Brain-based Idea
Hopefully, you are starting to get the idea now that the brain works a lot like a huge filing system. All you need is a key word to pull a lot of the files out – and they’re magic files. Sometimes they just pop out of the cabinet on their own via something called triggers, discussed in Tuesdays, Word of the Day.
We have established that triggers are fast and a lot of traumatized emotions are associated with something connected to the emotion but not necessarily present in the current moment. We talked about Little Sammy and the dog. The dog did nothing wrong, but now dogs are an object of fear for him.
Because these triggers are so fast and our thinky brain does not always trace them to their original source, we can misdirect our emotions toward the wrong source. Like moving away from a dog that is not a threat. We often do not even know why we do such things.
If we do not know, then how can we make changes?
One way is with something I will call corrective reattribution. Corrective reattribution refers to the process of accurately assigning responsibility based on the present moment. Here is how it works.
Aisha’s job is to compile a nightly report for her boss. This requires her to receive information from several people in her team. Most days, the people forget. She must run around the building to find people to get the information she needs. This makes her feel disrespected and frustrated.
Her irritation makes sense. However, she has found that she takes her angst out on her kids each night once she gets home. She comes into therapy for help.
In the process of discussing the issue, Aisha reveals that her last job was rather traumatic. Her boss was a micromanager that got on her case for “every last thing,” and eventually fired her for productivity issues that she is absolutely certain she did not have. The trauma of that experience is showing up at her present job.
In order to help her work this out, the therapist asks a series of questions, such as:
What bothersome emotion are you feeling? When does it come up most often at work/home (wherever the situation is taking place)?
Do/Does the triggering experience(s) remind you of anything from your past? If so, tell me about it. Who were the players? What was the issue? How does it relate to the current issue?
Think about the current issue. What are your fears? Do these fears relate to present-day issues/people or past ones?
In the present moment, who is actually responsible for what? Are your fears warranted in the present moment? If so, based on what evidence?
After asking some questions to build a full picture, Aisha realizes where her fears are coming from. She sees that she is harboring past fears that have been triggered in her present moment and that the real culprit (or responsible party) is someone from her past that resembles someone from her future. Having not realized it before, her upset has to go somewhere, so it is directed toward her children. Once she realized where the responsibility truly lies, she is freed from past associations and feels strong enough to confront her team about their lapses in reporting to her.
You may ask different questions, but the goal is to recognize when old experiences are dictating current emotional reactions that are being pointed at the wrong person or place and to figure out the truth.
Body-based Idea
A primary reason for misdirection of traumatized emotions is fear. Fear of showing your sadness, anger or fear to a particular person or in a given setting. Before you can rightly attribute the responsibility, you have to deal with the fear.
Fear of any kind sets off something we therapist-types call the Defense Network (DN) in your brain. This comprises the limbic system and, at times, the frontal lobe, basal ganglia, and cerebellum. Don’t worry about the science-y words. The important thing to know is that if your brain is triggered into fear, the DN will engage. It’s not a character flaw of failure on your part. It is completely outside your ability to manage – until you become aware.
Here are some steps to help your body during moments of fear:
o Sit down, close your eyes (or, if you can’t do that, look down at the floor), and count 25-30 slow, deep breaths
o Find some ice or something very cold. Hold it in your hands until you can’t stand it anymore then drop it and put your hands on your face for 30-60 seconds
o Do some intense exercise for 90 seconds – 5 minutes (such as jumping jacks, running, push-ups, or other aerobic movement*)
The point of these activities are to reduce the chemical wash of fear. It will either dissipate or transform into pure energy with these exercises. Once you are calm and able to think, then assess the present moment and proceed accordingly.
If you wonder if you are truly in a place to think clearly, try saying the alphabet backwards or counting one hundred to zero by sevens. If you can do these for even a few seconds, you are likely back in your thinking mind.
You now have some idea about how emotions that were hurt in the past show up nowadays. Come back next month as we explore the idea of Attachment and how that might affect our trauma, relationships, and self-perception.
In the meantime – take care of you!
*Be sure to be cleared by medical professionals before attempting any exercise suggested here
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