Resilience: Healing from Loss and Trauma with Compassion, Clarity, and Courage/ Linda Graham, MFT


-  Resilience is simply: bouncing back, from any disappointment,  difficult y or even a disaster, from the small annoyances in daily living –to- the greatest losses that break our heart & spirit. – to- the full catastrophe that upheaval our lives. So Whatever level of overwhelming or disruption we're experiencing to our coping or to our thriving; resilience is the capacity hardwired into the brain of response flexibility.. it's innate in every brain .. it's innate in every human being, & no matter what loss we're reacting to  (Job, relationship, hope ...etc) the response flexibility allows us to shift gears & to learn new capacities of skillful & effective coping to whatever has been thrown in our way, as: "How you respond to the issue is the issue".

- Tools that will strengthen the capacity response flexibility in the brain in ways that will allow you to approach any potential of previous Trauma with compassion, Clarity & Courage:


First: Somatic Intelligence




 - Breathing is what regulates our automatic nervous system, "Breathing in": is a slight stimulation & "Breathing out": is a slight relaxation to the nervous system.

-  Touch release the hormone of Oxytocin: which is the hormone of safety & trust, & brings direct antidote to the stress hormone "Cortisol", so you can place your hand on your heart or your face , you can give yourself a hug. 

- Movement is what wakes up the brain, activating it , making it feel more alive & helps it create new pathways, so you can practice movement to see the difference between being relaxed & being tensed. Exercise: is just to clinch your hand into a tight fist .. then release it , & then notice the difference in how your body feels. So you can notice the difference in your body when you're stressed & how your body feels, we're holding the tension in our belly, in our heart, in our throat & in our Jaw. Exercise: is to move your body into the opposite posture .

- Visualization: maybe of an imaginary friend who creates that sense of safety & trust, either someone you know, or a made up by your imagination. & imagining meeting this person, how you salute him, & then bringing what is bothering you to him & how he's listening carefully & with compassion.

Second : Emotional Intelligence

- Negativity bias: We pay attention to –ve experiences more than we pay attention to the +ve ones to survive & to protect you from physical & emotional danger, as we protect ourselves first then we process later, so you're more likely to pay attention to negative experiences & negative emotions, irritations, loneliness, fear, panic..etc. than the positive ones (satisfaction, awe,  ..).
- Our brain is a social brain & you'll never not have this negativity bias, so this is why you'll pay more attention to the one –ve comment by your boss in the meeting or your lover at the dinner table than the 19 +ve comments said to you throughout the day.

- Pay attention: We can get so caught in anger or shame or fear or loneliness, but all these emotions have a purpose to wake us up, as fear will motivate us to move away from toxic relationships, anger can motivate us to move against injustice, So when it comes to emotional intelligence; so the key to manage our disturbance is to be aware of them, accept them & bring compassion to ourselves by experiencing them.

- Mindful self-compassion protocol: to create a pause of awareness of what's happening , accepting this is what's happening, then bring kindness & compassion to ourselves for having this experience "we're having this experience & we're ok, we're human & there's nothing wrong or bad about us for what's happening here". So we use this tool to shift the functioning of our brain into more spaciousness.. more openness, the greater picture. The greatest outcome is not to feel better but to do better In our being = Resilience.

- Self-compassion break: telling yourself phrases like: " May I accept myself as it is in this moment, may I accept what's happening at this moment, May I be kind to myself at this moment.. at any moment"  
Third : Relational awareness within

- We have this inner voices: "you're not lovable, not accepted", so we're all vulnerable to believing the messages of these inner voices, one of the tools that can be used here to encourage our own self-acceptance :
You practice this positive thought over & over to create this positive experience first till it becomes natural to you: "Even though ..... , I deeply & completely love & accept myself" . you can practice it in all different types of situations by telling this to yourself.

Fourth : Relational intelligence with others

 - Theory of mind: simply means being aware that I'm I & you're you.  we're 2 different people & we're having different experiences so it is not necessarily to experience same thought of emotion, & that's ok, so we apply theory of mind to all skills of relational intelligence: negotiating change with others, setting limits & boundaries, forgiveness, & the triangle we play with others & we can get caught in by playing these 3 roles: Victim , rescuer & a persecutor.

- Circle of support: you take a moment to identify 1 or 3 people whom when you think of them you have this sense of safety, trust, connection & support.  Then  you can imagine them around you in a circle, then you can imagine walking with them into whatever situation that you have to deal with.
 
 - Positivity Portfolio: by gathering a positive appreciative comments people said about you & make a list & put it in anywhere you see it a lot & read it 3 times a day for 30 days as this will help you take in these information to re-wire your sense of self & what your strength & quality are.

-  Just like me: it helps us to get thru the barriers between ourselves & other people. Seeing people faces & saying: "Just like me: this person wants to be happy, Just like me this person wants to be free of pain & stress, just like me: this person has felt sadness-loss & pain, just like me: this person desires to love & be loved" , this can help cross the distances between you & the other person & tap into the common humanity, that all of us need to be able to cope with loss & trauma.

Fifth : Reflective intelligence

- In awareness of more complex patterns, maybe patterns of thoughts like:

- Assumptions: we make assumptions based on past experiences &  we expect the future to be the same way as well.

- Projections: we assume that what's true for us is true for the other person as well

- Objectification: we see other people not as a subject I & YOU, but as an IT & other people can see us as an IT instead of a person.

- Mind reading: thinking we know what the other people is thinking without checking with them., or assuming the other person knows what we're thinking without bothering to tell them.

- Discounting the positive: not registering positive attitudes in ourselves or others, de-valuing, dismissing the positive in ourselves or others.

- Over generalizing: saying words like "Always, Never, ..", assessing our experiences as global & permanent,

- Taking things personally: we attributing whatever is happening to me

- Catastrophizing: we think a sneeze means a cold, means losing a job, means financial disaster.  & we can do this in less than 3 seconds.

- Black & white thinking: we receive things as ALL or NOTHING, there's no grey. It's rigid thinking & does not allow any other possibilities.

- Inability to disconfirm: inability to learn, assuming that new experiences cannot replace the old information or old assumptions.

- So Mindfulness helps us see those patterns clearly & how they operate us, & how we can shift them.
- & we can choose to substitute a +ve thought instead of a –ve one, & we can choose to see the positive in the negative. .. which is an essential step in healing Trauma .

- "I could finish my practice, I get to do this or that".. this shift in our talk makes the shift in our thoughts.. Opening the space to more options & possibilities, but should means feeling criticized when failing to do the task.


The 5 facts that can contribute to post-traumatic growth:
1- Acceptance of reality

2- Resourcing with people

That's why support group is very helpful as you don’t have to explain or justify or defend anything
3- Recognizing the positive

4- Find in the silver lining

5- Coherent Narrative


- trauma therapy these days cares about stabilizing the body & the brain before doing anything, before talking about the experience, or the reaction to the story, we work fist with the body with the breath, so trauma therapy is not about reliving trauma .. is not talking about it until you experience it again..it is coming to a different place in your own body until you can have a different perspective on your emotions, thoughts, ..etc. this can take several month or even a year until the person can open up & unpack whatever stories related to the trauma.

Ring the bells that still can ring

Forget your perfect offering
There's a crack in everything
That's how the lights gets is
~ Leonard Cohen, Anthem ~

#Linda_Graham (Author of bouncing back)
#Healing_from_Loss
#Resilience
#Healing_Trauma_Summit


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