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From Hell to Healing: A Survivor's Journey

It was a sweltering day in the summer of 1987 in Limestone County, Alabama. The air, thick with humidity, sapped what little strength remained from already heat-wearied bodies, the chittering of bush crickets rising as the sun sank.

Following 11 hours of clearing hillside with a sling blade at the Elk River State Park, I let my thoughts wander while resting my right arm on the window frame of my father’s pickup truck, grateful for the air rushing against me. He and my stepmother, Louise, were continuing a disagreement they’d begun some time earlier about the whereabouts of a frying skillet.

The combination of fatigue and stifling heat dulled my usual hypervigilance around my father, so my response to Louise’s seemingly innocent question, “Don’t you remember your Daddy using the skillet last?” was unusually honest and unfiltered.

Absentmindedly, I replied, “I think so.”

Suddenly, the lap-belt compressed against my waist as my body lurched violently forward, then quickly snapped back. My dad, trying to hit me while leaning over Louise, screamed, “You calling me a liar! I’ll f—ing kill you, boy!” Louise pleaded with him to calm down, and screamed at me to get out of the truck.

Fueled by adrenaline, I hopped over a roadside fence and ran at breakneck speed across a heavily vegetated field. I could hear my father screaming obscenities and threats as Louise begged him to stop. I heard Louise’s panicked cry, “Run! Run! Oh my sweet Jesus, he’s going to kill you! Run!” The next sound I heard was bullets flying past me.

Louise saved my life that day, of that, I have no doubt. She would lose her own life, violently, seven years later, shot twice.

This traumatic experience, and others too numerous to recall, left an indelible mark on me. Two and a half decades later, I took the Adverse Childhood Experiences1 (ACES) questionnaire and began to understand trauma’s enduring impact on my life.

The ACEs study was a self-report questionnaire administered to more than 17,000 members of Kaiser Permanente in San Diego. It asked participants if they had experienced abuse, neglect, and household dysfunction prior to their 18th birthday. Scores range from 0 (no ACEs) to 10 (each ACEs), and the results were used to determine if there was any correlation between adverse childhood experiences and adult physical and behavioral health difficulties.

My ACE score is 10.

How has that score played out in my life?

I was expelled from the fifth grade for repeated schoolyard fights. I was arrested for arson at 10 years old. I was arrested for assault at 14. I dropped out of high school at 17. I abused alcohol my first two years of college. I attempted suicide five times. I was diagnosed with major depression, bipolar disorder, borderline personality disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, and a few other diagnoses along the way. I was hospitalized, voluntarily and involuntarily. I was placed on numerous psychiatric medications. I also underwent electroconvulsive therapy.

None of these behaviors, diagnoses, or treatments would surprise experts in the field of childhood trauma. It was, in fact, one such skilled clinician who helped me continue my long, but rewarding, journey of recovery.

How has a trauma-informed approach paved a healing path for me?

My therapist, Paula, recognized the effects of my experiences as adaptations to extreme circumstances, not symptoms of a disease. She realized these were normal responses to abnormal situations; they once served an important role in keeping me alive, but now they were preventing me from living successfully. Moreover, she recognized the tell-tale signs of ACEs by “thinking trauma” and responded to my treatment and care needs based on this understanding. Finally, she actively sought to avoid circumstances that might lead to my retraumatization.

Paula practiced the Six Principles of a Trauma-Informed Approach2

  1. She worked with me to establish a sense of safety in the environment, between us, and inside of me.
  2. She practiced transparency—sharing what she was doing and why she was doing it—which built a trusting relationship.
  3. She encouraged my use of peer support, connecting with others who have had similar life experiences to decrease my sense of isolation.
  4. She identified the cultural context and intergenerational aspects of my trauma to increase her sensitivity and deepen my understanding.
  5. She explicitly recognized my expertise and leadership in the healing process. From day one, she made it clear that therapy would be a collaborative process, something we did together, not something she did to me.
  6. Finally, she maintained a focus on empowering me to make my own choices and to express my voice in every step of the healing process.

Adverse Childhood Experiences or later-life traumas can leave a lasting impact on our lives, but they don’t have to dictate our destinies. People need to understand that we are not broken people, damaged goods, or inherently flawed. Rather, we are affected by past events not of our own choosing. Through this mindset we can begin to write a new narrative, a narrative based on empathy, compassion, acceptance, and nurturing.

This is where healing begins.

1.     Relationship of Childhood Abuse and Household Dysfunction to Many of the Leading Causes of Death in Adults. Felitti, Vincent J et al. American Journal of Preventive Medicine , Volume 14 , Issue 4, 245 – 258

2.     SAMHSA Trauma and Justice Strategic Initiative. (2014 July). SAMHSA’s Concept of Trauma and Guidance for a Trauma-Informed Approach. Retrieved from http://store.samhsa.gov/produc..._20141008_SMA14-4884

Malcolm Aquinas is a self-identified trauma survivor and warrior. He works as a Peer Recovery Specialist at the Oregon State Hospital. Additionally, he is the Team Lead for the OSH Trauma Informed Care Project. Malcolm is a professional consultant for the National Center for Trauma Informed Care. He is also a member of the Trauma Informed Oregon Leadership Team. He provides trainings on trauma informed care, trauma informed approach, trauma informed systems transformation, and peer support and supervision. He has served as Board Chair for the Oregon Consumer Advisory Council, Board Chair for the Klamath County Commission on Children and Families, and a Board Member for Project ABLE, a peer-operated organization. He is a current Board Member for the Oregon Consumer Survivor Coalition. Malcolm received his Bachelor of Arts in Psychology at Athens State University and a Master of Arts in Teaching at Southern Oregon University.Head shot - Malcolm 010317

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Sebern Fisher posted:

Malcolm,

i so appreciate your willingness to share your story and your capacity for self compassion. I know all of it was hard won. I wish it weren't such an act of courage to share this history, but the stigma is still strong.  I too, like so many, am a trauma therapist with a significant trauma and neglect history of my own. I had many years of hospitalization as a young adult and many, many more years of excellent psychotherapy. I was so overtaken by fear I hardly recognized it. In 1996, on the recommendation of a friend I tried neurofeedback for the first time. I was completely skeptical. This seemed like high tech snake oil.

I had no understanding then that the brain organizes itself through its rhythmic oscillations, through its frequencies. What I came to understand is that we can change the frequencies at which the brain fires using computerized feedback. After a weekend of training-not generally recommended- I felt like I lived in a different brain, a different Central Nervous a System. My hyper startle response went away but it was more than alleviation of symptoms. My baseline ambient fear ebbed and never returned full force. I became more spontatious and relational. I could organize my thinking. This after only a few hours. I kept at it. I began, slowly but surely to develop a sense of self. 

Developmental trauma I learned is first and foremost a brain problem. I'd always thought of it as psychological, or characterlogical- a me problem. Trauma and neglect in childhood impair brain development, particularly areas of the brain related to emotional regulation. Developmentally traumatized people are overrun by fear, shame and rage. It's very difficult to quiet these right hemisphere limbic erruptions with therapy alone. It's hard to reason with the amygdala, or to sooth much less to teach it that it doesn't need to fire at every damn thing. This is where brainwave biofeedback plays such a vital role in treatment for developmental trauma. We can train our brains to quiet reactivity. 

Shortly after I'd had my own experience, I sought out training in neurofeedback. For the past twenty years I have integrated neurofeedback with trauma focused therapy, much like you describe. It's been a game changer for most of my severely abused patients. In response to the publisher's request I wrote a book about all of this with many case examples and case histories and Norton published it as Neurofeedback in the Treatment  of Developmental Trauma: Calming the Fear-driven Brain in 2014. 

I am not intending to promote the book but do want those treating and those suffering the aftermath of developmental trauma to know about neurofeedback. 

Hello Sebern,

 

Thank you for sharing your thoughts and experiences. There are so many wonderful tools, resources, and treatments available. I am a proponent of exploring what works for you, the individual. I've found that what works for one person may not work for another. Also, what doesn't work at one time may work later on.

 

The information I shared relates the consensus statement on what helps in helping trauma survivors regardless of intervention(s) used (i.e., a Trauma Informed Approach). Whether someone is using EMDR, biofeedback, a neurosequential model, Cognitive Processing Therapy, Stress Inoculation Training, Prolonged Exposure, DBT, ACT, etc., what matters most is the relationship between the therapist and client. 

 

I wish for you, for me, and for countless others continued healing. May we take the findings of the Adverse Childhood Experiences study seriously, roll-up our sleeves, and get to work in taking a Public Health Model approach. Tertiary interventions, while necessary, are insufficient. We need to move upstream to secondary and, ultimately, primary interventions. Prevention is the goal.

 

Compassionately,

Malcolm

Sebern: Thanks for sharing your story. If you'd like to do a separate post about your book and why you decided to write it, feel free. I'm sure there would be many people who'd be interested.

Cheers, Jane

 

 

"Developmental trauma I learned is first and foremost a brain problem. I'd always thought of it as psychological, or characterlogical- a me problem."

Dear Sebern:

YOU SO GET IT and I appreciate so much what you know and how you express what you know. I've never done nuerofeedback but I have benefited from your work. You help articulate developmental trauma's impact like few others. THANK YOU! And also, for sharing more of your own story. That too is rare. 

Cissy

Dear Malcolm:

I couldn't stop reading. About your experiences, as a kid and in the healing process as an adult. Thank you for sharing and writing and that summary of the trauma-informed healing approach is fantastic. 

Also, I read the book Sebern Fisher wrote. It was FABULOUS and the single best thing I've read on how fear feels. Even though I've not done neurofeedback (yet) the book was great because of how clearly and deeply she gets and articulates the way the afraid self feels. She's rare in that. I hope to read more of your writing.

Cissy

Malcolm,

i so appreciate your willingness to share your story and your capacity for self compassion. I know all of it was hard won. I wish it weren't such an act of courage to share this history, but the stigma is still strong.  I too, like so many, am a trauma therapist with a significant trauma and neglect history of my own. I had many years of hospitalization as a young adult and many, many more years of excellent psychotherapy. I was so overtaken by fear I hardly recognized it. In 1996, on the recommendation of a friend I tried neurofeedback for the first time. I was completely skeptical. This seemed like high tech snake oil.

I had no understanding then that the brain organizes itself through its rhythmic oscillations, through its frequencies. What I came to understand is that we can change the frequencies at which the brain fires using computerized feedback. After a weekend of training-not generally recommended- I felt like I lived in a different brain, a different Central Nervous a System. My hyper startle response went away but it was more than alleviation of symptoms. My baseline ambient fear ebbed and never returned full force. I became more spontatious and relational. I could organize my thinking. This after only a few hours. I kept at it. I began, slowly but surely to develop a sense of self. 

Developmental trauma I learned is first and foremost a brain problem. I'd always thought of it as psychological, or characterlogical- a me problem. Trauma and neglect in childhood impair brain development, particularly areas of the brain related to emotional regulation. Developmentally traumatized people are overrun by fear, shame and rage. It's very difficult to quiet these right hemisphere limbic erruptions with therapy alone. It's hard to reason with the amygdala, or to sooth much less to teach it that it doesn't need to fire at every damn thing. This is where brainwave biofeedback plays such a vital role in treatment for developmental trauma. We can train our brains to quiet reactivity. 

Shortly after I'd had my own experience, I sought out training in neurofeedback. For the past twenty years I have integrated neurofeedback with trauma focused therapy, much like you describe. It's been a game changer for most of my severely abused patients. In response to the publisher's request I wrote a book about all of this with many case examples and case histories and Norton published it as Neurofeedback in the Treatment  of Developmental Trauma: Calming the Fear-driven Brain in 2014. 

I am not intending to promote the book but do want those treating and those suffering the aftermath of developmental trauma to know about neurofeedback. 

Rick Herranz Sr. posted:

thanks for your courage Brother. i am just starting this journey. But your title from HELL to recovery , caught my eye. i have been a prisoner of hell for years and did not even know it

 

Rick in florida Friday 02/03/17

May you find compassionate, empowering, and validating guides along your journey, Rick.

This quote for Peter Levine's, Waking the Tiger, may be a source of encouragement: "Trauma is a fact of life. It does not, however, have to be a life sentence. Not only can trauma be healed, but with appropriate guidance and support, it can be transformative. Trauma has the potential to be one of the most significant forces for psychological, social, and spiritual awakening and evolution."

thanks for your courage Brother. i am just starting this journey. But your title from HELL to recovery , caught my eye. i have been a prisoner of hell for years and did not even know it

 

Rick in florida Friday 02/03/17

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