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5 Crucial Understandings to Help You Heal From Trauma

Learning about trauma has been a complete game-changer for me in my ability to heal–mentally, emotionally, spiritually—even physically.

Using the word trauma doesn’t give us any excuses.

In fact, it opens us up to a very specific and powerful toolkit to more skillfully and accountably address what’s actually happening.

(In fact–without the toolkit, we most likely won’t ever actually get to the root of the problem!)

These 5 primary understandings can bring clarity to some of the chaos you may have experienced in your life and relationships:

Understanding #1: Trauma is stored in the body when you feel deeply unsafe/overwhelmed

When you experience something that your body/mind/spirit perceives as deeply unsafe or threatening, there’s a good chance that it will be stored in your brain/body as trauma.

This means that something that is traumatic for one person might not be traumatic for another person.

Your core values, past experiences, and life expectations will all influence if and how experiences are stored in your body as trauma.

Understanding #2: Trauma is stored in a very specific way that’s tied to your survival brain

Trauma is an evolutionary response that’s intended to help us survive.

If we were cavemen who lived in the jungle and a tiger showed up, our trauma response would kick in and we’d hightail it out of camp or suddenly have the superhuman ability to scale a tree, without even thinking about it.

This response evolved intentionally to bypass the rational mind (the left side of the brain) so that in life or death situations, our body would immediately respond to get us to safety.

But in the modern world, many of the experiences that feel deeply threatening are not literally life and death. They’re more relational and psychological.

But our body doesn’t know the difference.

Our body doesn’t know that blasting our system with adrenaline actually works against us when we’re in the triggering conversation with our spouse or boss.

It doesn’t know that taking our language center offline blocks our ability to express ourselves in those crucial moments when we want desperately to have our own back but we literally can’t.

Many, many people live on high alert, in a state of low-grade trauma all the time, because they’re constantly engaging with people and situations that create this kind of a physiological response.

This constant internal imbalance seriously deteriorates our health and well-being in every way—mentally, emotionally, spiritually, and physically, with serious consequences, including auto-immune diseases and low self-worth.

Understanding #3: Relational Trauma is a Particular Doozy

Relational trauma occurs when your primary attachment suddenly becomes the source of pain or threat.

If you’ve been (or currently are) in close relationship with a person or organization that has betrayed or manipulated you, you likely have some level of trauma associated with the person or relationship.

Depending on the depth of the betrayal and your level of dependency upon the person or institution, you may experience dysregulating physiological reactions like intrusive thoughts, heart-pounding, disrupted sleep patterns, body tremors, excessive sweating, digestion issues, or chronic muscle tightness.

Because the trauma is relational and now associated with your formerly safe people or places, you may feel isolated and abandoned.

You are moving through the pain and physiological chaos without a support system.

This typically causes people to feel crazy and question their lived reality, which is extremely painful and disorienting.

Understanding #4: Trauma is experiential, not logical

In trauma, the left side of the brain (where language centers reside and logical, analytical, and sequential thought occurs), goes off-line.

Trauma is then recorded by the right brain as an experience of visual images and location. Any sensory input that is associated with the event is also gathered and stored.

This means that smells, sounds, places, dates on the calendar, songs on the radio, time of year, time of day can all be wired in as triggers.

When we experience these random snippets at later times, our body connects them back and rekindles the trauma response as if the event were actually occurring.

We feel again the full embodied experience of being under threat, even though we are no longer in the threatening situation.

This feels crazy-making when we don’t have the tools or awareness to understand what’s happening.

Understanding #5: With the right toolkit, we can fully heal from trauma

Trauma represents a soul-split: a tear inside of us that creates intense levels of suffering.

Without awareness, this internal split plants seeds of fear that then sprout and grow to infest other areas of our lives.

We end up living from fear in self-protection, bitterness, and trapped in victim stories.

Because trauma occurs on such a deep physiological level, trauma healing requires a toolkit that integrates mind, body, and spirit.

To effectively heal trauma, you need an approach that systematically:

  • Re-establishes a safe connection between your mind and body
  • Helps you identify when you’re lost in a trauma response
  • Arms you with tools to ground into the present moment
  • Connects you to safe places and people to share your story
  • Helps you identify the core beliefs that continue to bring you pain and shows you how to release them

These 5 understandings have been life-changing for me and I hope they help you gain more insight and clarity as well.

Our programs at Body Soul School incorporate all the necessary elements to support deep, long-term healing from traumas of all kinds. If you need help, I hope you’ll learn more here.

With Hope for Your Full Healing Journey,
Becky

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Do You Struggle With Resentment?

Ten years ago, my marriage blew up and I found myself in total chaos.

For months, even a few years, my mind was often spinning with intrusive thoughts, my emotions were so big I couldn’t pull out of them, and my body was freaking out doing weird things–like waking me up at 4 in the morning or locking my spine to where I couldn’t move for days on end.

Because I knew what I was experiencing was connected to the event that had taken place in my life, I didn’t want to medicate myself.

I knew intuitively that my mind and body were reacting for a reason, and I didn’t want to numb them. I wanted to understand them, and learn how to work with them more skillfully.

This led me to a healing pathway that changed my life forever.

It started with learning the language of betrayal trauma: an actual physiological condition that mirrors PTSD and occurs when our primary attachments go from being our most trusted safe places to the source of our deepest pain.

Suddenly, my chaotic experience began to make perfect sense.

Of course I felt crazy, my body had kicked me into my limbic system–my survival brain–where the most reactive, instinctual parts of me were now behind the wheel, desperately trying to protect me 24/7.

Of course my body felt weird–I was filling it with cortisol and adrenaline day-in and day-out as I navigated an unexpected and unwelcome new reality on high alert.

Understanding trauma gave me the tools and language to not only work with the chaos in my mind and body, it gave me the foundation to start to trust myself again.

I spent about seven years in betrayal trauma recovery, eventually becoming a sponsor, presenter, administrator, and author of recovery materials.

The more I learned, healed, and observed others on similar journeys, the more obvious it became that some kind of relational trauma was almost universal—and that it’s where most people remain stuck.

I realized that without an understanding of the role trauma was playing in my experience and my reactions, I would never have been able to fully heal.

It would be like playing the game without a full deck of cards.

That’s why after seven years, I left the 12-step world of addiction and trauma recovery, and created a mindfulness-based, trauma-informed program to bring the same tools and healing principles to the world.

Because the fact is, there’s more than one kind of betrayal, and whatever kind you experience, it creates its own kind of trauma in the body that will hold you hostage for days, weeks, decades, if you don’t know how to work with it.

Your body might be holding on to a sense of betrayal from the way you were raised, from a religion, from a career gone wrong, from life itself, from God, and yes….from an intimate partner.

If you struggle with unresolved feelings of bitterness, resentment, victimhood, paranoia, numbness, or apathy that you can trace back to an event or relationship that has a tinge of betrayal to it, you’re likely dealing with a trauma you never even realized.

And you’ll be stuck until you start working with a trauma-informed toolkit.

This is why I’m offering a FREE teaching on the 5 Types of Betrayal: a 2-part Webinar Series that will help you understand common ways people experience betrayal, how you can tell if you’re still carrying trauma, and what it takes to heal from it.

I never want anyone to experience the loneliness and isolation that I went through before I found the trauma-informed tools that could actually help me.

I never want anyone to miss the beautiful journey of growth and healing that is so possible with the right framework and support.

If you or someone you know has struggled with feelings of bitterness, victimhood, or apathy and they’d like to know more, please register here to be part of this LIVE training for absolutely free.

With love and fellowship on the journey,
Becky

P.S. This training goes LIVE on Tuesday, Nov 19th & Thursday, Nov 21st at 7pm MDT/9pm ET, and if you’re not available you can watch the replay. I hope you’ll join us here!