29-08-2025 01:39 PM
29-08-2025 01:39 PM
The recent medication changes has calmed my brain down. I’m still feeling caged up, I know my psych is looking at more frequent therapy sessions if we can get more under ED plan. Once a month sessions aren’t enough. It just feels like the traumatic memories aren’t ending, I’ve been in therapy for years. It’s taking so long to heal. I just want to get to the point the body flashbacks aren’t so regular
29-08-2025 04:08 PM
29-08-2025 04:08 PM
29-08-2025 05:15 PM
29-08-2025 05:15 PM
29-08-2025 06:15 PM
29-08-2025 06:15 PM
29-08-2025 06:23 PM
29-08-2025 06:23 PM
Hey @creative_writer ,
Sorry you feel this way. Feel free to connect to the community and let the community know what support looks like for you.
29-08-2025 06:43 PM
29-08-2025 06:43 PM
29-08-2025 06:56 PM
29-08-2025 06:56 PM
Hey @creative_writer
It's a bit like that sometimes. You feel unheard when someone doesn't talk to you, but then you don't reach out directly to others so it ends up a bit of a cycle of percieved rejection turning into real 'rejection'? Something like that?
I think with my trauma, I had to first accept that it was trauma and because of what I experienced, it has affected my life. This took a long time to accept. All my life, I just considered myself as the weird, different person.
Once I accepted it, I could then understand that trauma happens within our context so healing must be around people too.
I then engaged in group therapy which was really hard.. but I finished the program and have made huge gains since.
It's about facing the trauma... not escaping it.
29-08-2025 07:23 PM
29-08-2025 07:23 PM
30-08-2025 04:30 PM
30-08-2025 04:30 PM
31-08-2025 11:01 AM - edited 31-08-2025 11:04 AM
31-08-2025 11:01 AM - edited 31-08-2025 11:04 AM
Hi Creative,
What you are experiencing is one of the negative outcomes of our brains being simple processors.
Our brains are hardwired to fixate on traumas, pains, stress, etc. and to filter out the "irrelevant" aka times we were safe or things that make us feel safe. That is because our brain's priority is far different than our emotional priority. Our brain's priority is your survival, it does this by remembering unsafe situations in order to process them faster and get us out of the situation sooner by reflecting on how this was achieved in similar situations in the past. Our brain takes a lot of energy to run, so it is constantly looking for ways to make shortcuts. This is why traumas are more often repeated in our minds versus the good times. Good times don't threaten our survival and are, thus, deemed less important for the brain to remember.
There are ways to harness this innate focus of our brains, though. I highly suggest looking up the Pocket Psychologist on Facebook. She is so wonderful at breaking down how the brain works and then providing you with strategies to reign the brain back in. It does take practice to engage the prefrontal cortex, our thinking brain, over the basic brain (which is simple and looking for shortcuts), so if you feel you are struggling and your brain hurts at first that is totally normal - that is the feeling of growing new neural pathways, and it gets easier as you continue to reach for those new neurons and build strong connections to them for easier and quicker retrieval later.
If you need urgent assistance, see Need help now
For mental health information, support, and referrals, contact SANE Support Services
SANE Forums is published by SANE with funding from the Australian Government Department of Health
SANE - ABN 92 006 533 606
PO Box 1226, Carlton VIC 3053