. Wanting those unmet childhood needs in adulthood. Looking for safety, protection, being cherished and loved can often be normal unmet needs in childhood, and the survivor searches for these in other adults. This can be where survivors search for mother and father figures. Transference issues in counseling can occur and this is normal for childhood abuse survivors.
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Default Jul 28, 2013 at 01:02 PM
  #4
It sounds like a cross between role-playing therapy http://blogs.psychcentral.com/therap...-role-playing/ and therapeutic storytelling http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/...od-storyteller. Instead of putting yourself in someone else's shoes or being told a story that illustrates something you are having difficulty with you tell your own story and then put yourself in your own shoes. I like the idea.

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Default Jul 28, 2013 at 01:31 PM
  #5
Quote:
Originally Posted by MoxieDoxie View Post
That's interesting. Sounds better than what T1 tried with me. I had a hard time relaying childhood stories. I would tell them in the present tense and would be emotional, triggered, foggy and after I was a puddle on the floor he would say I had to trust him and to go ahead and tell him the same story again. NO Idiot! I am not doing that.

Apparently that is called exposure therapy. I could not imagine a poor woman who was violently raped, in the therapist office, having to recount that story over and over until it she could do it without being upset.

Has that worked for anyone. Well I can see if your afraid of spiders or something to constantly expose your self to the spider with a therapist.
here in NY the retelling of the abuse is a way for the victim to reconnect with their feelings and fully process what happened to them because most rape victims have a Post Traumatic Stress symptom called lack of affect. this is where due to the rape the victim can no longer show appropriate emotions, shut off their feelings, stuff their feelings/emotions and end up being able to tell what happened with out any emotions..its actually quite common for victims of rape to talk about the abuse as if it was just another day in their life, nothing unusual happened kind of tone/affect/emotions. so treatment for rape/sexual assault and other trauma's usually do include having the victim retell their story so that they can reconnect with their feelings/emotions and deal appropriately with their emotions/feelings.

here in NY exposure therapy is purposely exposing yourself to something you fear and have panic attacks over. example a person who has panic attacks when encountering the dog down the street can conquer their fear and anxiety by purposely being exposed to the dog for as long as they can handle then backing off and repeating the exposure. we do not do this kind of therapy with rape victims because here that would fall under retraumatizing a victim basically causing them to become more unstable, and have more PTSD symptoms. the goals here in NY is you get the client more stable and not do more harm to them in the process.

that said I do know of some rape victims who will purposely place their self in situations where they will be retraumatized through being raped again or having to re count what happened to them over and over again. for those I know its an addicting thing to get to the point where you can talk about what happened and how powerful that makes a person feel. we do encourage victims here in NY to feel their feelings even if it means they need to recount what happened over and over again but there is a point where it is very unhealthy for someone to stay stuck in that spot where they constantly need to recount what happened to them over and over and over and over....which is why when we see victims at the crisis center falling into this trap we redirect them to focusing on the present...how does that make you feel today to be able to tell me what happened? you told me your story today, thank you very much, now what do you need from me today? What was the purpose of retelling me today? basically getting the victim to understand yeas its ok to tell about it but you also need to be able to live in the present moment too, not just stay stuck in that moment of being raped. thatas how we deal with victims here at the crisis center where I work.

my own therapist does something similar.. when I have told something so much its lost its point or become redundant she says...ok, now what? how does that apply to your life today?
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