Showing posts with label trauma treatment and counseling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trauma treatment and counseling. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

A Bipolar Woman’s Self-Reflection - April 2025

A Bipolar Woman’s Self-Reflection - April 2025

With anger, resentment, hurt Michael my fellow group member suddenly screamed:

 “You treat men like disposable objects, like trash, you hurt them, men like me who want love and relationships with your destructive behaviours. You made up this stupid word ‘situationships’ to exempt you from being responsible for how your actions affect the other person. You hate men, you use them and abuse them and I’m sorry you were raped so much but maybe you should deal with your problems before you engage in another relationship, maybe you should try being a worthwhile person who deserves love…” 


Michael, which is not actually his name but for the sake of confidentiality it’s what I am going to call him, had so much more to say and he said it with a certain and violent anger as if he and I had been engaged in one of these situationships and he was the man I had hurt, used and abuse instead of meeting in January 2025 online for the first time  at least that's how it came across to me. I have been in a Cognitive Processing Therapy group for the last 10 weeks attempting to understand how my past trauma has affected my present life and interpersonal relationships. I was told in my intake last December 2024, that an unusual occurrence had happened in this intake where there were more men wanting to address their trauma than the organization had seen in many years. My psychotherapist realized because of the nature of my trauma, Gender-Based Violence, I may experience some discomfort with their presence. I was determined to join however not 100% comfortable with the idea but willing to explore it.


For the first 5 or 6 weeks I barely said anything, I just sat in my big red  chair, well mannered and well groomed, listening to the other group members share some of the most horrific traumas outside of my own that I had ever heard. I empathized with all of them but I kept quiet only speaking when asked to share my weekly emotions during check-in and my group take-away during check-out. I realized around session seven that I was not only afraid to share my trauma with the men in the group I was terrified of their judgement and rejection. 


Every week a member of the group would go over our homework worksheet where the three facilitators would help us understand our “Stuck Points” (the elements of the trauma that was keeping us in the trauma rather than moving forward and healing). Every week I would try to do some of the homework and I would fail, not because I didn’t find it relevant or useful but because I had avoided and covered up my pain and trauma so long it was like it was never even there like a picture you hang over a giant hole in your wall instead of fixing the wall, you know there is damage there but the pretty picture covers it so well you forget. I feel with my lack of engagement in the group perhaps Michael could only see the pretty picture I presented and not the giant empty and hollow hole of trauma that lived inside me. 


By week eight I made up my mind to share my homework and thus share my story with the group. I can remember the day of group, March 17, 2025 and what my stuck point was: “When there are too many men in a room with me, especially if they are intoxicated, I can’t control the situation and I will be attacked and raped because all men are dangerous and capable of rape.” When my group facilitator asked me why I felt this way, a watershed of emotional blockage came unstuck and I told the group everything. I was molested as a child, I was gang-raped at 14-years old by five boys in highschool, I was raped at 18-years old by my boyfiend and I was drugged and raped at 27-years old by a stranger I met at a club. This is the trauma I carry inside of me and the narrative that goes with it is: 


“All men are dangerous and even if you are attracted to them, the minute you lose control of the situation aka situationship run far, run fast, do something destructive to push them away because they will destroy you anyway so don’t give them your power ever again.”  


I didn’t realize I felt this way until week eight when I shared my trauma with the group. I believed these feelings were in the past and I could explain all my self-destructive behaviours related to men by placing the label of Mania or Psychosis in Bipolar disorder on it. The truth is however, as angry, hurt and embarrassed as I was over what Michael screamed in my face during group last week there is also a sense of release and self-discovery because for the first time since therapy started I had a breakthrough. I don’t agree with most of what he said or how he said it but I must honour the mirror he put up to my face. 


When I look at myself in that mirror I see a woman with decades of unaddressed trauma who avoids relationships because she is afraid and does not feel worthy of love because she is damaged. I see a woman who doesn’t feel safe anywhere, not even in her own home; I see a woman that sexualizes herself so men will find her worthwhile; lastly I see a little girl who got dealt a bad hand but has grown into a strong person who is trying to release the lifetime of pain she's been carrying in her mind, body and spirit. I don’t know where my trauma healing journey will lead me and I don’t know if my fellow group member is correct in saying stay away from men until you heal (kinder way of rephrasing). I do know everyday I fall a little more in-love with myself, everyday I feel a little stronger, everyday I feel a little more worthy and at peace with myself and everyday I feel closer to the ultimate goal of self-love and forgiveness. I may never heal to the point of being in a loving partnership, it may be me and all my journals for the rest of my life (I have no animals yet) either way I’m excited to find out.


If this self-reflection was as hard for you to read as it was for me to write, reach out, leave kind comments as its been a hell of a week, let’s connect, let’s have a conversation that takes us beyond the stigma of trauma to a place of healing, forgiveness and self-love.  


Saturday, February 8, 2025

Life Lessons Series: The Only Way Out is Through - American Poet Robert Frost

Life Lessons Series: The Only Way Out is Through - American Poet Robert Frost

Life Lesson #3

This quote is one of the most profound messages that I have tried to live by over the years. I was originally introduced to it in high school by my grade 12 English teacher. I was 17-years old dealing with Depression and Anxiety and felt lost in myself, in a world I didn’t fully understand. I had entered a dark phase in my youth that would continue into my adulthood, a dark tunnel with twists and turns that seemed never ending. But these six simple words bought me comfort and gave me hope through it all. I had always considered myself a fighter, someone who faced challenges and adversity head-on even when I felt fear. It was Frost that reminded me that even in the darkest of times escape was not the answer, rather it was confrontation of what I feared the most.


Today, I received a call I had been waiting for for almost 10 years. I will be starting the in-take process for enrolment into one of the best trauma treatment programs in Ontario. There was a time not too long ago where I wouldn’t have taken that call, where I would have let it go to voicemail and not returned the message. A time where I tried to escape my past trauma with substance use and excuses to justify avoidance of dealing with issues that have plagued me all my life. My trauma might not be unique to those who also have experienced trauma but it has been an overbearing burden that has halted my progress for years. When I was experiencing it in childhood, at fourteen years old, at eighteen years old, at twenty-seven years old, when my trauma was effecting my ability to be in a healthy and stable relationship I found a way to bury it deep inside, to cope with it, to exist beside it rather than to find a way through it.


Today after scheduling my first counselling session I cried. I could feel all that I had lived through rising to the surface begging me to face my fears, to face my trauma, reminding me that truly the only way out of pain and a lifetime of suffering was moving through it. It's a new year, a time for change, a time to apply one of the most valuable lessons I have learned. Truly the only way to clear my mind, body and soul of the trauma that has followed me throughout my life, that has had a detrimental effect on my mental health and that has halted my personal development is to go through the healing process. I can finally see the light at the end of a very dark tunnel and I know there is sunshine after the rain. Thank you Mr. Frost for reminding me of my strength and sheer force of will. I will forever be grateful for your words, the only way out is through.