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Healing the Hidden Wounds from Childhood The Promise of Healing (Glenn R. Schiraldi, Ph.D., Lt. Col. (USAR, Ret.)

 

Far too many people are walking around with unhealed, hidden wounds from toxic childhood stress. For some the pain is obvious. Others might look outwardly strong, capable, and in control. However, unhealed inner wounds inevitably cause untold and needless suffering and can lead to a dizzying array of psychological, medical, and functional problems.

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In this three-part blog, we’ll discuss the road to recovery. This blog is Part I: The
Principles of Healing. Part II will explain why traditional treatments are not typically the best starting place, and what approaches work better. Part III will discuss new and promising treatments.

The Principles of Healing
Information about Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) can help us better understand the link between ACEs and health outcomes. But information alone is rarely sufficient to heal scars deep within us.

The healing agents are
1. Mature Love. Although this may sound unscientific, science has shown that love, not time, changes one’s brain, physiology, and ability to heal in profoundly beneficial ways. Love helps to soften, soothe, settle, and rewire distressing memories. Love stimulates the brain to release oxytocin, which reduces stress, anxiety, depression, post-traumatic symptoms, and inflammation. Love causes the developing brain to wire in ways that regulate physical and emotional stress. From the earliest days of life love affects the brain’s ability to self-soothe and recover from stress. If you didn’t receive love from caregivers growing up, you can learn to provide healing love and nurturing now.


2. Calm. Excessive stress causes areas of the brain that regulate emotions, thinking, and speech to go “offline.” Excessive stress also takes offline areas of the brain that give one a feeling of being connected to oneself, one’s body, and one’s emotions. Learning to regulate stress arousal that is stuck on too high or too low, therefore, is a critical step to healing. You can learn to bring stress arousal within a window where arousal is neither too high nor too low. This window is called the “resilience zone.”

3. Safety. Toxic childhood stress imprints the sense that one is unsafe, which keeps a person on edge and kicks one out of the resilient zone. You can learn to help your body and right brain, where traumatic memories mostly play out, to feel safe and calm.

4. Turning toward the pain. Rather than avoiding what hurts—which is a normal and understandable tendency—you turn toward painful memories in order to heal them. You learn to bring wounds that are hidden in the shadows into the light of day and face them calmly and kindly, knowing that you are now safe. Love and acceptance—of yourself and the experiences you’ve faced— meet these old memories and replace shame. Bottled up painful memories find constructive expression (think of draining an infected wound).

5. Appreciate the strength that has gotten you through so far. If you didn’t have the strength we call resilience, you wouldn’t have survived until now. Giving yourself realistically earned credit is one way to nurture yourself.


Some other helpful principles
1. Healing can occur at any age, if you apply the necessary healing skills. Sometimes the healing comes sooner, sometimes later, but practice enables you to feel improvement.

2. Healing requires an active stance. We would not fail to clean and bandage a physical wound. Similarly, we can actively tend to our inner wounds, with newfound healing skills. You can typically practice many skills on your own. However, when the steps to healing seem overwhelming, you can seek the help of a trauma specialist, one who is skilled in the process of healing traumatic wounds.

3. ACEs often cause one to think poorly of oneself. You might experience self-dislike, shame, and/or damaged self-esteem. This perspective can be changed. If willpower alone has not helped, there are many new strategies for healing. Negative neural programming can be rewired so that you will feel and function at your best. You can change the way you experience yourself and life, and create a satisfying and joyful life.

4. You are not crazy. It is normal to have troubling symptoms following exposure to toxic childhood stress.

5. Even painful experience can be useful. Difficult times can spur us to learn
compassion for self and others, turn vulnerabilities into strengths, and grow from our experience. Destructive intergenerational patterns can be interrupted, starting with you. You can be the transition person.

We have learned so much in recent years to heal the inner wounds of toxic childhood stress. There is much cause for hope, as we’ll explore in the next two blogs.

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About the Author

Glenn R. Schiraldi, PhD, has served on the stress management faculties at The Pentagon, the International Critical Incident Stress Foundation, and the University of Maryland, where he received the Outstanding Teacher Award in addition to other teaching/service awards. His books on stress-related topics have been translated into seventeen languages, and include The Adverse Childhood Experiences Recovery Workbook, The Resilience Workbook, The Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Sourcebook, and The Self-Esteem Workbook. The founder of Resilience Training International (www.ResilienceFirst.com), he has trained laypersons and clinicians around the world on various aspects of stress, trauma, and resilience.

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Hi Glenn, this is a wonderful post and brings great hope for healing the wounds of childhood toxic stress, I look forward to the release of parts 2 & 3. I am the new community manager for the ACEs Ireland group and I wondered if you might post this blog there also? Best regards, Angela

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