Looking back

I find myself hyper focused on things in the past. I look back all the time and I don't understand why. The past has little good. I look back at the bad times, I see my parents, our house burning and then the mental health hospital that's been my home for some time.

I'm told not to look back but it's where my head focuses. Maybe I try to make sense of what happened, how life has ended up this way?

I think it's a natural function to look back and try to fit the pieces of the puzzle and make sense of what occurred and more importantly, if I had done things differently would things be different.

I feel extremely sad and helpless looking back and I'm trying to train my mind to focus on better things but right now I'm stuck in this endless spiral.

Sigh.

One day at a time. Things will get better.

Who else looks back and struggles to move on from the past?

Parents
  • I'm told not to look back but it's where my head focuses. Maybe I try to make sense of what happened, how life has ended up this way?

    My understanding is that you cannot move past these things because you don't understand them fully and have not processed the trauma associated with them.

    That was how my therapist described it for me.

    The therapy process of "unpacking" past events is essential to this - teasing out the details of how you felt, what it meant to you and what the significance is to you are all important to dragging those monsters out from under the bed to hold them up to the light and realise they are 6 stone weaklings with fake fangs, bald patches and moth eaten clothes 2 sizes too big for them.

    Once you realise true nature of the event in terms of your experience you can start dealing with it. Here it gets a bit painful sometimes but thats why the therapist is there to guide you through it and help you do so safely without falling to harmful coping mechanisms.

    Once that monster has been seen in detail, proven to be not what we feared it to be and know we have the power to deal with it then it starts to lose its power to terrify us anymore. We can look back at the event and instead or reliving it again and again we can say "I know you. You hold no power over me now. I'm going now and there is nothing you can do about it".

    That is more or less how I would describe my experiences - everyone will be unique of course but the process is tried and tested and if it isn't working then then chances are you will discover why in the unpacking process and can switch tactics to a different way to deal with the underlying issue with the help of the therapist.

    At the end of the day you cannot change the past. You can only learn from it and being at peace helps that constant "if only..." thought pattern. You may as well bang your head on the door of a closed down shop to get it to open for all the good it will do - you are the only one who is going to suffer.

    Just my experience I thought may help.

  • Your comments Iain are always insightful and interesting, and this one particularly speaks to me this evening. I am starting structured psychology the week after next, I had the introductory stuff of ground rules, confidentiality and info gathering etc earlier this week, and I’m hopeful. But it’s hugely involved of course, I’ve been the victim of multiple trauma from many different people over most of my life, so clearly c-ptsd, and the nightmares plus flashbacks are dreadful, not every day/night but unpredictably present most weeks.

    Well I say I’m optimistic, but tbh I’m not, the nightmares can’t respond to techniques such as EMDR due to every one being different in imagery and plot, plus and I already know lots about DBT which as far as I can appreciate only works on my conscious mind, it helps in a crisis but doesn’t penetrate the core issues. It’s like my subconscious is an erant alien in my mind which no technique can control. Nevertheless I’m committed to the help being offered and will fully engage. I note your comments about unpacking and hope this will be part of the programme but it’s not clear yet. 

    Thanks

    Emma

Reply
  • Your comments Iain are always insightful and interesting, and this one particularly speaks to me this evening. I am starting structured psychology the week after next, I had the introductory stuff of ground rules, confidentiality and info gathering etc earlier this week, and I’m hopeful. But it’s hugely involved of course, I’ve been the victim of multiple trauma from many different people over most of my life, so clearly c-ptsd, and the nightmares plus flashbacks are dreadful, not every day/night but unpredictably present most weeks.

    Well I say I’m optimistic, but tbh I’m not, the nightmares can’t respond to techniques such as EMDR due to every one being different in imagery and plot, plus and I already know lots about DBT which as far as I can appreciate only works on my conscious mind, it helps in a crisis but doesn’t penetrate the core issues. It’s like my subconscious is an erant alien in my mind which no technique can control. Nevertheless I’m committed to the help being offered and will fully engage. I note your comments about unpacking and hope this will be part of the programme but it’s not clear yet. 

    Thanks

    Emma

Children
  • Thank you, this is really interesting and I didn’t know it or at least not expressed this way. I’ve screenshot your reply to add to my collection of insights which I’m hoping will inform the therapy.

    Unfortunately it’s looking like another sleep avoidance one tonight, hugely stressed and alone, Haze is at her place tonight, too many triggers today, really struggling 

  • It’s like my subconscious is an erant alien in my mind which no technique can contro

    It actually is an alien - a lizard to be precide.


    The reptilian brain is the oldest core or the brain that has its origins back in prehistory and which is involved with primitive drives related to thirst, hunger, sexuality, and territoriality, as well as habits and procedural memory (like putting your keys in the same place every day without thinking about it or riding a bike).

    Trauma tends to illicit a response mechanism at this level of the brain which is effective at over-riding the higher level functions and which is why we find trauma so hard to deal with.

    It has roots in a part of us that is quite alien to our concious mind and which we have limited access to modify.

    The whole subject is fascinating and I'm really considering taking on a degree in psychology with a focus on neurodivergence. Next year is looking promising to start.

    Going through the process of being therapised (is that even a word LoL) was fascinating as I could feel the coldness of that subconcious control of my actions while unpacking - it sometimes felt like another entity which makes sense and I did find there could be a degree of power exerted over it, but that control felt limited.

    I love how complex we can be but enjoy finding how we can control outselves in spite of these complexities. It is sometimes like playing 3 dimensional chess while solving a crossword puzzle and going through a series of tunnels while someone steals random chess pieces in the dark.