WHAT DOESN’T KILL US MAKES US STRONGER
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Post-Traumatic Growth can be transformational. “Suffering is the short road to spirit,” is a common metaphysical saying. This means that suffering leads people quickly to connect with their own spirituality. If everything is fine all the time, where is the motivation to meditate, to read books that give us new insights into human behavior, or to think in different ways? If we don’t know sadness, then we can not appreciate happiness. In fact, the first noble truth of Buddhism is that life consists of suffering. This is the premise, the base of the entire Buddhism philosophy: life is pain.
Is suffering therefore necessary for us to know our higher powers? The most unanswerable question of the universe is why does God allow us to suffer. Is it possible that suffering needs to exist as a way to propel us forward on our spiritual paths, as a catalyst for us to truly know ourselves and therefore spirit? Clearly, no God that any culture has ever conceived of wants any of their sheep to suffer. Only one reason is big enough for any higher power to allow suffering, right? Suffering would have to be the oil keeping the entire machine grinding onward.
Unfortunately, this “necessity” needed for spiritual advancement is too much for many people. While it is crucial for masters to reach enlightenment, it is apparently kryptonite for the rest of people. The good news is that, at any point, you can decide to master your own suffering. Anyone can do it. In fact, the very reason why you have found this article right now at this time is because the universe is telling you, “It’s time!”
THE HEROINE’S JOURNEY
“It is so much easier to cause pain than to feel pain.” -Brené Brown
There are three stages of trauma processing with the final stage representing Post Traumatic Growth: 1) Victim [injured], 2) Survivor [transforming], 3) Heroine/Hero [transformed]. A victim is someone who has experienced trauma. She could be in a coma or she could be Mother Theresa during the qualifying traumatic event (plane crash, emotional abuse). Often people in the “victim stage” are still in shock and denial–they have not truly begun to process. People can spend decades in the victim stage depending on the nature of the trauma. A survivor is someone who begins to feel what there is to feel in response to the trauma–typically pain, shame, and anger. A heroine/hero has succumbed to and dealt with all the feels and has integrated the trauma into their life and world view.
In an academic paper called Trauma Recovery: A Heroic Journey, the authors compare the process of recovering from trauma to Joseph Campbell’s “hero’s journey:”
“Stage One, The Departure, begins with some life circumstance that serves as a ‘call to adventure‘ that will require courage to accept. It is not uncommon for the traveler to initially refuse the call due to a fear of potential dangers. The encouragement or inspiration of a ‘mentor‘ provides ‘supernatural aid‘ in the form of resources and guidance, which is often the impetus needed for the would–be hero to find the courage to leave behind all that is familiar and embark on an unknown journey (Campbell, 1949, p. 49–90).
“Stage Two, Initiation, is characterized by a series of trials, tests, ordeals, and victories. As the individual wrestles with each new challenge, she learns to rely on new allies and develops personal abilities. Each obstacle serves to strengthen and transform the traveler. This stage is often characterized by a final challenge that feels like a death from which the traveler emerges ‘reborn‘ as a hero with enhanced strength, wisdom, and knowledge.
“In Stage Three, Return, the transformed hero is beckoned to re–enter the ordinary world with gifts of enhanced wisdom and knowledge bought through her experiences. Perhaps reluctant at first, the hero is summoned from the extraordinary journey back to the life of the ordinary. This return often involves another life and death moment for the hero. Once achieved, she is now the ‘master of two worlds’ (Campbell, 1949, pp. 229-237) as she passes the threshold back to her community.
“Campbell (1949) describes the transformed hero’s increased wisdom, strength, inspiration or other resources as elixir which can be used to bring restoration to the world. The hero has come full circle and now serves as an aid to others as they begin their journey. Her personal journeys become an offering of inspiration and hope in the service of others.” 1
Psychologist Philip Zimbardo reports, “Having survived a disaster or personal trauma makes you three times more likely to be a hero and a volunteer.” 2 Obviously not everyone is hero material, and that is OK. There are many paths.
The Recovery Village, reports that 70% of adults experience at least one major traumatic event in their lifetime, 20% of people who experience a traumatic event will develop Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and, in general, 1 in 13 people will develop PTSD at some point in their life. 3 The Phoenix Trauma Center says that 50% of children who experience trauma will develop PTSD. They also write that, of the children and adults who develop PTSD, about 2/3 report experiencing Post-Traumatic Growth. Could we interpret this data to mean that only 20% of adults ever leave the victim stage of trauma recovery? And, of those, only about 70% graduate to hero?
WHAT IS POST-TRAUMATIC GROWTH?
“You do vulnerability knowingly, or vulnerability does you.” -Brené Brown
In contrast to Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (often the state of people in the survivor stage), Post-Traumatic Growth is the result of passing through the dark tunnel of PTSD. The person inching forward through the quicksand of the trauma often has no idea they are “growing” because they remain focused on emerging from the suffering. When it comes to moving through one’s trauma, Metin Basoglu, former Head of Trauma Studies at the King’s College London says, “Relinquishing control is the ultimate form of control.” 4 To move through trauma, survivors must let it push and pull them where it will. Because of this messy, unpredictable map for healing, it is common to not feel that any growth or “benefit” has been experienced until well after graduating from the survivor phase. The new-found strength, self-insight, or closer connection to spirit may not be apparent for a long time.
PositivePsyhology.org.uk breaks down Post-Traumatic Growth into three categories:
- “Feeling stronger and finding hidden abilities and strengths; this changes the person’s self concept and gives them confidence to face new challenges, e.g. If I can survive this, I can survive anything;
- “Good relationships are strengthened, which is reflected in how people often speak of ‘finding out who their true friends are’ after they have experienced a trauma; and,
- “Priorities and philosophies concerning the present day and other people are altered, e.g. living for the moment and prioritizing your loved ones (Haidt, 2006 and Joseph & Linley, 2005).” 5
Other sources report these Post-Traumatic Growth components: emotional growth, closer family relationships, a better perspective on life, greater self insight, and positively altered values and priorities, appreciation of life, personal strength, spiritual change. In his ground-breaking book Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving, therapist Pete Walker describes Post-Traumatic Growth in great detail. He first explains the emotional intelligence aspect:
“We live in an emotionally impoverished culture, and those who stick with a long term recovery process are often rewarded with emotional intelligence far beyond the norm. This is somewhat paradoxical, as survivors of childhood trauma are initially injured more grievously in their emotional natures than those in the general population.
“The silver lining in this, however, is that many of us were forced to consciously address our suffering because our wounding was so much more severe. Those who work an effective recovery program not only recover significantly from emotional damage, but also evolve out of the emotional impoverishment of the general society. One of my clients described this as becoming ‘way more emotionally intelligent than the normies.’
“Perhaps the greatest reward of improved emotional intelligence is seen in a greater capacity for deeper intimacy. Emotional intelligence is a foundational ingredient of relational intelligence–a type of intelligence that is also frequently diminished in the general populace.” (p. 80) 6
Walker also zeroes in on enhanced capacity for intimacy as a common aspect of Post-Trauma Growth:
“Intimacy is greatly enhanced when two people dialogue about all aspects of their experience. This is especially true when they transcend taboos against full emotional communication. Feelings of love, appreciation, and gratitude are naturally enhanced when we reciprocally show our full selves–confident or afraid, loving or alienated, proud or embarrassed. What an incredible achievement it is when any two of us create such an authentic and supportive relationship! Many of the most intimate relationships that I have seen are between people who have done a great deal of freeing themselves from the negative legacies of their upbringings.” (p. 80-81) 7
Finally, Walker explains in detail, based on his experience counseling Complex PTSD survivors, exactly how trauma can improve one’s internal life:
“A further silver lining in recovery is the attainment of a much richer internal life. The introspective process, so fundamental to effective recovery work, eventually deepens and enriches survivors’ psyches. Ongoing mindful exploration of all aspects of our experience helps us see firsthand what Socrates meant when he said: ‘The unexamined life isn’t worth living.’ The survivor who follows the introspective ‘road less traveled’ becomes increasingly free of compulsive and unconscious allegiance to unhelpful familial, religious, and societal values that were instilled at an impressionable age. The recoveree now gets to choose her own values and reject those that are not in her own best interest. She develops a deeper, more grounded self-respect that is not contingent upon going with the herd and shifting center with every new popular trend. In psychological parlance, she becomes free and brave enough to individuate and develop more of her full potential.
“In Joseph Campbell’s words, the survivor learns to ‘follow his own bliss.’ He is freer to pursue activities and interests that naturally appeal to him. He evolves into his own sense of style. He may even feel emboldened to coif and dress himself without adherence to the standards of fashion. He may extend his freedom to into his home decor. In this vein, I have seen many survivors discover their own aesthetic, as well as an increased appreciation of beauty in general. How this contrasts with many of the homes of my ‘normal’ sports buddies, whose homes are often sparsely decorated, as if they are too afraid to put something out or up lest it not be cool enough.” (p. 81) 8
Some argue changing the term Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, which sounds like a disease, to Post-Traumatic Stress Injury since it is more like spiritual bruising as a natural response to taking a “blow to the soul.” This re-definition would help shift the perception that PTSD is a normal, healthy process rather than a mental illness.
OWN IT. MAKE SPACE. TELL YOUR STORY.
“Brave leaders are never silent around hard things. Our job is to excavate the unsaid…That requires courage and vulnerability.” -Brené Brown
In an article called “The Secrets of Extraordinary Survivors,” a story is told of a female activist in the Congo who was kidnapped by the opposing political regime, raped, and tortured for 3 days. They left her bleeding and disoriented on the side of the road, and, weeks later, she discovered she was pregnant. She says, “Before my treatment, I wasn’t able to tell my story to anyone. I was dead. Now I feel like telling it. It’s my story.” 9 If processing my own childhood rape taught me anything, it’s that nobody wants to hear about it. Not really. But I told them anyway. Because I needed to. The more uncomfortable people I encountered, the more I realized how very, very needed these painful, awkward, raw, real conversations about rape and other traumas are. There is almost no space to discuss these sticky topics: afternoon talk shows, group therapy sessions, and in relation to a news case of a similar theme–that’s it! If you bring it up outside these acceptable situations, then you have “poor boundaries.” People going through trauma need more space to process, grieve, and digest than just this, so, until then, claim your own space. “We’re here! We have uncomfortable stories! Get used to it!”
The Harvard Medical School studied a group of people for over almost 20 years who were hospitalized as teenagers for psychosis. They followed the group through the early 90s. According to WebMD, “Psychosis is a condition that affects the way your brain processes information. It causes you to lose touch with reality. You might see, hear, or believe things that aren’t real. Psychosis is a symptom, not an illness.” 10 So PTSD would definitely meet this definition. Of this group of people Harvard studied, who went on to lead functional adult lives? “These survivors did not appear to possess any remarkable innate attributes. Instead, what set them apart was the way they framed the story of their illness and how they integrated it into their personal narratives.” 11
Jewish psychiatrist Viktor Frankel was sent to the Theresienstadt concentration camp in 1942. There he witnessed his father starve to death. In 1944, he and his family were moved to the Auschwitz concentration camp. He suffered the loss of both his mother and brother in the gas chambers there. Later, he and his wife were transferred to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. He watched his wife die of Typhus there. In total, Frankl spent three years in the Nazi concentration camps surrounded by the worst suffering and trauma imaginable.
When he wrote a book about his experience, what did he call it? Man’s Search for Meaning. Sexist language aside, the title is basically “Why does bad shit happen to good people?” Without coming up with a real answer to this impossible question, most victims can never graduate from the shackles of trauma. Survivors are compelled to literally unravel the universe to search for this meaning. The answer is typically tied up in things as deep as universal energy, one’s life purpose, a thorough study of multiple disciplines, and often an explanation to every other “why” out there. No one can thrive as a complete, functional, vibrant human in a world where terrible tragedies and traumas just fall out of a clear blue sky for no reason. A world like that doesn’t feel safe. Stephen Joseph, a psychologist from the University of Nottingham says, “Trauma creates a rupture in a person’s life story.” 12 The only way to seal the rupture is to understand why the bad thing happened. What’s the first thing people say after trauma? “I didn’t think bad things like that could really happen.” Because believing that is what helps us get out of bed everyday. Living in a world where bad things don’t seem “regular” is required to function. The only way to re-claim that feeling of safety after trauma is, as Frankel says, to search for the meaning.
Even in the “Secrets of Extraordinary Survivors” article, it quotes a trauma therapist encouraging other trauma therapists to tell clients crap along the lines of, “You need to put a shiny, hopeful bow on your story and talk about how you survived then ended up at my door.” Trauma survivors that apparently didn’t get a gold star from this guy said things like: “I’m a prisoner of the past,” “I feel empty,” and “I’m not worthy.” 13 This type of ignorance is so rampant among the so-called experts unfortunately. If you never felt trapped, empty, or worthless because of your trauma, then, I have to ask, are you still breathing? This type of thinking reminds me of when my toxic, alcoholic mom, less than 24 hours after my dad died, told me something to the tune of, “You can cheer up now–it’s over” (referring to my dad’s excruciating battle with the world’s deadliest cancer). I told her, “No, mom, this is just the beginning. If I don’t smile for the next 6 months, it’ll be perfectly healthy and normal. That’s how grief works.”
In the victim stage of trauma, the victim will be broken–that is the very definition of trauma. If you’re not broken, you weren’t traumatized–period. The very common “broken-ness” feeling may well last through the survivor stage as well. What trauma therapists could do instead of trying to force or control a victim’s narrative is empower them by letting them write their own damn stories–ones that are authentic, raw, ugly. Spoonfeeding a trauma survivor garbage like this–trying to lead them where the therapist wants them to go–revictimizes them. Give options, not advice, and let the survivor make their own decisions. When you take power away from people–and that is exactly what trying to “clean up” someone’s narrative is–you’re no different than the person or event that took their power away in the first place. You don’t fuck with survivors’ voices. God knows there were plenty of days when my story was: “This therapist is an idiot.”
Dr. Brené Brown researches shame and vulnerability. She says, based on her research, that you can’t be loved if you can’t be seen. 14 Telling your unpolished story is imperative for being seen, being loved. If people can’t know the real you, you’ll never own your trauma–it’ll own you.
SPIRITUAL VIRAGOS: WHY DO WOMEN DEVELOP PTSD MORE OFTEN
“If you can’t, you must. If you must, you can.” -Tony Robbins
I like world famous life coach Tony Robbins’ attitude, purpose, and work ethic, and I respect the fact that literally millions of people around the globe say that he has helped them live better lives. Tony was severely abused by his mother growing up. In that way (plus, he was a speech & debate geek like me), I relate to him a great deal. He doesn’t talk a lot about the abuse he suffered because he feels it makes him “look like a victim.” Tony expresses a very typical “good ol’ boys” attitude whenever the subject arises. He told Opie Radio that people need to let go of negative emotions and problems. The interviewer says, “Is that suppressing the problem though?” Tony responded, “No, no, suppressing is pretending it’s not there…In any moment, what’s wrong is always available, but so is what’s right…You’re feeling like shit doesn’t help somebody else.” 15 Looking away from trauma doesn’t make it go away, nor is there a need to regulate our own emotions based on helping other people. These are really well-accepted, popular responses to trauma though…to kind of look the other way. It’s time for this narrative to change–sharing your story doesn’t make you “look like a victim.” Minimizing or silencing your story does. It’s more than OK to feel like shit after being traumatized. Yes, PTSD that persists is a clear problem, but spending a few weeks or months in PTSD after a trauma is perfectly reasonable. One can both be grateful and thankful for a variety of things and still, at the same time, be angry, scared, and hurt about the trauma–this is a false distinction (I’ll speak more on this in the next section).
According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, research indicates that men experience trauma 10% more often than women do. Despite experiencing less trauma, women are twice as likely as men to deal with PTSD. 16 Mental Health Researcher Dale Vernor hypothesizes that one reason for this is that men are dealing primarily with war/violence type of trauma, while women are dealing primarily with sexual assault. He reported that 94% of female sexual assault victims experience PTSD. Vernor thinks another possible reason for this dichotomy is that PTSD is more prevalent in highly patriarchal societies. His final theory is that women experience PTSD more than men because of our female tendencies (i.e. “tending to others”–I believe that’s called parenting…something husbands are supposed to also do, even after their wives are raped, and “women’s reliance on the support of others during problematic times”–because emotional support seems like a super unhealthy strategy that could definitely lead to a mental breakdown). 17 Wow! Speechless!
Let’s not tip toe around the pink elephant in the living room here, Dale. “Toxic masculinity” and “fragile masculinity” are concepts for a reason. I’ve been raped. As a child. And then by two different men in adulthood. And I’ve had PTSD. But war, to me, still seems worse. I guess one reason is that war can include being raped (like POWs having broomsticks inserted into their anuses) plus all that pesky shooting, killing, bombing, seeing your friends die, and homesickness. It’s a big leap to assume rape is more PTSD-inducing than war simply because 94% of female victims get PTSD from it. I may be going out on a limb here, but I do believe it’s harder for a man who has been sexually assaulted since he has to deal with everything a female victim experiences PLUS feeling like he’s not a “tough guy.” Women don’t feel like we aren’t “real” women after being raped. This argument is only further supported by Dale’s second point about patriarchal societies producing more PTSD. Dale only thinks about how patriarchy affects women, not how it affects men. Both “fragile masculinity” and “toxic masculinity” come from super patriarchal cultures. Men are experiencing less PTSD because they will not allow themselves to look weak or vulnerable. Dissociation is not bravery. Looking the other way is not strength. Projecting a fake sense of OK-ness is not admirable.
I say let’s give a round of applause to women who have the “hero factor” (read: balls) to actually feel the completely reasonable feelings associated with being traumatized, to those who will earn the steroid boost of “Post Traumatic Growth Hormone” they get. As Brene Brown says, vulnerability is courage, and courage is vulnerability. Developing PTSD has nothing to do with poor mental fitness, but dissociation, something practically demanded of men, does. Becoming a “trauma hero” will cause you to develop mental and spiritual muscles that are far more useful than physical muscles. Even Tony Robbins knows this. In an interview with Marie Forleo, Tony says:
“For decades, my obsession has been what makes the difference in people, right? Why some people–you give them everything: love, joy, tremendous education, economic well-being–and they end up going in and out of rehab all day long. How many actors, actresses, wealthy people have you seen do this? It’s sad. And then there are people that life has just beat the hell out of, right? People have gone through physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, spiritual abuse…and many of these people, rather than being broken, become so hungry, so driven. Because they don’t want anyone else to experience that–I’m an example of that–that they become masterful in things.” 18
DEALING WITH TRAUMA SPIRITUALLY
“That which you resist, persists.” -popular saying
In a live Q&A, a woman once asked Eckhart Tolle how to deal with the suffering she had experienced from being the victim of a crime. He said, “The important thing is the realization that there is in you a dimension that is beyond anything that could ever suffer.” 19 It is true that our “I am” energy can never be touched, tainted, or hurt. This is re-assuring, especially since so many trauma survivors are stripped down to nothing more than our “I am” energy during the trauma. Tolle then points out the importance of not identifying with the pain. While, yes, the pain is present, the pain is not who you are. He also recommended surrendering to the pain because what we resist persists. For example, after a flashback, one might say, “OK pain, here you are again. I acknowledge you. I see you. I feel you. I am me, and you are you. You are not who I am. For right now, you will be with me. That’s ok. I accept your presence at this time.” Telling yourself this kind of story, this self-narrative, will help you avoid losing touch with your “I am” energy. Not surprising, Tolle, like Tony Robbins, described his own childhood as being characterized by on-going trauma.
A spiritual teaching that helped me immensely is from Neale Donald Walsh’s series of Conversations with God books. That teaching is that the purpose of life is not to “learn lessons.” We are consciousness. This is not “new age hoo ha” any more–this is a fact easily proven over and over by quantum physicists. Consciousness already knows what there is to know. Consciousness, which is the essence of your “I am” energy, is awareness and infinite knowledge. We are not here in human form to learn. Earth is not a school. We are human BEings (not human DOings). We are here to BE who we are. For example, after George Floyd was killed when a police officer kneeled on his neck during the Covid-19 pandemic, were you angry and protesting in the streets? Were you on your couch reading the social media posts thinking, “How awful”? Did you turn to meditation and visualize healing, safety, and love for African Americans? Did you argue that “All Lives Matter”? Did you turn the channel because you’re not a “political person”? Did you donate to a bail fund? Did you cry? Everything that happens to us is an opportunity to express our “being-ness.” In the face of this trauma, who are you?
This gets us back to “our story” of trauma. Any spiritual teacher will advise you not to put energy on “your story.” Even Alcoholics Anonymous philosophy discourages members from identifying with their stories of alcoholism. The ego loves to identify as a “poor me” victim. It loves complaining. A story of victimhood is the ultimate complaint for the ego. This is how trauma can lead us to mastery–at the same time we need to compile “the story” in order to process it and flush it from the system, we also need to avoid identifying as the story.
Ram Dass says, “In spiritual evolution, you don’t destroy the ego, you merely turn away from identifying with it, to having it as a functional unit.” 20 Our egos are wrapped up in our fight or flight responses (i.e. “functional unit”). Ultimately, the ego wants us to survive and feel safe–it’s like a helicopter mom living in our heads. Unfortunately, we only really, truly NEED the ego to “keep us alive” sparingly (god willing, right?). Post-traumatic growth is about walking that tight rope of “I need my ego to help me survive this” and “OK ego, I don’t need you any more.” Dass says also, “…you really have to become somebody before you can become nobody.” 21 In the case of trauma, this means gathering and telling the story…until the need to express the story slowly dissolves. This is spiritual mastery.
FROM ZERO TO HERO: CLAIMING YOUR POST-TRAUMATIC GROWTH
“I believe there’s a hero in all of us…” -May Parker in Spider-Man 2
Do you think after what psychologist Viktor Frankel survived at the hands of the Nazis that he felt trauma could lead to growth? Damn straight he did. In fact, he believed in it so firmly that he created Logotherapy, defined by Wikipedia as “a concept based on the premise that the primary motivational force of an individual is to find meaning in life.” 22
If you are currently dealing with PTSD or processing a trauma, how can you help yourself keep pushing through to the other side? First, patience! Yes, you want to overcome this, but you must be gentle with yourself. Nevertheless, the more you can dive into what happened and feel it, the better. The main objective is to “get it out” of you. This will just be something that needs to get done until it doesn’t need to get done any more.
Some trauma experts encourage survivors to sleep in the dark (with the light off) and do other things that are currently terrifying. I think those things resolve themselves as you start getting the details of your story together and begin sharing it. Allow yourself to feel safe…if that means sleeping with the light on for now, then I don’t see the harm in doing that. My own recovery did not come from having more nightmares, it came from new epiphanies, new connections, new awareness (i.e. moving deeper into my own “search for meaning.”) To master this trauma, dig in and analyze/deconstruct what happened, feel every last inch of ugliness, and act accordingly when you emerge on the other side as a different person. You are in charge of handling that how you see fit. Me personally, I made a “scrapbook” where I could craft my story page by page in full color with song lyrics, poetry, diary entries, academic essays, statistics, pictures, and all the fucking room I wanted to be angry, sad, or hurt. I don’t know why I felt compelled to do it that way, but it was extremely healing, empowering, and rewarding. The trauma came “out” of me and went “on” the pages. Whenever I feel compelled to re-visit, I can open the scrapbook–an external thing, something no longer residing in me as it did before. Post-Traumatic Growth is reached when “the story” has been compiled, shared, released completely from every cell, then, eventually, set aside as to no longer be identified with.
You will never be the un-traumatized you again, so who do you want this new hero you to be? It’s your story to write. So aside from that, here are a few more tools to consider:
- Journaling/Scrapbooking – This is one of the most effective ways to “get it out.” Start writing everything you remember and feel. Analyze news events relating to your trauma. Write angry letters. Make a scrapbook.
- EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) – This is a form of psychotherapy specifically designed to reduce the burden of traumatic memories. Your therapist will actually help you re-program your brain using a variety of tools: lateral eye movements, hand tapping, audio stimulation, etc. I personally have experienced miraculous changes from EMDR.
- Talk Therapy – If you have not already sought out a trauma counselor to speak to, this will help tremendously to “get it out.” It is highly recommended to find a therapist who specializes in trauma (or even more specifically a rape trauma specialist or a veterans trauma specialist, etc) or else it is likely the therapist will do more harm than good.
- Punching Bag/Rock Throwing – Anger is a perfectly healthy reaction to trauma. The key is going to be finding a healthy way of getting that “out” as well. If you don’t have something you can punch, fill an old pillow sack with folded-up blankets or fabric, and hang it up somewhere at punching height. You can use a black marker to write or draw what you are angry at on the old pillow case. Throwing rocks at a wooden fence, a dirt bank, or into a lake is also a powerful anger release.
- Art/Poetry/Photography/Music – Tap into your creativity and “get it out” by expressing your emotions as paintings, poems, songs, or photos. Describing your anger, explaining your pain, and figuring how to best capture your PTSD feelings in an artistic way can not only be super therapeutic, but it can help you communicate your story more effectively.
- Crying – No better way to “get it out” than through what Pete Walker calls “healing tears.” You’ve no doubt already cried until your eyes hurt, but, if you haven’t, allow yourself that kindness.
- Volunteer or Advocacy Work – You can remind yourself of how far you’ve already come and how strong and empowered you still are by volunteering to help other victims (or a similar population you find to be relevant–like working with children if you were traumatized as a child). Advocating for other victims or relevant population can be very rewarding as well (political protest, boycott, letter writing campaign to the government, fundraising, marching in the streets, etc).
- Read/Educate Yourself – Learning everything there is to know about PTSD or your specific type of trauma can be very empowering. Read books, google all of your questions as they arise, watch Youtube videos on these topics, see what documentaries are available on the things you feel compelled to study relating to your trauma. Become an expert on what happened to you. Collect evidence. Investigate. Research. Own it. Claim it. (Look at you reading all the way to the end of this article!)
- Reclaim your Power – What else can you do to reclaim your power? Every situation is different. Can you get the perp arrested? Can you write an Op/Ed for your local paper about what the police did to you? Where can you file a complaint? Contact a lawyer and find out what rights you have (filing a lawsuit might be an option).
- T.R.E. (Trauma Releasing Exercises) – This is an innovative series of exercises that “shake off” deep muscular patterns of stress, tension, and trauma from the body. It activates a natural “vibrating” reflex that releases muscular tension & calms down the nervous system. This is a new therapy that is really starting to gain popularity. No side effects, nothing to lose by giving it a try.
- Somatic Work – To physically remove the imprint of trauma from your cells, an article entitled “Transmuting Trauma Through Somatic Practices” on Chopra.com recommends scanning your body several times a day to be aware of the sensations (is your chest always tight? are you constantly flexing your jaw?) What does your intuition tell you about these sensations? For example, I find my stomach clenched constantly. Intuitively, I know that even though it’s been 5 years since my mom last attacked me (when I quit speaking to her), my cells are stuck in a constant state of terror that I work on little by little, day by day. Once you identify where your body is storing the fear, the hurt, the shame, the heart ache, etc, Chopra.com recommends the Emotional Freedom Technique (“tapping”) to help alleviate it. 23 Check out SpiritualVirago.com’s EFT Tapping Cheat Sheet free download.
Again, the main thing all these tools have in common are that they are ways to “get the trauma out” of your body, of your spirit. To this end, Frankel explains in Man’s Search For Meaning:
“When someone finds that it is their destiny to suffer, they will have to accept their suffering as their task; their single and unique task. They will have to acknowledge the fact that even in suffering they are unique and alone in the universe. No one can relieve them of their suffering or suffer in their place. Their unique opportunity lies in the way in which they bear their burdens…
“Once the meaning of suffering had been revealed to us, we refused to minimize or alleviate the camp’s tortures by ignoring them or harboring false illusions and entertaining artificial optimism. Suffering had become a task on which we did not turn our backs. We had realized its hidden opportunities for achievement…Rilke spoke of ‘getting through suffering’ as others would talk of ‘getting through work.’ There was plenty of suffering for us to get through. Therefore, it was necessary to face up to the full amount of suffering…there was no need to be ashamed of tears, for tears bore witness that a person had the greatest courage, the courage to suffer. Only very few realized that…like the comrade who answered my question of how he had gotten over his edema, by confessing, ‘I have wept it out of my system.'” (Sexist language removed. p. 77-79) 24
POST-TRAUMATIC GROWTH: IN CONCLUSION
“People with heavy ‘pain bodies’ have a much stronger incentive to awaken spiritually than people with a very weak ‘pain body.’ So if your ‘pain body’ is dense and heavy, then be grateful…Enjoy the adventure of awakening in this lifetime.” -Eckhart Tolle
What are parents constantly complaining about with regards to the generation that got trophies just for showing up? It’ll make the kids “soft.” Most parents believe that you can’t talk to your kids about working hard, being responsible, or being strong. You give your kids chores, and work will teach them those things. Suffering is spiritual work. And those who don’t get assigned these “soul chores” were given “participation trophies” by the universe. Bummer for them.
Trauma is an opportunity to completely re-invent yourself…if you accept the challenge. Yea, you’re probably going to have to go 17 rounds against this bitch before the referee raises your glove over your head. But, when that moment happens, you can be whoever the hell you want and do whatever the hell you want. I truly believe that trauma is a calling. It’s a masterclass in conquering absolutely anything–that is something you can’t buy, you can’t learn from a guru or at Harvard, and you can’t study under a microscope. The gift of knowing how fucking strong you are is never-ending. Beating this thing is something that can never be taken away from you…and that is a power that only a blessed few get to experience. If you grow the mental and spiritual muscles needed to bench press this monster, and you spend the rest of your life dealing with demons a quarter of its size, please tell me when are you going to ever really, truly, sincerely be afraid again? Finally, I’d like to close with one more quote from Dr. Brené Brown’s Netflix special “The Call to Courage:”
“Here’s the thing–I’m not going to bullshit you. Vulnerability is hard, scary, and it feels dangerous. But it’s not as hard, scary, or dangerous as getting to the end of our lives and having to ask ourselves, ‘What if I would have shown up, what if I would have said I love you, what if I would have come off the [starting] blocks. Show up. Be seen. Answer the call to courage and come off the blocks–because you’re worth it. You’re worth being brave.” 25
If you have experienced trauma, tell me in the comments below what helped you reclaim your power and move you from victim to survivor or from survivor to heroine/hero.
RECOMMENDED: FURTHER LEARNING
“Whether you can use your healing as an awakening process depends on the perspective from which you come at it.” -Ram Dass
POST-TRAUMATIC GROWTH QUOTES: POST & SHARE
“Choose courage over comfort.” -Brené Brown
Click for more quotes or square versions of these ones.
Footnotes
- https://scholarship.richmond.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1010&context=heroism-science
- https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/what_makes_a_hero/
- https://www.therecoveryvillage.com/mental-health/ptsd/related/ptsd-statistics/
- https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20150813-the-secrets-of-extraordinary-survivors
- http://positivepsychology.org.uk/post-traumatic-growth/
- https://amzn.to/3B2blpo
- https://amzn.to/3B2blpo
- https://amzn.to/3B2blpo
- https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20150813-the-secrets-of-extraordinary-survivors
- https://www.webmd.com/schizophrenia/guide/what-is-psychosis
- https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20150813-the-secrets-of-extraordinary-survivors
- https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20150813-the-secrets-of-extraordinary-survivors
- https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20150813-the-secrets-of-extraordinary-survivors
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gr-WvA7uFDQ
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zLozCh5oZLA
- https://www.nami.org/Blogs/NAMI-Blog/October-2019/PTSD-is-More-Likely-in-Women-Than-Men
- https://www.nami.org/Blogs/NAMI-Blog/October-2019/PTSD-is-More-Likely-in-Women-Than-Men
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WuFysBXxMUw
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dZ2GfrendQg
- https://www.ramdass.org/the-ego-dichotomy-fear-love/
- https://www.ramdass.org/healing-from-childhood-injury-as-a-prelude-to-spiritual-practice/
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logotherapy
- https://chopra.com/articles/transmuting-trauma-through-somatic-practices
- https://amzn.to/3l6RQoW
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gr-WvA7uFDQ