How to stop reliving my horrible past

a water colour painting of a memory

“The moments of life that were too intolerable to experience fully are actually preserved in our field of consciousness, energy, and body.

The body, energy, and mind in these fragments are literally tied up in the past, and are no longer available to function in the present.

All subsequent experience will be limited by the bound fragments in the body. There will be gaps where experience, emotion, and sensation are closed to life.”

There are many ways to release bound memories. Any method that helps people relax and loosen their grip on themselves, will help the release.”

~ Judith Blackstone

The above quote is a good description of how horrible past experiences continue to haunt you, long after they are over.

To understand why, it is helpful to understand how the brain experiences traumatic events, and how it stores them.

Because of neuroscientific research, we now know that our “mind” is in our bodies. We store memories as a complete snapshot of an event. The snapshot is like one seen in Harry Potter’s world. The picture is three dimensional and includes all our senses. It also includes emotions and feelings we were experiencing at the time. These memories are stored in our bodies as the sensation we experienced at the time.

If you pay close attention to the times old memories are triggered for you, you will notice that you feel sensations in your body. These are the things you were experiencing at the time of the trauma.

Have you ever had an experience where you remember something really scary from your past and can describe everything about that event, even down to what you were wearing at the time?

That is because your body stored all the information and you have been able to recall it.

Not all memories are recalled, or are recalled fully. For a child who experiences something bad it may be too scary to remember the event so it is locked away in a part of the body that is off limits. Those memories may only ever return when something triggers them to be unlocked.

Even when a memory is unlocked, it is not always fully accessed. Even after the passage of many years, the full memory may be too overwhelming to be fully experienced.

There is another reason memories can be hard to access and it is related to the difficulties some adults have in understanding their own emotions.

For many children, living in a confusing world of adult rules, it can be really confusing to combine what they are feeling inside, with what they are being told to do. For example. A child may feel unsafe visiting an uncle but may be told by their parents not to be so silly, because their uncle is a wonderful man. So the child learns to not pay attention to their body in order to obey their parents.

A lot of people who come to see me have great difficulty understanding how to listen to and respect their intuition (those body sensations that indicate what they are feeling).

I often take people back to the childhood exercises of marking on a body outline what they feel and where it is felt when they have certain emotions.

So to get back to the quotation at the start of this blog. Old memories may be locked away, but the energy that was part of the memory does not go away. Talking therapies do not work well with these memories. A lot of these memories do not contain words, just sensations and feelings. How do you express memories like that?

My number one way to work with this is through drawing or painting. I particularly love, oil pastels, chalk, crayon, and paint. I find they are so expressive and the way they flow is wonderful. It is always interesting to draw or paint something and then look at what has been created. There are always surprises and insights to be gained from doing this.

Another way I work is by using symbols in sand. They can also be very effective.

These techniques are always used with attention to sensations in the body. At first those sensations may be hard to find. Particularly if you are used to not feeling those sensations. But with time, you start to feel those sensations. There are a number of ways to help you to learn to listen to your body. Mindfulness being one of the most useful.

A word of caution: it is always important to be careful when exploring old memories. Some can be really frightening to experience, particularly if you have not learned how to calm yourself down. This is where a trauma trained counsellor like me is helpful because I will teach you how to calm yourself before going anywhere near potential memories.

It is not necessary to recall all locked away memories. There are some that will be “knocking on the door” wanting to be recalled. There are also some that may return over time as you heal other memories. If the memories are recalled, then it is appropriate to attend to them. If they remain locked away, then they should be left alone.

You can heal from past trauma without having to relive or recall it.

If you would like to talk to me about how I can help you with your recalled memories, please contact me on 0409396608 or nan@plentifullifecounselling.com.au

If you would like to learn more, I write a regular newsletter with interesting information, tips, information on courses, and the occasional freebie. At the moment I have a free mindfulness meditation for anyone who signs up to my newsletter. This meditation offers a way to safely explore your feelings and learn to be okay with them. If you would like to subscribe please click on the link here: http://eepurl.com/g8Jpiz

How to survive the terrible walk alone

When you grieve, you take that path on your own.

Others may walk with you for a few steps and listen as you express your pain.

But you will walk that path alone.

This path belongs to you alone and you walk it at your own pace.

Your pain feels like exposed nerve endings.

The wound is raw.

Your heart broken.

You don’t want to believe this is true.

Your anger is palpable. So raw it is overwhelming.

The loss you feel is the bitterest pill to swallow.

You will most likely come eventually to a place of peace.

But you will do it because you journeyed alone.

It will come in your own time.

And you will find it by travelling your own way.

Shock

Disbelief

How can they be gone?

How can this be over?

I am angry that they are gone.

I am angry that this is over.

What if I had done this?

I regret not doing that.

What if

What if

Sadness

Deep deep sadness

This is real, it is really over.

They are really gone.

Grief will never end.

The pain may fade but it will always be here.

Sometimes it will be a fresh as though it happened only yesterday.

Other times there will be the mercy of years.

What does it all mean?

What is the meaning in the loss?

Loss wounds and paralyses.

Meaning in the loss empowers me to find a path forward.

It helps me make sense of my grief.

What is meaning?

What does it look like?

It is many shapes, colours and sizes.

It may be gratitude for the time spent with the one you love.

It may be commemorating and honouring the one who is gone.

It may be realising how short our lives are and of the need to live each moment fully.

It may be campaigning to find a cure for what killed them, or to prevent the cause of their death such as campaigning on drink driving, or speed.

When there is meaning the grieving is easier.

When meaning is absent there can be such an overwhelming focus on life with the loved one that all purpose and direction is gone.

Meaning comes through finding a way to sustain your love for the person after they are gone while continuing to live. In many ways, you will have a greater sense of the preciousness of life because of the one you lost. Living life to the fullest is how we honour the dead.

You have a choice to grieve or to detach from life, including the opportunity to experience joy.

Remember:

Meaning is relative and personal.

It takes time, and by this I mean it may take years

It doesn’t require understanding of why that person died.

When you find meaning you will still not feel that meaning was worth the cost of what you lost.

Loss is not a test, lesson, something to handle, a gift or a blessing. It is simply what happens in life. Meaning is what you make happen.

You are the only one who can find your own meaning.

Meaningful connections will heal painful memories.

If you would like to talk to me about how I can help you with your grief journey and search for meaning, please contact me on 0409396608 or nan@plentifullifecounselling.com.au

If you would like to learn more, I write a regular newsletter with interesting information, tips, information on courses, and the occasional freebie. At the moment I have a free mindfulness meditation for anyone who signs up to my newsletter. This meditation offers a way to safely explore your feelings and learn to be okay with them. If you would like to subscribe please click on the link here: http://eepurl.com/g8Jpiz

A vital step to take when things get hard.

“Being a friend to yourself is no mere metaphor or purely sentimental idea. It is the basis of all relationship, because it is a fundamental recognition of soul.” Thomas Moore

Would you take better care of yourself
Would you be kinder to yourself
Would you be more forgiving of your Human imperfections if you realized your
Best friend was yourself
Who is always with you everywhere
Who is on your side when others are unfair
And tell me who will never let you down in
Any situation
Who will always see you get your share And that’s why I am a best friend to myself
And I take me out whenever I feel low
And I make my life as happy as a best
Friend would
I’m as nice to me as anyone I know

(lyrics to Best Friend by Helen Reddy)

Sooner or late in life you will hear someone say you cannot be a friend to others until you are a friend to yourself.

Or you need to be a friend to yourself.

That is true. But how do you do it?

Do you act like a friend to yourself?

When you make mistakes are you compassionate or judgemental with yourself?

One of the biggest barriers to good mental health in the aftermath of childhood trauma is learning to like yourself.

When your abuser has spent your childhood putting you down. Telling you that you are useless, or unloveable, or a disaster, or always wrong, difficult, trying … you name it, it has been said. When that has happened you tend to not have a high opinion of yourself.

Do you remember as a child trying to be good? Really good. Because you were always told you were bad. So this day you were going to be good so your Mum and Dad did not have to get angry with you.

And you worked really hard to do all the rights things. You did what you were asked without pause. You spoke politely when spoken to. You kept alert. You asked if there were things you could do.

Your measure of success was not being abused.

You worked hard, but you failed.

Your father or mother or both abused you and you were crushed because you were such a bad person.

Small wonder you feel like a bad person when someone is rude or aggressive towards you.

As a child you were not aware that you were not being bad. It was your abusers who were bad.

As an adult, you have taken that belief so tightly into yourself that you aren’t even aware that you always judge yourself harshly when people are rude or aggressive towards you.

You also wonder why you feel so crushed and bad.

It is time for self compassion and awareness.

Maybe you can remember a time you tried to be good. Maybe you have forgotten such a time. Maybe you can remember feeling you were a bad person and maybe you can’t.

The important thing is to acknowledge the hurt and pain.

Place your hands on your heart and take a releasing breath in and out. Let all the hurt and pain flow out with your breath. Breathe in cleansing and breathe out the hurt and pain.

When you are ready, carefully examine what your inner voice is telling you about the hurt and pain you are currently feeling.

Are there any statements that come up for you? These can be clues to the underlying emotions and beliefs.

Comfort yourself, just as you would comfort a child.

Send love and warmth through your hands into your heart.

Talk to that hurt part.

“It’s okay darling. I am here. I love you. I am here to protect you. You are safe with me.” And so on.

Allow that part to feel the love and compassion of a friend.

Always remember, you are kind to your friends, so be kind to yourself.

Being your best friend. Treating yourself with compassion and love is vital.

Do this instead of judging and berating yourself.

Making mistakes is human. It is okay to sometimes get things wrong.

Being treated unfairly by others is unfair, and it doesn’t make you are bad person. It is actually the other person who is being bad. So give yourself some slack. Give yourself comfort and love and compassion.

If you would like to talk to me about how I can help you with healing from the hurts of today or of your past, please contact me on 0409396608 or nan@plentifullifecounselling.com.au

If you would like to learn more, I write a regular newsletter with interesting information, tips, information on courses, and the occasional freebie. At the moment I have a free mindfulness meditation for anyone who signs up to my newsletter. This meditation offers a way to safely explore your feelings and learn to be okay with them. If you would like to subscribe please click on the link here: http://eepurl.com/g8Jpiz

Are struggling with the end of your relationship?

Most people who see me are seeing me because they are struggling with the death of a loved one.

But there are also people who see me about the end of their marriage/relationship.

Ending a marriage is a really big thing.

Josie came to see me after she and her husband of 40 years decided to separate.

They were married a long time and had spent their adult years together.

Now they were having to work through the pain.

For Josie that was multi-layered.

She couldn’t blame anyone for the end of the marriage. They had both drifted apart. They had both agreed they were not happy anymore and wanted out.

Despite this amicable end to the marriage, they both experienced a time of anger and blame at each other.

She spent too much time running around after their now adult children.

He spent too much time looking after his mother.

That was just the tip of the iceberg!

Josie was acutely ashamed of her marriage ending and of the need to seek counselling. She would come to see me wearing a scarf, big coat and dark glasses to disguise herself. She was terrified someone would recognise her and judge her for needing help.

She had moved away from her home town because of her shame.

She believed marriages shouldn’t end.

She was worried she looked terrible and her friends would pity her and talk about how bad a state she was in.

She was worried about her future. The future she had planned was gone and she had visions of being some lonely old lady no one ever visited. She was terrified she would die and no one would notice.

She was frightened of going out and having men want to talk to her.

She was anxious that her children would get married and want her to sit on the same table at the reception as her father. By this time she was so angry with him she hated him. She blamed him for everything that had happened. And he blamed her back.

She didn’t recognise the fact that she was grieving and needed time and space to allow that to unfold. She needed to let go of her belief that ending a marriage was wrong. She needed to be able to grieve for the lost future and learn to have a new one.

She needed to stop running.

Brad had been with his partner ten years. He was happy and settled and envisaged a future where he and his partner planned to have children and grow old together. He was blindsided by his partner’s announcement she was leaving him. He had seen no evidence of trouble in the relationship.

He was unable to understand what had happened.

Life was so difficult to manage. He was lonely and lost. He cried a lot or went out with some mates and drank too much.

He could not cope with the loneliness.

He felt totally useless and unloveable.

He contemplated ending it all.

Like Josie he needed time to grieve and the space to allow that to unfold.

He needed to learn how to sit with the not knowing around the end of the relationship.

He needed to know it was okay to hurt and that it would get better.

He also needed to come to the realisation that his relationship ending did not make him less of a person.

So often when relationships end, people are encouraged to just get on with life. There is little recognition of the devastating losses associated with the end of a relationship.

These losses are real. They need to be acknowledged and honoured. The person in this situation must be allowed to feel their grief and work with it.

If you are struggling with  the end of your relationship and would like to seek my help, please contact me on 0409396608 or nan@plentifullifecounselling.com.au

If you would like to learn more, I write a regular newsletter with interesting information, tips, information on courses, and the occasional freebie. At the moment I have a free mindfulness meditation for anyone who signs up to my newsletter. This meditation offers a way to safely explore your feelings and learn to be okay with them. If you would like to subscribe please click on the link here: http://eepurl.com/g8Jpiz

How do I ask for help?

I have observed many clients with childhood trauma who struggle to ask for help.

They will report struggling to get work done at home without help and feeling resentful that no one notices they need help.

Do you experience that?

Other people may ask you why you don’t just ask for help.

There is a very good reason for that.

The abused child is a child who is often alone.

The child is without help.

Requests for help are often met with either anger or shaming.

The child learns they cannot ask for help.

The child grows up and still believes it is not possible to ask for help.

I could tell you to just ask for help.

Maybe you could do that.

Maybe you would struggle.

You would feel your heart racing.

You would feel panic.

You would have a sense of being in danger.

Your childhood when these neural pathways were laid down has taught you that.

It takes a lot of exploring feelings and healing before you can learn that you can ask for help and receive it.

As you heal you can learn that you have the right to ask for help.

You can learn that you deserve help when you ask for it.

You can learn that healthy people are more than happy to help when asked.

Think about the wonderful day when you find yourself in need of help and ask.

And when you ask, you receive the help you needed.

If you would like to talk to me about how I can help you with learning it is okay to ask for help, please contact me on 0409396608 or nan@plentifullifecounselling.com.au

If you would like to learn more, I write a regular newsletter with interesting information, tips, information on courses, and the occasional freebie. At the moment I have a free mindfulness meditation for anyone who signs up to my newsletter. This meditation offers a way to safely explore your feelings and learn to be okay with them. If you would like to subscribe please click on the link here: http://eepurl.com/g8Jpiz

I’m stuck in the jungle of grief. How do I get out?

In my work I have noticed that most people who come to me for help after the death of a loved one struggle to make sense of what has happened. This is referred to as making meaning. This may sound strange but making sense of what has happened in any life event is actually about finding what that event means for you.

If you find yourself in that situation, you will notice how hard it is to move on into the rest of your life.

So many people struggle with the issue and arrive in my counselling room exhausted from trying to manage life and fed up with being stuck in the same place in their lives.

When you see me, you find an objective listener who can see things you might have missed.

Learning there is a way out of the tangle of grief is a great source of relief.

John in the jungle

John likened the space he was in after his wife’s death as being trapped in an impenetrable jungle without a machete to hack his way through.

He was so caught up in how to get out of the jungle, that he was unaware of feelings he had not addressed.

Once he was able to explore those feelings with me, he realised there was an underlying question. That question was overwhelming all his efforts to remember the happy times with his wife.

John came to realise that he had struggled to make sense of how this strong, capable woman had succumbed to cancer.

Once he was aware of this question, he was able to explore it.

In that massive question were so many feelings he had never explored.

He was angry at the cancer that took her life.

He was confused at how quickly it had taken over their lives and turned them upside down.

He was full of remorse at the times in the past he had felt he had not given his wife enough attention. At the missed opportunities to connect. He always imagined they could do things together in retirement. But that never happened.

He felt responsible for her cancer not being picked up earlier. He knew that they had acted on the signs they saw, but he still felt he should have noticed.

He was mourning the loss of the future they had anticipated.

He had lost trust in the certainty of life.

He didn’t know how he would keep living, alone.

These are just some of the feelings he had not experienced until he came to see me.

Once he was able to experience and work through these feelings, he found there was a way out of the jungle.

He could see a path emerging from the tangle of vines that had formerly blocked his way out.

Then one day he was able to walk down the path and emerge into the sunlight.

Jacky and the big question about death.

When Jacky lost her daughter, she struggled with accepting that this teen who had barely lived could be consigned to the nothingness of death.

Her friends would tell her to not think about it, but she needed to know what happened after death. A lot of people never think about that. It is a very confronting thing for many people. It is easy, when faced with such an uncomfortable subject, to move away from it. Hence Jacky’s friends not wanting to discuss it.

I was prepared to let her explore that question.

Jacky spent a lot of time at home reading and exploring attitudes and beliefs around death.

She came and discussed these ideas that she had formed. It is always helpful to have someone to bounce ideas off. It is also helpful to talk with someone who encourages you to reflect on those ideas.

Jacky found comfort in reading about near death experiences and decided her daughter’s spirit went somewhere into another existence after death.

Finding meaning

Two different people. two different stories. Yet both were struggling to find meaning in the death of their loved one.

It is said by those who research grieving that finding meaning in that person’s death is the most overlooked part of grieving.

If you would like to talk to me about how I can help you with finding meaning in the death of a loved one, please contact me on 0409396608 or nan@plentifullifecounselling.com.au

If you would like to learn more, I write a regular newsletter with interesting information, tips, information on courses, and the occasional freebie. At the moment I have a free mindfulness meditation for anyone who signs up to my newsletter. This meditation offers a way to safely explore your feelings and learn to be okay with them. If you would like to subscribe please click on the link here: http://eepurl.com/g8Jpiz

Help! My brain keeps hijacking my body.

One of the biggest casualties of trauma is the sense of self.

When you come to see me, we can work through healing the trauma, but we must also work on helping you to restore a sense of who you are.

There are a number of body centred exercises that I can teach you that will help you regulate what you are feeling inside and how you are responding to those feelings. These exercises will also help restore and repair the connections between your mind and body that are disrupted in trauma.

One of the most effective ways to achieve this is through breathing exercises. Mindfulness is on of the most effective of these ways and I will teach you this as part of your therapy. Mindfulness combines breathing, awareness and meditation.

The part of the brain that gives you a sense of self awareness is sometimes referred to as the “Mohawk of Self Awareness”. It is a good illustration of where those parts of the brain are. I will mention the names of those parts because often you will hear them referred to, and it is nice to have some idea where they are.

Starting from the front of the brain, there is the orbital prefrontal cortex, the medial prefrontal cortex, the anterior cingulate, the posterior cingulate and the insula. Now I have mentioned them you can forget them if you like.

The main point with these brain areas is that these areas of the brain are shown to have less activity in traumatised people. This is actually because a traumatised person’s brain is constantly on alert and these parts of the brain go offline when the defensive parts of the brain are on high alert.

You may have heard the term hyperarousal. That is what happens when the defensive parts of the brain are on high alert.

One of the ways your brain protects itself from the busyness in the brain of hyperarousal is to block the connection between your body and your brain. This reduces the messages your body sends your brain. Those messages would overload your brain if they were allowed through. The trouble with that is you are then disconnected from your feelings, which are felt in your body. If you don’t know what you are feeling, it is hard to respond well to things that happen.

Another casualty of the blocking of the body sensations by the brain is that you cannot engage in self reflection and experience and understand all the feelings you are experiencing. The only ones that will get through will be those associated with the trauma.

Those feelings will send your brain into high alert without you being aware of it. It reacts where you would prefer to have some control and respond.

Breathing exercises, and mindfulness in particular, is a very important way of reconnecting your body and brain and allowing you to be aware of your feelings and respond to them.

The stronger the connection between the body and brain, the lower your reactivity is to what is happening in the world around you.

Wouldn’t it be great to feel in control of your brain again?

If you would like to talk to me about how I can help you with healing from your trauma, please contact me on 0409396608 or nan@plentifullifecounselling.com.au

If you would like to learn more, I write a regular newsletter with interesting information, tips, information on courses, and the occasional freebie. At the moment I have a free mindfulness meditation for anyone who signs up to my newsletter. This meditation offers a way to safely explore your feelings and learn to be okay with them. If you would like to subscribe please click on the link here: http://eepurl.com/g8Jpiz

What are you longing for?

There is a welsh word “Hiraeth” which means homesickness for a home you can no longer return to, or maybe never was. It is a yearning and grief for the lost places of your past.

Many people will report that feeling every now and then as they think about those they have loved who are no longer with them.

Grief does that.

Years after the event there are still days or moments of sadness. Something will happen to trigger the memories and you are back, feeling sad and longing for one more moment to spent with that person, or people, you loved.

Grief never ends.

You eventually learn how to live with the loss of your loved one. But you never stop grieving.

In reality, would you want to stop hurting? Would you want the love you had for that person to end? Because that is the only way to stop the hurt.

Love inevitably leaves the pain of grief when you lose the one you love.

Yes you miss that person.

Yes, you wish they could be here.

Yes, you know they can’t come back, but that doesn’t stop you wanting it all the same.

Sometimes you can get stuck on the journey to the place of Hiraeth and never reach it.

Life goes around and around in circles and you find yourself trapped in this limbo, unable to go back and not knowing how to move forward.

That longing you feel then is not Hiraeth. It is like being trapped in a nightmare with no end. In pain, but unable to move forward and learn how to live with that pain.

Sometimes it helps to seek the help of a counsellor who is experienced in grief counselling.

If you would like to talk to me about how I can help you with finding your way out of the cycle of stuckness to the place of Hiraeth, please contact me on 0409396608 or nan@plentifullifecounselling.com.au

If you would like to learn more, I write a regular newsletter with interesting information, tips, information on courses, and the occasional freebie. At the moment I have a free mindfulness meditation for anyone who signs up to my newsletter. This meditation offers a way to safely explore your feelings and learn to be okay with them. If you would like to subscribe please click on the link here: http://eepurl.com/g8Jpiz