I want to take this time to share some quotes from some of the Masters in this field of Trauma. All of these quotes have to do with the title of this Journal Entry; the many myths and misconceptions that lead to misapplications of treating trauma. Therapists who work with trauma (well… a growing number of us!), now understand that traditional talk therapy doesn’t heal us; learning that while talk is important, we want to heal. We cannot treat the events- they are over. It’s how those events continue to affect us today that we need to focus on- how such events do not feel like they are over. We re-experience these unresolved traumas in a variety of ways in our bodies, in our thoughts, in our emotions, our actions and in our relationships.
Additionally, the idea of catharsis for healing is a misconception and can even be quite harmful and dysregulating for trauma survivors- even retraumatizing. Also, many survivors of childhood trauma tend to enter states of collapse, feel numb, disconnected, emotionally detached and/or physically detached. Thus, for many, even getting to the state required for something like catharsis, is not even possible.
Janina Fisher, PhD, co-creator of Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, once said in a training I attended of hers, that in each session we can choose “catharsis or transformation,” which most of my clients have heard me say. It’s often difficult, as whether we are therapists, clients, or both, we are used to traditional modalities of treatment; we want to vent, analyze, and have emotional catharsis. However, that’s not what heals, transforms, or treats the ongoing legacy of unresolved trauma that lives in survivors right now.
*Note: All information in this Journal, and included in the following quotes, are not just opinions, they have been well-researched.