The following is an article by Casa Palmira www.casapalmira.com
7 Ways to Heal Your Childhood Trauma
Children are often
viewed as highly resilient and able to bounce back from just about any
situation, but traumatic experiences in childhood can have severe and
long-lasting effects well into adulthood if they are left unresolved. Childhood
trauma can result from anything that makes a child feel helpless and disrupts
their sense of safety and security, including: sexual, physical or verbal
abuse; domestic violence; an unstable or unsafe environment; separation from a parent;
neglect; bullying; serious illness; or intrusive medical procedures.
If you’re living with the emotional and psychological consequences of a traumatic childhood, there is hope. Here are seven ways to heal your childhood trauma and reclaim your life.
If you’re living with the emotional and psychological consequences of a traumatic childhood, there is hope. Here are seven ways to heal your childhood trauma and reclaim your life.
1. Acknowledge and recognize the trauma for what it is. Victims of childhood trauma often spend years minimizing the event or
dismissing it by pretending it didn’t happen or by succumbing to feelings of
guilt or self-blame. The only way you can begin healing is to acknowledge that
a traumatic event did occur and that you were not responsible for it.
2. Reclaim control. Feelings of helplessness can carry
well over into adulthood and can make you feel and act like a perpetual victim,
causing you to make choices based on your past pain. When you’re a
victim, the past is in control of your present. But when you’ve conquered your
pain, the present is controlled by you. There may always be a battle between
past and present, but as long as you’re willing to let go of the old defenses
and crutches you used as a child to navigate your trauma, you will be able to
reclaim control of your life now and heal your pain.
3. Seek support and don’t isolate yourself. A natural instinct that many trauma survivors have is to withdraw from
others, but this will only make things worse. A big part of the healing process
is connecting to other people, so make the effort to maintain your
relationships and seek support. Talk to a trusted family member, friend or
counselor and consider joining a support group for survivors of childhood
trauma.
4. Take care of your health. Your ability to
cope with stress will increase if you are healthy. Establish a daily routine
that allows you to get plenty of rest, eat a well-balanced diet and exercise
regularly. Most importantly, stay away from alcohol and drugs. These might
provide temporary relief but will inevitably increase your feelings of
depression, anxiety and isolation and can worsen your trauma symptoms.
5. Learn the true meaning of acceptance and letting go. Just because you accept something doesn’t mean you’re embracing your trauma
or that you like it or agree with it. Acceptance means you’ve decided what
you’re going to do with it. You can decide to let it rule your life or you can
decide to let it go. Letting go doesn’t mean “poof!” it’s magically gone.
Letting go means no longer allowing your bad memories and feelings of a bad
childhood to rob yourself of living a good life now.
6. Replace bad habits with good ones. Bad habits can take many forms, like negativity and always mistrusting
others, or turning to alcohol or drugs when feelings become too hard to bear.
Bad habits can be hard to break, especially when they’re used as crutches to
help you avoid reliving the pain and trauma of your childhood. A support group
or a therapist can help you learn the tools necessary to break your bad habits
and replace them with good ones.
7. Be patient with
yourself. When you’ve been seriously hurt as a child you develop
out-of-control emotions, hopelessness, defense mechanisms and warped
perceptions that are difficult to let go of. It will take a lot of time and
hard work to let go of these feelings. Be patient with yourself and honor your
progress, no matter how small it may seem. It’s the little victories in your
recovery that will eventually help you win the battle of healing your childhood
trauma.
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