I can't believe it's been more than a year since my last post. A lot has happened...
The ablation worked. Terrifying procedure though. My cardiologist is good...but has NO patient skills. He did not think that a life time of trauma would make a difference in his treatment plan... My therapist and I worked hard to prepare for it. I could not be asleep for it because the medication stopped the PVC's. There was no warning when he zapped the part of my heart that was misfiring...Just intense pain in my chest. It was a very traumatizing experience. But...I am grateful that it worked!!
Not long after the ablation, another memory of watching my father kill someone (Amy) started coming out. My therapist and I began tackling it with EMDR and energy work. Lots of tapping. After several months, I finally got a large chunk of it remembered. I was going to share it in my next session, when my therapist canceled due to illness. A week or two later he called and told me he had cancer. He died 2 months later.
I worked with him for 7 years. It took the first 5 years to figure out what worked...and how to do it. We were moving mountains towards the end. It has been one of the biggest losses in my life. After some research, I found a therapist who does a lot of energy work, is good with kids, and is generally awesome. I am blessed! I haven't unpacked the "Amy" memory yet. It has taken much longer than I thought to be willing to commit to starting over with a new therapist.
I've been amazed at the new therapist's approach. She is focusing on my body pain & illnesses, and it is resolving the trauma. (Nice!!) I'm learning that there is more than one way to attack memories...since the body holds the trauma.
This blog will explore and explain my view of life. I am almost 55 years old and have been in therapy for 14 years. As a result extreme abuse spanning 23 years, I now live with Dissociative Identity Disorder, (or Multiple Personality Disorder as it used to be called.) I hope that what I share can help someone else on their healing journey. We are fractured light, trying to live above the darkness.
Showing posts with label Therapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Therapy. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
Sunday, March 1, 2015
I have been busy staying alive. It seems that is all I can do most of the time. I'm waiting for a Catheter Ablation now. It is a procedure that will zap the area of my heart that is misfiring and causing arrhythmias.
It amazes me how the body and mind work together. The damage to my heart was done when I was eight years old. My father thought he would do his own version of electro shock treatment to make me forget what he was doing to me... what he accomplished was heart damage that was held in a dissociative part named Jessica. The symptoms did not start until I remembered the incident about 10 years ago. Wierd, huh! If you asked a physician if this is possible, I'm pretty sure they would say "No way"!!! How little they know!!
I tried to "warn" (or to actually reassure myself) when I saw the cardiologist, but he was unconcerned that I had a history of trauma. Dr's relate to the term PTSD...but not to DID or childhood abuse. I am learning to use their language. But it still did not matter to him...I know it does not change the diagnosis or the treatment, but that was not the reason I wanted him to know.
Most people who have medical procedures that require conscious sedation don't remember the procedure afterward. That is the point of conscious sedation. Because I am multiple, conscious sedation only makes me unable to respond. I remember every detail of the procedure. So...to prepare for the Ablation, my therapist and I have been working diligently to reduce the fear all my internal kids have.
We felt that death is inevitable... set in place by the actions and wishes of my dad. Pretty much a Pygmalion effect. I'm VERY grateful that the fear of the procedure and the belief that we are fated to die are mostly all gone!!! Yea! Now it is just living long enough to get well!
Learning about the ACE study and how to counter the effects of the abuse has helped me enormously. So over all I'm a happy camper!!
It amazes me how the body and mind work together. The damage to my heart was done when I was eight years old. My father thought he would do his own version of electro shock treatment to make me forget what he was doing to me... what he accomplished was heart damage that was held in a dissociative part named Jessica. The symptoms did not start until I remembered the incident about 10 years ago. Wierd, huh! If you asked a physician if this is possible, I'm pretty sure they would say "No way"!!! How little they know!!
I tried to "warn" (or to actually reassure myself) when I saw the cardiologist, but he was unconcerned that I had a history of trauma. Dr's relate to the term PTSD...but not to DID or childhood abuse. I am learning to use their language. But it still did not matter to him...I know it does not change the diagnosis or the treatment, but that was not the reason I wanted him to know.
Most people who have medical procedures that require conscious sedation don't remember the procedure afterward. That is the point of conscious sedation. Because I am multiple, conscious sedation only makes me unable to respond. I remember every detail of the procedure. So...to prepare for the Ablation, my therapist and I have been working diligently to reduce the fear all my internal kids have.
We felt that death is inevitable... set in place by the actions and wishes of my dad. Pretty much a Pygmalion effect. I'm VERY grateful that the fear of the procedure and the belief that we are fated to die are mostly all gone!!! Yea! Now it is just living long enough to get well!
Learning about the ACE study and how to counter the effects of the abuse has helped me enormously. So over all I'm a happy camper!!
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
enditnow
enditnow and Loma Linda University did a film (30 Min long) on the ACE study. I referred to the ACE study in an earlier post but now have the video to post. There are 3 versions of the video. I have only watched the Seventh-day-Adventist version. I know they are very similar, just a little different. You can take your pick.
I am interviewed in the video. It is kind of a long story how I got involved...weird thing is, I did not realize at the time exactly what the video was about, other than childhood sexual abuse. I'm sure they told me and the reason I didn't know was a result of the DID...lol... but I would have shared so much more about physical problems resulting from childhood abuse...but maybe that will come in time too...
I can't tell you how important dealing with past trauma is to your present and future!!!!! Feel free to share this video with everyone...you never know who might need this information.
I am interviewed in the video. It is kind of a long story how I got involved...weird thing is, I did not realize at the time exactly what the video was about, other than childhood sexual abuse. I'm sure they told me and the reason I didn't know was a result of the DID...lol... but I would have shared so much more about physical problems resulting from childhood abuse...but maybe that will come in time too...
I can't tell you how important dealing with past trauma is to your present and future!!!!! Feel free to share this video with everyone...you never know who might need this information.
Mainstream Version
Adventist Version
Religious Version
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Her Eyes
So, the desire to never leave the house again is
still here. I fight it to go out. My brain is still a tangled mass of fiber
optic threads. The paths they once neatly followed are barely visible
underneath the heap of glowing yellow strands. At least the fire works have
slowed down. There is not as much exploding now.
I still have no proverbial shoes
on. My feet are ice cold. For the past several weeks it has felt like this
process of remembering is eroding and devouring my life energy. Having
verbalized that in therapy last week, the last half of this horrendous memory
came out very quickly. Instead of weeks or months to ease it out, the rest of
it came in one session.
The whole point of drawing it out
was to survive it. Our amazing therapist has been painstakingly distancing us
from the images so that we are not overwhelmed. We have lost parts for months
at a time who just disappeared due to being re-traumatized during the
remembering. Our therapist says we are getting stronger and are doing better.
It is hard for me to see how I am objectively. It does not feel like winning
this war is worth knowing what I now know.
How much I really know is very
relative. I have “known” the main points of this memory for quite a while… or
rather, someone has. There are different levels of knowing also. Memories that
have been packed away from ones consciousness are often broken down into
elements:
1)
Images
2)
Emotions
3)
Somatic sensations (Body memories)
4)
Cognitive knowing
These elements can be remembered separately. I have had
flashes of cognitive knowing and images. The emotions have mostly come out in
session. The terror has always been with me. I just did not know what it was or
where it came from. It masqueraded as many things through out my life. It
learned to skip in and out of my experiences, keeping its disguises so I
wouldn’t remember too soon. My ability to hold back the feelings has been
eroding. Keeping everything manageable is a delicate balance.
I can
hardly handle knowing what happened. I feel like a dancer in an endless
pirouette. My skin hurts. My ears hurt. My eyes hurt. Maybe like sensory
overload. I don’t know what is worse…taking a long time to remember…or
remembering quickly. I suppose there is no easy way through this minefield!
It is her
eyes that I see…every waking minute of the day. Eyes from a dirty face streaked
with tears. She is gagged, and at this point, all her tears are spent. I did
not know one could cry until there were no more tears. I know it now. Her eyes
held mine steadily. Our eyes were locked in a wordless conversation. They
flickered hope, shouted pleadings, faded into despair, and then started over
again. I can see the hope finally fading in her eyes. I cannot bear watching
the image of her dying. Her eyes were focused on mine until they turned in
resignation to look at my father. She was so very brave. If she’d had a chance
she would have won, fighting back. My inner children refer to her as “the poor
little girl who never got to go back home.”
I don’t
know if their bodies were ever found in that deep grave behind the First
Baptist church in Bladenboro. Maybe their families are settled and at peace.
They may not still be alive…but if it matters in the eternal scheme of things,
I have no doubt that someone will find them
.
Monday, October 1, 2012
Why kids don't tell
People often ask why I didn't tell someone what was happening to me as a child. I have thought a lot about this and have finally come up with an answer that fits for me. A therapist will give reasons why children remain silent. I have heard them all, and agree with them...but I need more. I want to see more fully from a child's eyes and understand from a child's heart. That shouldn't be hard with so many internal children, except that kids don't have words for such things, so I have to take what they feel and verbalize it.
1) I did tell. Not a lot of people, but enough that someone could have responded. When no one responds, a child stops trying. It is more important to hold onto hope than to risk telling and not be taken seriously. More on hope later...
2) There are usually enough normal/good things in a child's life to make reality too confusing. It is crazy-making to hold onto two realities at the same time. A child will want to sort it out...but that isn't possible.
3) My fathers retribution was not worth the risk of telling.
4) The perp's threats are terrifying.
5) Perp's always blame the child.
6) It felt like to me that my father was omnipresent. It felt like he knew everything I did, thought or felt. In order to preserve hope and not die, I "needed" to take the blame for the abuse. If I would bathe more often, comb my hair, make better grades, be more quiet, then maybe daddy would love me and stop hurting me.
I have always thought that the opposite of death is life...but there are many ways to die as well as many ways not to be alive. I rather think now that Hope is the opposite of death.
There is a huge difference between cognitive and emotional understanding. As an adult, I can know something but not be able to emotionally accept it as fact. I can handle waiting until the emotional catches up to the cognitive. As a child there was no way I could do either. Cognitively I KNOW the abuse WAS NOT MY FAULT and that I had NO CONTROL over my fathers actions. These things I know for sure now. But as a child I could not know that without dying. To have acknowledge that I had no control over my life would have stripped away all hope. With no hope that life would improve, I would have died.
Maybe I am slow...and everyone else has already figured out the connection between life and hope and keeping silent. Part of my process now is to emotionally acknowledge and accept the fact that I had no control over my life...and to do it now without dying or losing my mind.
1) I did tell. Not a lot of people, but enough that someone could have responded. When no one responds, a child stops trying. It is more important to hold onto hope than to risk telling and not be taken seriously. More on hope later...
2) There are usually enough normal/good things in a child's life to make reality too confusing. It is crazy-making to hold onto two realities at the same time. A child will want to sort it out...but that isn't possible.
3) My fathers retribution was not worth the risk of telling.
4) The perp's threats are terrifying.
5) Perp's always blame the child.
6) It felt like to me that my father was omnipresent. It felt like he knew everything I did, thought or felt. In order to preserve hope and not die, I "needed" to take the blame for the abuse. If I would bathe more often, comb my hair, make better grades, be more quiet, then maybe daddy would love me and stop hurting me.
I have always thought that the opposite of death is life...but there are many ways to die as well as many ways not to be alive. I rather think now that Hope is the opposite of death.
There is a huge difference between cognitive and emotional understanding. As an adult, I can know something but not be able to emotionally accept it as fact. I can handle waiting until the emotional catches up to the cognitive. As a child there was no way I could do either. Cognitively I KNOW the abuse WAS NOT MY FAULT and that I had NO CONTROL over my fathers actions. These things I know for sure now. But as a child I could not know that without dying. To have acknowledge that I had no control over my life would have stripped away all hope. With no hope that life would improve, I would have died.
Maybe I am slow...and everyone else has already figured out the connection between life and hope and keeping silent. Part of my process now is to emotionally acknowledge and accept the fact that I had no control over my life...and to do it now without dying or losing my mind.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
No Shoes
I decided to start a blog because the need to tell someone what happened to me is huge. Having survived the following incident by splitting and becoming "unaware" I find my brain returning back to the chaos of what this incident did to me. I have younger alters, but until this happened at three, I don't think the DID was cemented into place as my automatic coping skill. Today I struggle to allow my head to process what it couldn't when I was three. I honestly don't know if I will survive this process with my sanity, but I know I still have to do it. I have to learn how to incorporate the knowledge of all the stuff that happened to me into my identity. Cognitive knowledge must meet and join emotional experience. Who am I? What does knowing all this make me?
This week I am still contemplating the image of being knocked out of my shoes. I'm not sure it really happens, but I've heard that when someone is hit by a train or other fast moving vehicle, they are literally knocked out of their shoes. I can relate to this emotionally. Somewhere in the woods behind the First Baptist Church in Bladenboro NC there must be a small pair of tennis shoes. Proverbial or not, I still see them.

This week I am still contemplating the image of being knocked out of my shoes. I'm not sure it really happens, but I've heard that when someone is hit by a train or other fast moving vehicle, they are literally knocked out of their shoes. I can relate to this emotionally. Somewhere in the woods behind the First Baptist Church in Bladenboro NC there must be a small pair of tennis shoes. Proverbial or not, I still see them.

I am only three and as I sit on
the ground with my feet dangling in a hole, my mind is exploding, reconfiguring
and exploding again. The change may not
have been instant, but it is life changing. All color seems to drain out of the
sky. The sun no longer shines the same joyful way it used to. Everything I see
becomes the color of sepia. Not black and white or gray, but the reddish brown
color of faded dried blood.
My father dug this hole to bury a
dead lady and a still living child. I am a candidate for that yawning gaping
hole in the ground too. My grasp of life is churning in my head like a pot of
stew. My relationship to, and my perspective of the world are forever altered.
I step back into the shadows of my mind and begin to watch it float by. There
are no more questions at this point. I don’t quiz him about why the lady was
hanging in a tree and I don’t wonder anymore what dead means.
I understand that I killed this lady. Not because I wanted
to, but because he made me.
I know she was sleeping when he cut her down from the tree. It doesn’t
matter that I couldn’t wake her up. When he dropped me into that hole on top of
her she made a noise. It was so hard to keep my balance. I didn’t mean to fall
on her. It was different then when I play with daddy or momma on the floor and
sit on their tummies. I don’t fall off so easy. The lady felt squishy and
reminded me of stepping on little rocks that roll under my feet and make me
fall.
I didn’t mean to hurt her, but she cried out. It
sounded like when I surprise daddy and jump on his tummy. So I know she was
just sleeping and I just surprised her. She didn’t get up though. I woulda
gotten up quick if it had been me! Daddy laughed at her noise. Daddy made me
open her mouth and put dirt inside. I cried because I wasn’t brave. I did not
want to kill that lady. I know that when you get dirt in your mouth and nose
and eyes that you can’t breath good and it hurts. I begged daddy not to make me
do it, and to wake her up. But now it is done, and I don’t ask anymore. Daddy
put dirt in the hole on top of the lady and me. I’m so worried that Momma will
be mad at me when I get home cuz I’m so dirty now.
Daddy told me the lady was bad cuz
she told someone something she wasn’t s’posed to tell. Daddy says that secrets
are important to keep and that I better not ever tell anybody stuff about me
and daddy. He says that the little girl is naughty, cuz she told stuff she
wasn’t s’posed to tell, too...........
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