Tag: trauma
Multiple Lives Of Narcissist
I learned this the hard way
Traumatic experiences that took years to heal
Masked Man
Narcissist Victimhood
Narcissist detest peace
Definitely true ! Always stirring the s***. Thriving on trauma and drama , projection and continuous abuse
Abandonment
“if abandonment is the core wound
the disconnection from mother
the loss of wholeness
then the most potent medicine
is this ancient commitment
to never abandon
yourself
to discover wholeness in the whole-mess
to be a loving mother
to your insides
to hold the broken bits
in warm open awareness
â¨
and to illuminate the sore places
with the light
of love.”
đ jeff foster
đ¨ Yuumei Art

What therapy should be ; Dan Edmonds Ed.D
When a distressed person enters the realm of modern psychiatric practice they are first confronted with what Laing terms as the âpsychiatric ceremonialâ. In this process, the experience of the person is not considered. Rather, the psychiatrist sits in a place of judgment, he being considered sane and stable, and determines by his subjective observation of behavior how the person is a deviant from what should be expected of him or her and then categorizes it and assigns it a label. There is no concern for the personâs experience, rather the person is seen as an âitâ, as an object whose behavior is to be analyzed. Science is only able to examine what is, not what will be. It is based on duplication of results, but can we duplicate experience. When we merely look at behavior without understanding the context of it, we draw false conclusions. Understanding the context may lead us to see that the behavior is not truly meaningless after all. Frankl states, âAn incurably psychotic individual may lose his usefulness but yet retain the dignity of a human beingâŚa doctor, who would still interpret his role mainly as that of a technician would confess that he sees in his patient nothing more than a machineâŚbut man is ultimately self-determining.â
Laing states, âbehavior therapy is the most extreme example of such schizoid theory and practice and proposes to think and act purely in terms of the other without reference to the self of the therapist or the patient, in terms of behavior without experience, in terms of objects rather than persons. It is inevitably therefore a technique of nonmeeting, of manipulation, and social control.â Experience is the soul of psychotherapy and we should note that the term psychotherapy literally means the âhealing of the soulâ. The therapeutic process should be a meeting of two human beings, it should be the sharing and understanding of experience. Laing states that âI see you and you see me. I experience you, and you experience me. I see your behavior and you see my behavior. But I do not and never will see your experience of me.â It is popular today to look at individualsâ behaviors merely as the result of chemical processes or the effects of so called chemical imbalances. But then we must ask the question as Laing did- do chemicals come together because they love each other? Do atoms explode because they hate one another?
So often we seek to ignore experience. Laing notes the invalidation of experience by such comments as âthat never happenedâ, or the trivialization of
experience, or to invalidate its content by such words as âit wasnât really that wayâ or âhow can you think such a thing?â We must realize that we exist in an existential vacuum, and it is these things that lead to the development of aggression, addiction, depression. Our behaviors are how we communicate distress; they are for some the only form of communication they know. Their behaviors communicate to us a glimpse of their experience. âIf our experience is destroyed, our behavior will be destructive. If our experience is destroyed, we will have lost our selves (pg.28).â The therapeutic process is a shamanic voyage, a journeying with another person. But can two human beings truly come together? Are there too many barriers? Can we put aside our affiliations, our ethnicities, our religions, and all the other things that set us apart? Can we come together completely bare and share in the human condition? Nietzsche stated, âNihilism represents the ultimate logical conclusion of our great values and ideas- because we must experience nihilism before we can find out what value these âvaluesâ really had.â So, we must come together in nothingness and from this to ex nihilo, from nothing, become. We must as Frankl (pg. 112) stated be able to transform tragedy into triumph.
But without often realizing it, therapists and others become agents of oppression. Is our work solely leading people to become proper conformists, to do what others are doing? Is our work solely to make people adapt to totalitarianism, to do what they are told to do? It has always been these two processes that have led to the most dangerous of
outcomes. When freedom and autonomy are taken, and individuals can no longer be individuals, when critical thinking has ceased, we have entered a dreadful place. Maybe we are already there. Freedom is to have choice and have regard for others. License is to do which one wishes without regards to the other. Often today we see the violence evoked on people in the name of a common good or a common cause, or as Durkheim would say the collective consciousness. We can even justify our brutality as progress if what we are doing somehow subdues a person, makes them more amenable to society, or brings us satisfaction. If we can turn a person into a âthemâ by ascribing a label, then âweâ can feel justified to treat them as we wish. This violence which calls itself love can be found within the very structure of the family. Within the structure of the family are certain rules that are established that the members are to adhere to. These rules may not always be sensible, but nonetheless become a part of how the family operates. They are generally known whether or not they always are followed. It is dependent on who is in control and what the consequences are for violation whether the family members adhere to the established rules of conducting themselves.
-Dan L. Edmunds, Ed.D.
MEETING OF TWO PERSONS: WHAT THERAPY SHOULD BE
Child Psychological Abuse /PA
The heartbreaking and frustrating thing for alienated parents is that we can’t force our child/children to see things from our point of view or, at the very least, to see things in a more balanced way. We crave justice. It is hard to resist trying to tell them right from wrong, to teach them that this (parental alienation) isn’t the way a loving parent behaves, that we love them, we want them in our lives, we’re not who they’ve been led to believe we are … If we push all this on them, we risk pushing them away. They don’t (want to) see their alienation or that they’ve been in any way complicit. They were acting in the only way they knew how to survive the nightmare situation their alienating parent put them in. It is a test of patience and love, waiting for them to wake up from this nightmare and see the light.

Homelessness & Trauma
The case discussed had alcohol addiction and ” behavioral ” health treatment included a lot of prescribed drugs . These are supposed to be short term use only.
A survivor of childhood sex abuse , her lover became abusive and this sadly points to changes being required.
Homelessness alters everything and in my opinion she should not have been evicted while in treatment .
I don’t feel the obstacles to heal addictions are necessary in the name of service and help , including a list of RX which ongoing in treatment bring a whole new problem when seeking balance in life … seems never ending
www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/i-have-no-one-understanding-homelessness-and-trauma
