Home page of BPDFamily.com, online relationship supportMember registration here
September 28, 2024, 05:32:03 PM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Board Admins: Kells76, Once Removed, Turkish
Senior Ambassadors: EyesUp, SinisterComplex
  Help!   Boards   Please Donate Login to Post New?--Click here to register  
bing
Books members most read
105
The High
Conflict Couple
Loving Someone with
Borderline Personality Disorder
Loving the
Self-Absorbed
Borderline Personality
Disorder Demystified

Pages: [1]   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: My story. A writing to a younger me of how I reversed my Trauma response  (Read 415 times)
Survivorsyory
Fewer than 3 Posts
*
Offline Offline

What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Other
Relationship status: Broken up
Posts: 1


« on: August 16, 2022, 11:29:31 AM »

This is in no way medical advice. I'm not a medical professional that should be giving out medical advice. Seek a trusted therapist or other qualified professional that knows you for advice. I assume no liability for an individual's actions from reading this. This writing is shared for the sole purpose of proving the story of one person's success to provide hope. This should not be taken as a recommendation. Seek a trusted qualified professional to discuss this information before deciding if any of it should/could be incorporated in your treatment plan.



This writing is framed as instructions to a younger me.

A step by step guide to reverse a trauma response to put BPD symptoms in remission.

To do this you don't have to trust me or anyone other than yourself. That's what makes this successful. Don't trust yourself? You don't have to do that either Laugh out loud (click to insert in post). You just have to trust one part of yourself. I'll explain more in the instructions.

The wildest thing about this is you already have all the tools. You've actually been practicing them for years to prepare yourself to do this exact thing.

I want to try to make this as simple as possible while still giving you all the instructions you need to do it right. This has been your journey all this time. This is yours to finish on your own. This is just the map to the road that you forgot was there.

Instructions:

You have to be done. Don't go into this with hope. Go in to this because you are beaten down from feeling like no matter what you do…you keep doing everything right and still somehow it feels like everyone is still disappointed… you feel like PLEASE READ it. This is how you'll prove that you are right.

You have to first be able to accept that you are a human like everyone else. This does/can happen with every human.

You have to accept that there is something wrong. You've been told there's something by plenty of people… that doesn't convince. You've seen it though. You've seen it sometimes when you're angry. When you are forced to look back at it… it's confusing. You may tell yourself "that's how I process"... Or "I must have misheard"… or something. That's something you can know is true. That's something you know you can see. Than do it for an anger issue.

You already are prepared. When someone talks to you, you already are ready for what they will say before they say it. You'll feel that feeling bubbling up before they say the word. The trick is you want to catch that feeling before it bubbles up.

Know the feeling. When you're mad you're mad, sad you're sad, etc. You know what your feelings are. And yes! You're feelings are valid! For this I want you to try something a little different. Think back to the feeling of being broken up with. We know that feeling well enough. The pain. Think of how you feel that feeling and where. Try to think of how that feeling first starts. Keep your feelings peeled for that. It'll be felt alongside that anger. You'll notice it first, and it's the feeling you're targeting. The "rage", "panic", "overwhelm", whatever it is known to you as.

When that feeling bubbles up during a conversation. Hold that feeling down for a brief moment. Don't try to bottle it up. Just hold it down for a brief moment.
The best descriptions I can think of are that feeling when you clench your gut (left hand side), kinda hold your breath, and you can also feel it a bit in your throat.

The feeling as if you were going to try to turn your face red. But don't put the pressure to try to turn your face red.

Essentially, the body mechanics feel very similar to when you might start to get angry and lose your top when you've misheard someone and you're holding waiting for them to clarify what they said.

It's a very similar action… or maybe the same, as what we do naturally as children when we are mad. The thing we're always told not to do.

You only have to hold this for a moment. I was a young man full of testosterone when I did it… so if I could do it then I'm prone to believe anyone can.

What is done in this moment is the key. The best I can tell is it reminds/teaches the brain that this is a safe path to take.

The key is in that moment you have to think "Right or Wrong" as if you are being a judge of yourself and the other person from an outside perspective. The right or wrong being more in the sense of which one is doing the right thing. What makes this the key is you have to take a little "leap of fate" and judge without checking your gut.

This is essentially a conscience check.
This is not in any possible way saying that you don't have a conscience. We all have one. It's been thinking and checking your gut to build it for years. You always KNOW what's right or wrong to you. You may not be very judgemental but you still know what's right or wrong to you in any moment. It's a constant. That doesn't mean we have to choose that way every time. Usually we have to think about the situation and feel it out to make our choice.

This can be felt out ahead of time to get ready. You know how to hold your gut. Don't think of a conflict. Just kinda… "zone out" for the second and picture yourself and another person arguing.
Right or Wrong? You're brain wants to search for the details so it can feel out the situation… that's what you're brain is going to crave to do. It needs to resolve the problem. It does that part automatically. All you need to do is, from that view point in your mind, think "Right or Wrong".

You may already do this and often. If you do, that's great! We just have to do it in this sequence and catch the right time.

We always get angry for a reason. That's a fact. You may even find that 90+% of the time it's just simply being angry. All you have to do is this until you catch that one time when it's our trauma response hiding.

When you feel a mental orgasm, bigger than the one we get from the relief of a partner telling us they want to get back together after a fight, you know it was a success.

My Best estimate of why this works is:
In moments when that panic/overwhelm/(what you named it) (this being our "trauma response" or "shame response") our mind chooses for us to only go full emotion. It does this to get through these perceived trumas and prevent our mind from having to remember those traumatic events. But we no longer live in a world where everything is actually life or death anymore (though it sure can feel it sometimes. This would be why). When you choose to do this the brain learns/relearns that it's safe to look at everything again. And it learns this fast. This is me writing to you over a decade later… I don't regret a thing.

 

—--------------



I'm not the first one to figure this out by any means. Everyone can do it. Most people I think only stumble across it when they're at their lowest lows or don't really realize what they did to get there.
My best estimate is that the reason why younger individuals do better at this is because they have Parents/guardians/family that have an authoritative position to call you out, make us look at what we do and process, and then tell us to think next time… and it just kinda happens naturally.
 As adults, we don't always have that family figure to call us out and hound us until we finally figure out the right way. If we do… that's usually the family member we probably feel like avoiding. We also navigate society to avoid these fights that are essential to this process. We are also always told to feel our feelings. Which I think is absolutely the right thing to do. Just… after doing this one thing… this one time. When you're on the other side you'll understand why.

I think that it likely has to be a genuine provoked response. I don't think planning practice fights are going to help. Although you will absolutely feel opposed to this… it may make sense for you to tell your circle of people to start calling you out on your PLEASE READ. We might not notice it… but they try to tip toe talking to us as part of their way of navigating society and preventing conflict with us.


Tips going forward:

You can't understand Love. Love is like Pi in math.

The break ups are still going to be hard. That is something you'll actually be able to process now and heal around afterwards.

You might feel before that you always feel silly because you don't know who to trust…or trust too easily. That goes away. Surround yourself with people you can trust.

Old habits die hard… open up and talk things out when you're dealing with things. It becomes a million times easier and it helps.

Some motos for the other side:

You can only expect from others what you expect of yourself.

It's not right to try to fix people. You can only fix yourself. You can help people… but people have to do things on their own and only if they want to and are ready.


Go have your forced epiphany.

—-------


« Last Edit: August 18, 2022, 08:45:59 PM by Turkish » Logged
Gemsforeyes
*******
Offline Offline

Gender: Female
What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Ex-romantic partner
Relationship status: Ended 2/2020
Posts: 1150


« Reply #1 on: August 20, 2022, 08:00:20 AM »

Thank you for posting this.  I read it last night and again this morning.

I truly believe the gift you’ve shared is exactly what I need these days dealing with an elderly relative I’m required to care for.  She’s manipulative and can be awful.  My insides and emotions are falling apart and I can say nothing to anyone.

Having others say “you should”, “you better” in louder and more threatening tones to me isn’t helping or solving anything for me.  I cannot change her or the situation.  I need to adjust me. 

The situation IS... I just need to find a calmer way to handle my own emotions around it.

So thank you.

Gemsforeyes
Logged
Can You Help Us Stay on the Air in 2024?

Pages: [1]   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Our 2023 Financial Sponsors
We are all appreciative of the members who provide the funding to keep BPDFamily on the air.
12years
alterK
AskingWhy
At Bay
Cat Familiar
CoherentMoose
drained1996
EZEarache
Flora and Fauna
ForeverDad
Gemsforeyes
Goldcrest
Harri
healthfreedom4s
hope2727
khibomsis
Lemon Squeezy
Memorial Donation (4)
Methos
Methuen
Mommydoc
Mutt
P.F.Change
Penumbra66
Red22
Rev
SamwizeGamgee
Skip
Swimmy55
Tartan Pants
Turkish
whirlpoollife



Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2006-2020, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!