Download FREE Good Thoughts, Commitment Pages and Letters to Yourself on Angela's Ejunkie Download Page.

Trauma Therapy Tools: Grounding

by Dr. Kathleen on October 27, 2009

in Healing & Recovery,Mental health,Therapies

Working through trauma can be scary, painful, and potentially overwhelming. Very often people who have experienced trauma have coped at least in part through some degree of dissociation. While this was necessary for your survival then, continued dissociation (especially forms that are not within your control) is not adaptive once the abuse has stopped. Now the task of therapy is to help you stay present long enough to learn other means of establishing safety in the present. How does someone with automatic survival skills of dissociation learn to do this? Grounding is one skill that can help.

Trauma therapy does not only consist of telling your story or focusing on traumatic memories, though of course that is a crucial part of the work. Bringing trauma memories to mind, talking about them in a trusting relationship, and developing the capacities for managing them while staying present in the moment are all crucial parts of the healing process. A premature emphasis on traumatic material can in fact do more harm than good. Many trauma survivors may first need to learn and practice a variety of self-care skills that you can then employ during the memory work phase of therapy.

In the past, trauma survivors were encouraged to speak about their abuse in the belief that this catharsis would be healing. Sometimes this instead led to re-traumatization rather than mastery of the material or healing. In fact, some trauma survivors are able to tell their stories easily, but in a dissociated manner. Because of the risks involved, this healing work is best done with the help of an experienced trauma specialist who can help you learn techniques to cope with memories effectively. One goal of trauma therapy is to help you connect to the past while staying in the present.

More recent trauma therapies have focused on a stage approach, which includes early preparation, focus on developing coping skills and stabilization. Judith Herman, in Trauma and Recovery, states that the central task of the first phase of therapy must be safety. How can you experience this if you do not even feel safe within yourself, but at the risk of uncontrolled flashbacks? In fact, for many trauma survivors it may have felt that there were only two choices available to them historically: abuse or dissociation. Learning grounding skills so that you can be present enough to develop a whole range of self-care strategies is crucial.

What do therapists mean when we talk about grounding?

Kathleen Young, Psy.D

Treating Trauma in Chicago

Share
  • http://asurvivorsthoughtsonlife.wordpress.com/ One Survivor

    Wow! This really stands out for me: “In fact, some trauma survivors are able to tell their stories easily, but in a dissociated manner.”

    There are times when I can talk about the ritual abuse, or think about it, and it almost does not really seem to phase me. In fact, it tends to make me wonder about the validity of what I now remember.

    Then there are those times when I really start to get in touch with the dissociated emotions and find myself choking up.

    On the one hand, I long to be able to talk to someone about this…yet…talking makes it more real. Talking does tend to bring the dissociated parts of the memories back together. I don’t want to focus on the negative, but I do want to be able to share what I know and work through the trauma of it.

    Thanks so much for sharing this!

  • http://topsy.com/tb/ow.ly/1mIOgw Tweets that mention Trauma Therapy Tools: Grounding | The Survivor Manual — Topsy.com

    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Dr. Kathleen Young and petrogenic, Splinteredones. Splinteredones said: RT @DrKathleenYoung RT @survivormanual Trauma Therapy Tools: Grounding http://ow.ly/1mIOgw Humph [...]

Previous post:

Next post: