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Addressing ACEs in Adults is Key (https://twitter.com/ACEs_Canada)

 

Twitter post Oct. 24 by Elizabeth Perry for @ACEs_Canada

https://twitter.com/ACEs_Canad.../1187400245568835585

This post I made has received a lot of interest. I thought you on ACEs Connection might also appreciate reading it. 

#ACEs are not just about children. That's the problem. Many who talk about ACEs just focus on prevention. But there are millions - probably billions of us living on this planet as #AdultsWithACEs  Our potential is impeded by the lingering, unresolved effects of our childhoods.

The effects of unaddressed #ACEs may manifest in adults as #Anxiety #Depression #Cancer #SocialIsolation #Addiction #PTSD #CPTSD #HeartDisease #Diabetes #COPD #Unemployability #Violence #Incarceration #Poverty #Homelessness #ACEs are #RootCause but they are not a life sentence.

Rejection & Silencing are #1 secondary #Trauma inducers. Ignoring #ACEsAffectedAdults will impede our ability to #PreventACEs When adults have an image of ourselves as children as being unworthy of having our needs met, we will & do project that image onto today's children.

We wonder why we give lots of lip service to prioritizing children in our society, and yet children were rarely mentioned in the #elxn43 campaign, except by  @children1stca @austinsaral @cblackst for the most part. Alice Miller knew why: because adults deny their childhood needs.

If we are going to transform our #ImageoftheChild which is an initiative underway in the #ECE field, adults have to connect with their image of themselves as ch'n deserving of love, nurturing, safety, respect, authority, autonomy. Not coopted b/c we turned 18, but b/c we exist.

#AdverseChildhoodExperiences teach the developing human that they are not safe in their community, that they are not worthy of at the bare minimum having their needs met, that adults are in charge and children have no voice. Look around our society. What have we adults created?

Adults have perpetuated for the children in our society the conditions within which we developed. Until adults face the difficult truth of the inadequate conditions under which we grew up, we will never change our #Imageofthechild We can't. Because we have to protect our ideal.

That's why I talk about #ACEs They have informed our worldviews. For many of us they are the ghoul that constantly follows us and breathes cold on the back of our necks. They are the past we can't discuss b/c we feel ashamed. So we avoid and minimize their importance. #NotFree

#ACEs are colonial and religious child rearing instruction manifest. Alice Miller called it #PoisonousPedagogy We've come a long way over the past few decades towards understanding child development better and appropriately interacting with children professionally. #ServeNReturn

#AdultsWithACEs make up the bulk of our population. Unless we address the lies learned from #ACEs lingering in the consciousness of the adults in our society, many of who are making decisions about the rest of us or absorbing extraordinary levels of resources, we will not change.

The #RootCause of virtually all of the ills in our society are #ACEs , the effects of which are lingering in the consciousness of #Adults who grew up in coercive, unstable, exploitive, emotionally disengaged, abusive environments, and perpetuate those for the rest of us.

If we directed our resources & efforts towards addressing #ACEs effects in #AdultsWithACEs we would transform our society & effectively recalibrate our #ImageoftheChild. We would then be able to prioritize #Children1st b/c we would know that they genuniely deserve it, like we did.

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Secondary Structural Dissociation. 

It was only 2 months ago that I stumbled across a post by Laura Kerr on her page. 

30 plus years of therapy including at University of Michigan, Mayo Clinic, and Indiana University.  Talk therapy, Progressive Muscle Relaxation, 3 years of EMDR, Neurofeedback, too many psychiatrists.....trauma conferences that really have nothing to do with peds, 100’s of books, thousands of hours of lectures and only 2 months ago after stumbling on a post by Laura Kerr do I slowly come out of a fog and begin to comprehend what has happened to my mind. 

I care about adults. They are parents. They are grandparents. They are community.   

Adults once traumatized mercilessly at the hands of parents would do well to understand a whole lot more about dissociation. 

Last edited by Former Member

To be able to respond to these conversations as a lay person without education of any college degrees gives me a since of telling parts of my brother's and my story. There is a big gap in adult ACEs and the work of helping children now. I have yet for an abused Mom or domestic abuse victims to understand that their choices they make also traumatize theire children. I was raped at the age between 5-6 years old by 3 preteen boys (never told),  we had extreme discipline abuse from the age of 3 years up to 15 years old by our mother, physically, emotionally spiritually and metally abused from 7-15 years old by our step father,  I molested by neighborhood friend from 7-15 years old and our mother shot and killed in front of us both at the age of brother 11yrs and me at 15 yrs.Two weeks after ther funeral of which we also planned we were separated to go to our individual fathers. This had consequences of him remaing in the same environment and me going to a better one. This is something I tried my best to change but as a child I couldn't and because I was nieve to the routes I could have taken nothing was any better for my brother. Today I feel the guilt of be helpless. Ashamed of the life I was able to have, even though I had a step mother that was extremely jealous of my dad's love for his daughter. She called me names. I was shunned in school because I was mean and distant. I still did not go through the abuse that my brother continued in. Today he is 50 years old and is facing armed robbery charges of which I believe he did for the love of a woman along with threeatening suicide with a stolen gun he had purchased.                              My life was different. I shut myself off from feeling the pain of my past. I worked hard at any job I did. I finished school with a B+. I met a guy my freshman year, we dated for 3 1/2 years and married. We've now been married for 33 1/2 years. I have 2 children by birth and one adopted out of love, all are married and they have 8 children between them. One would think I have the most wonderful life, and I do. With that being said in the begining of May my brother in law who has an addiction of opiods and I've worked hard to get help, had started texting me viciosly because I let his brother, my husband, know he was driving on a suspended license and drinking and driving with his very young girls with him. The following week he broke into my house while we were out of state and left his broken credit card in our home. Before I had found out that it was his I gave it to detectives and asked them to file charges on whomever it belonged to. So when it came back he was charged. Not only did my husband discount the severity of breaking into my home so did his family of which I had become very very close to. They are a Christian family and it turned extremely ugly with the insinuations. My children also have be wronged by their uncle to the point that they do not trust to be at their grandparents if he is there of which he lives. So this eventful situation has ruffled the feelings of such emotion in my world. I feel I cannot trust anyone. I have shut out the main people in my life except immediate family, children and grandchildren. I go to work and church only. I have a feeling of such lonliness. I can't explain my feelings so anyone can understand. I'm an emotional mess. These feelings did not come when I was young. They didn't play into my raising of my children except to make sure they were treated with love and understanding. They were spoiled but were taught consequences. They were never abused or belittled by me at any time of them growing up. So contrary to Michael Harrell, I do believe that I was the acception to the rule regarding children. But it is affecting my relationships now. So in that since he and you are correct. Pain is the culpret that prevents the brain from moving forward. This part is the one that needs work. As a parent and someone that wants to help others be resilient to the abuse I work hard to study what others are saying and any information that can help others as well as myself. At the moment I am also working on trying to help my brother's mental health. He may go to prison but to find one that will help him mentally is definitely a challenge. So thank you from a parent who struggles with CPTSD, ADHD and several health issues. This is not anything that defines who I am or stopping me from much. I AM RESILIENT! And will continuously keep telling myself that until I conquer what holds me back. Thank you for the time you each take to give us the info we need to help.

 #resilence 

 #trauma survivor

 Sincerely, 

 Treva Massey

Thanks Elizabeth Perry. I have been thinking about this. We have wounded adults who have denial of past pain and who are the doctors, school board, judges, teachers and politicians.  And who are voters.  So addressing the adults living with past adversity and pain has to be part of the plan.  If the adults do not have care and compassion for their own pain then they will not extend compassion to the children. 

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