Healing PTSD: Don’t Hit The Symptoms With A Hammer
Saturday, February 28th, 2009 • Uncategorized •
“Telling a person with PTSD to ‘get over it’ is kind of like trying to heal a broken bone by hitting it with a hammer.”
This is so true, isn’t it?
Today’s the last day of February, which means the end of the second month of our BRIDGE THE GAP PTSD healing workshop and our 2009 PTSD New Year Healing Resolutions #2: I WILL TALK.
A quick recap of the top 10 healing steps we’ve covered this month:
1 – the importance of talking in the healing process
2 – 10 reasons you don’t want to speak; and the one reason you really, really should
3 – the importance of integrating memories
4 – learning to talk
5 – tips for outlining the story
6 – putting the story on paper
8 – learning to say it out loud
9 – preparing to share the story with someone else
It’s not easy to begin telling our story, but it does get easier. It’s like walking: first you stumble forward and do a faceplant, then you learn to hold onto things nearby so you don’t fall. While you do this you learn how to rhythmically and with balance put one foot in front of another. You develop a level of comfort and proficiency. You begin to walk a little faster, a little farther. One day: you run great distances. That’s the future for all of us.
So there. If you ever questioned what we’re doing here, rest assured: I do my homework. More importantly though, I lived it. I’ve done it. Our traumas and healing journeys are all individual, but our symptoms are universal. The best self-healing practices are, too.
(photo: Darren Hester)
Tags: heal, How to Talk About Trauma, ptsd, symptoms

