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132 E. Broadway, Suite 323 | Eugene, OR 97401
cjh@caroleejhorningcounseling.com | (458) 201-0125

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    • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
    • Counseling for Trauma
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    • Group Therapy
  • Getting Started
    • FAQs
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(458) 201-0125

cjh@caroleejhorningcounseling.com

Brains on Trauma

June 9, 2020 by Carolee Horning

Many times with clients, I compare a wound to the therapy process. Some people get a wound on their arm, and with little or no attention, it heals itself. Some people get a wound on their arm, and it gets some bacteria in there or a sliver. It needs to be re-opened and cleaned out before it can heal. Still, others suffer from many many wounds, all depths, and various infections that are very complex.

Many people with complex trauma learn to disassociate or “numb out” in their day to day life so they can function. But something comes along and triggers them, causing that immense distress. That is why people are so ignorant when they say, “Why can’t you get over it?” Because that “sliver” is there in the brain until it is removed. With therapy, you have to arouse the memory, “poke the bear” – go through the tunnel, and come out the other side. You clean out the wound. And then you can heal.

Brene Brown has a saying, “The story I tell myself.” This is a phrase we often use when we are troubled by something. It is not necessarily rational, or true, or even in the arena. But because of our past traumas or conditioning, it is how our brain is wired to explain whatever we are upset about.  It’s rarely the actual truth, but it’s our perception based on how our brain was mapped in trauma.  But your brain can be ‘re-wired.’  It takes practice and hard work. There is no magic wand or special words a counselor can wield.  I wish that was the case, but alas, it’s not!  But trust me, as a woman that also experienced trauma in her past, you can overcome.  You can heal.  You can reach the other side.

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Comments

  1. Christi Allen Fields says

    June 9, 2020 at 4:32 pm

    Excellent blog! Great reminders!

  2. Carolee Horning says

    June 9, 2020 at 4:39 pm

    Thank you!

  3. Dan Bur says

    June 9, 2020 at 9:55 pm

    This is the first time that a simple illustration accurately describes what I have been experiencing for years! It is a wound that has been re-injured and scabbed over many times but has never healed.

    • Carolee Horning says

      June 9, 2020 at 10:19 pm

      I’m glad you found it helpful!

  4. Susan Lunas says

    June 10, 2020 at 2:43 am

    Bingo! Awesome how serendipitous events are. Reading the blog re-inforces what I studied on my weight-loss app this morning. Thanks!

    • Carolee Horning says

      June 10, 2020 at 2:47 am

      Funny how life works that way sometimes!

132 E. Broadway, Suite 323
Eugene, OR 97401

(458) 201-0125

cjh@caroleejhorningcounseling.com

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