Cover of The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma
    Self-help

    The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk is a groundbreaking book that explores the deep connection between trauma, the brain, and the body. Drawing on years of research and clinical experience, van der Kolk shows how trauma reshapes both mind and body, and offers transformative insights into healing through therapies like mindfulness, yoga, and neurofeedback. A must-read for anyone seeking to understand trauma and its effects, this book is both informative and deeply compassionate.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    S
    CHAPTER 6
    LOSING YOUR BODY, LOSING YOUR
    SELF
    Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love
    the ques­tions them­selves.… Live the ques­tions now. Per­haps you
    will grad­u­al­ly, with­out notic­ing it, live along some dis­tant day into
    the answer.
    —Rain­er Maria Rilke, Let­ters to a Young Poet
    her­ry walked into my office with her shoul­ders slumped, her chin
    near­ly touch­ing her chest. Even before we spoke a word, her body was
    telling me that she was afraid to face the world. I also noticed that her long
    sleeves only par­tial­ly cov­ered the scabs on her fore­arms. After sit­ting down,
    she told me in a high-pitched monot­o­ne that she couldn’t stop her­self from
    pick­ing at the skin on her arms and chest until she bled.
    As far back as Sher­ry could remem­ber, her moth­er had run a fos­ter
    home, and their house was often packed with as many as fif­teen strange,
    dis­rup­tive, fright­ened, and fright­en­ing kids who dis­ap­peared as sud­den­ly as
    they arrived. Sher­ry had grown up tak­ing care of these tran­sient chil­dren,
    feel­ing that there was no room for her and her needs. “I know I wasn’t
    want­ed,” she told me. “I’m not sure when I first real­ized that, but I’ve
    thought about things that my moth­er said to me, and the signs were always
    there. She’d tell me, ‘You know, I don’t think you belong in this fam­i­ly. I
    think they gave us the wrong baby.’ And she’d say it with a smile on her
    face. But, of course, peo­ple often pre­tend to joke when they say some­thing
    seri­ous.”
    Over the years our research team has repeat­ed­ly found that chron­ic
    emo­tion­al abuse and neglect can be just as dev­as­tat­ing as phys­i­cal abuse
    and sex­u­al molestation.1 Sher­ry turned out to be a liv­ing exam­ple of these
    find­ings: Not being seen, not being known, and hav­ing nowhere to turn to
    feel safe is dev­as­tat­ing at any age, but it is par­tic­u­lar­ly destruc­tive for
    young chil­dren, who are still try­ing to find their place in the world.
    Sher­ry had grad­u­at­ed from col­lege, but she now worked in a joy­less
    cler­i­cal job, lived alone with her cats, and had no close friends. When I
    asked her about men, she told me that her only “rela­tion­ship” had been with
    a man who’d kid­napped her while she was on a col­lege vaca­tion in Flori­da.
    He’d held her cap­tive and raped her repeat­ed­ly for five con­sec­u­tive days.
    She remem­bered hav­ing been curled up, ter­ri­fied and frozen for most of that
    time, until she real­ized she could try to get away. She escaped by sim­ply
    walk­ing out while he was in the bath­room. When she called her moth­er
    col­lect for help, her moth­er refused to take the call. Sher­ry final­ly man­aged
    to get home with assis­tance from a domes­tic vio­lence shel­ter.
    Sher­ry told me that she’d start­ed to pick at her skin because it gave her
    some relief from feel­ing numb. The phys­i­cal sen­sa­tions made her feel more
    alive but also deeply ashamed—she knew she was addict­ed to these actions
    but could not stop them. She’d con­sult­ed many men­tal health pro­fes­sion­als
    before me and had been ques­tioned repeat­ed­ly about her “sui­ci­dal
    behav­ior.” She’d also been sub­ject­ed to invol­un­tary hos­pi­tal­iza­tion by a
    psy­chi­a­trist who refused to treat her unless she could promise that she
    would nev­er pick at her­self again. How­ev­er, in my expe­ri­ence, patients who
    cut them­selves or pick at their skin like Sher­ry, are sel­dom sui­ci­dal but are
    try­ing to make them­selves feel bet­ter in the only way they know.
    This is a dif­fi­cult con­cept for many peo­ple to under­stand. As I
    dis­cussed in the pre­vi­ous chap­ter, the most com­mon response to dis­tress is
    to seek out peo­ple we like and trust to help us and give us the courage to go
    on. We may also calm down by engag­ing in a phys­i­cal activ­i­ty like bik­ing
    or going to the gym. We start learn­ing these ways of reg­u­lat­ing our feel­ings
    from the first moment some­one feeds us when we’re hun­gry, cov­ers us
    when we’re cold, or rocks us when we’re hurt or scared.
    But if no one has ever looked at you with lov­ing eyes or bro­ken out in a
    smile when she sees you; if no one has rushed to help you (but instead said,
    “Stop cry­ing, or I’ll give you some­thing to cry about”), then you need to
    dis­cov­er oth­er ways of tak­ing care of your­self. You are like­ly to exper­i­ment
    with anything—drugs, alco­hol, binge eat­ing, or cutting—that offers some
    kind of relief.
    While Sher­ry duti­ful­ly came to every appoint­ment and answered my
    ques­tions with great sin­cer­i­ty, I did not feel we were mak­ing the sort of vital
    con­nec­tion that is nec­es­sary for ther­a­py to work. Struck by how frozen and
    uptight she was, I sug­gest­ed that she see Liz, a mas­sage ther­a­pist I had
    worked with pre­vi­ous­ly. Dur­ing their first meet­ing Liz posi­tioned Sher­ry on
    the mas­sage table, then moved to the end of the table and gen­tly held
    Sherry’s feet. Lying there with her eyes closed, Sher­ry sud­den­ly yelled in a
    pan­ic: “Where are you?” Some­how Sher­ry had lost track of Liz, even
    though Liz was right there, with her hands on Sherry’s feet.
    Sher­ry was one of the first patients who taught me about the extreme
    dis­con­nec­tion from the body that so many peo­ple with his­to­ries of trau­ma
    and neglect expe­ri­ence. I dis­cov­ered that my pro­fes­sion­al train­ing, with its
    focus on under­stand­ing and insight, had large­ly ignored the rel­e­vance of the
    liv­ing, breath­ing body, the foun­da­tion of our selves. Sher­ry knew that
    pick­ing her skin was a destruc­tive thing to do and that it was relat­ed to her
    mother’s neglect, but under­stand­ing the source of the impulse made no
    dif­fer­ence in help­ing her con­trol it.
    LOSING YOUR BODY
    Once I was alert­ed to this, I was amazed to dis­cov­er how many of my
    patients told me they could not feel whole areas of their bod­ies. Some­times
    I’d ask them to close their eyes and tell me what I had put into their
    out­stretched hands. Whether it was a car key, a quar­ter, or a can open­er,
    they often could not even guess what they were holding—their sen­so­ry
    per­cep­tions sim­ply weren’t work­ing.
    I talked this over with my friend Alexan­der McFar­lane in Aus­tralia,
    who had observed the same phe­nom­e­non. In his lab­o­ra­to­ry in Ade­laide he
    had stud­ied the ques­tion: How do we know with­out look­ing at it that we’re
    hold­ing a car key? Rec­og­niz­ing an object in the palm of your hand requires
    sens­ing its shape, weight, tem­per­a­ture, tex­ture, and posi­tion. Each of those
    dis­tinct sen­so­ry expe­ri­ences is trans­mit­ted to a dif­fer­ent part of the brain,
    which then needs to inte­grate them into a sin­gle per­cep­tion. McFar­lane
    found that peo­ple with PTSD often have trou­ble putting the pic­ture
    together.2
    When our sens­es become muf­fled, we no longer feel ful­ly alive. In an
    arti­cle called “What Is an Emo­tion?” (1884),3 William James, the father of
    Amer­i­can psy­chol­o­gy, report­ed a strik­ing case of “sen­so­ry insen­si­bil­i­ty” in
    a woman he inter­viewed: “I have … no human sen­sa­tions,” she told him.
    “[I am] sur­round­ed by all that can ren­der life hap­py and agree­able, still to
    me the fac­ul­ty of enjoy­ment and of feel­ing is want­i­ng.… Each of my
    sens­es, each part of my prop­er self, is as it were sep­a­rat­ed from me and can
    no longer afford me any feel­ing; this impos­si­bil­i­ty seems to depend upon a
    void which I feel in the front of my head, and to be due to the diminu­tion of
    the sen­si­bil­i­ty over the whole sur­face of my body, for it seems to me that I
    nev­er actu­al­ly reach the objects which I touch. All this would be a small
    mat­ter enough, but for its fright­ful result, which is that of the impos­si­bil­i­ty
    of any oth­er kind of feel­ing and of any sort of enjoy­ment, although I
    expe­ri­ence a need and desire of them that ren­der my life an
    incom­pre­hen­si­ble tor­ture.”
    This response to trau­ma rais­es an impor­tant ques­tion: How can
    trau­ma­tized peo­ple learn to inte­grate ordi­nary sen­so­ry expe­ri­ences so that
    they can live with the nat­ur­al flow of feel­ing and feel secure and com­plete
    in their bod­ies?
    HOW DO WE KNOW WE’RE ALIVE?
    Most ear­ly neu­roimag­ing stud­ies of trau­ma­tized peo­ple were like those
    we’ve seen in chap­ter 3; they focused on how sub­jects react­ed to spe­cif­ic
    reminders of the trau­ma. Then, in 2004, my col­league Ruth Lanius, who
    scanned Stan and Ute Lawrence’s brains, posed a new ques­tion: What
    hap­pens in the brains of trau­ma sur­vivors when they are not think­ing about
    the past? Her stud­ies on the idling brain, the “default state net­work” (DSN),
    opened up a whole new chap­ter in under­stand­ing how trau­ma affects self-
    aware­ness, specif­i­cal­ly sen­so­ry self-awareness.4
    Dr. Lanius recruit­ed a group of six­teen “nor­mal” Cana­di­ans to lie in a
    brain scan­ner while think­ing about noth­ing in par­tic­u­lar. This is not easy for
    any­one to do—as long as we are awake, our brains are churning—but she
    asked them to focus their atten­tion on their breath­ing and try to emp­ty their
    minds as much as pos­si­ble. She then repeat­ed the same exper­i­ment with
    eigh­teen peo­ple who had his­to­ries of severe, chron­ic child­hood abuse.
    What is your brain doing when you have noth­ing in par­tic­u­lar on your
    mind? It turns out that you pay atten­tion to your­self: The default state
    acti­vates the brain areas that work togeth­er to cre­ate your sense of “self.”
    When Ruth looked at the scans of her nor­mal sub­jects, she found
    acti­va­tion of DSN regions that pre­vi­ous researchers had described. I like to
    call this the Mohawk of self-aware­ness, the mid­line struc­tures of the brain,
    start­ing out right above our eyes, run­ning through the cen­ter of the brain all
    the way to the back. All these mid­line struc­tures are involved in our sense
    of self. The largest bright region at the back of the brain is the pos­te­ri­or
    cin­gu­late, which gives us a phys­i­cal sense of where we are—our inter­nal
    GPS. It is strong­ly con­nect­ed to the medi­al pre­frontal cor­tex (MPFC), the
    watch­tow­er I dis­cussed in chap­ter 4. (This con­nec­tion doesn’t show up on
    the scan because the fMRI can’t mea­sure it.) It is also con­nect­ed with brain
    areas that reg­is­ter sen­sa­tions com­ing from the rest of the body: the insu­la,
    which relays mes­sages from the vis­cera to the emo­tion­al cen­ters; the
    pari­etal lobes, which inte­grate sen­so­ry infor­ma­tion; and the ante­ri­or
    cin­gu­late, which coor­di­nates emo­tions and think­ing. All of these areas
    con­tribute to con­scious­ness.
    Locat­ing the self. The Mohawk of self-aware­ness. Start­ing from the front of the brain (at
    right), this con­sists of: the orbital pre­frontal cor­tex, the medi­al pre­frontal cor­tex, the ante­ri­or
    cin­gu­late, the pos­te­ri­or cin­gu­late, and the insu­la. In indi­vid­u­als with his­to­ries of chron­ic trau­ma
    the same regions show sharply decreased activ­i­ty, mak­ing it dif­fi­cult to reg­is­ter inter­nal states
    and assess­ing the per­son­al rel­e­vance of incom­ing infor­ma­tion.
    The con­trast with the scans of the eigh­teen chron­ic PTSD patients with
    severe ear­ly-life trau­ma was star­tling. There was almost no acti­va­tion of
    any of the self-sens­ing areas of the brain: The MPFC, the ante­ri­or cin­gu­late,
    the pari­etal cor­tex, and the insu­la did not light up at all; the only area that
    showed a slight acti­va­tion was the pos­te­ri­or cin­gu­late, which is respon­si­ble
    for basic ori­en­ta­tion in space.
    There could be only one expla­na­tion for such results: In response to the
    trau­ma itself, and in cop­ing with the dread that per­sist­ed long after­ward,
    these patients had learned to shut down the brain areas that trans­mit the
    vis­cer­al feel­ings and emo­tions that accom­pa­ny and define ter­ror. Yet in
    every­day life, those same brain areas are respon­si­ble for reg­is­ter­ing the
    entire range of emo­tions and sen­sa­tions that form the foun­da­tion of our self-
    aware­ness, our sense of who we are. What we wit­nessed here was a trag­ic
    adap­ta­tion: In an effort to shut off ter­ri­fy­ing sen­sa­tions, they also dead­ened
    their capac­i­ty to feel ful­ly alive.
    The dis­ap­pear­ance of medi­al pre­frontal acti­va­tion could explain why so
    many trau­ma­tized peo­ple lose their sense of pur­pose and direc­tion. I used to
    be sur­prised by how often my patients asked me for advice about the most
    ordi­nary things, and then by how rarely they fol­lowed it. Now I under­stood
    that their rela­tion­ship with their own inner real­i­ty was impaired. How could
    they make deci­sions, or put any plan into action, if they couldn’t define
    what they want­ed or, to be more pre­cise, what the sen­sa­tions in their bod­ies,
    the basis of all emo­tions, were try­ing to tell them?
    The lack of self-aware­ness in vic­tims of chron­ic child­hood trau­ma is
    some­times so pro­found that they can­not rec­og­nize them­selves in a mir­ror.
    Brain scans show that this is not the result of mere inat­ten­tion: The
    struc­tures in charge of self-recog­ni­tion may be knocked out along with the
    struc­tures relat­ed to self-expe­ri­ence.
    When Ruth Lanius showed me her study, a phrase from my clas­si­cal
    high school edu­ca­tion came back to me. The math­e­mati­cian Archimedes,
    teach­ing about the lever, is sup­posed to have said: “Give me a place to stand
    and I will move the world.” Or, as the great twen­ti­eth-cen­tu­ry body
    ther­a­pist Moshe Feldenkrais put it: “You can’t do what you want till you
    know what you’re doing.” The impli­ca­tions are clear: to feel present you
    have to know where you are and be aware of what is going on with you. If
    the self-sens­ing sys­tem breaks down we need to find ways to reac­ti­vate it.
    THE SELF-SENSING SYSTEM
    It was fas­ci­nat­ing to see how much Sher­ry ben­e­fit­ed from her mas­sage
    ther­a­py. She felt more relaxed and adven­tur­ous in her day-to-day life and
    she was also more relaxed and open with me. She became tru­ly involved in
    her ther­a­py and was gen­uine­ly curi­ous about her behav­ior, thoughts, and
    feel­ings. She stopped pick­ing at her skin, and when sum­mer came she
    start­ed to spend evenings sit­ting out­side on her stoop, chat­ting with her
    neigh­bors. She even joined a church choir, a won­der­ful expe­ri­ence of group
    syn­chrony.
    It was at about this time that I met Anto­nio Dama­sio at a small think
    tank that Dan Schac­ter, the chair of the psy­chol­o­gy depart­ment at Har­vard,
    had orga­nized. In a series of bril­liant sci­en­tif­ic arti­cles and books Dama­sio
    clar­i­fied the rela­tion­ship among body states, emo­tions, and sur­vival. A
    neu­rol­o­gist who has treat­ed hun­dreds of peo­ple with var­i­ous forms of brain
    dam­age, he became fas­ci­nat­ed with con­scious­ness and with iden­ti­fy­ing the
    areas of the brain nec­es­sary for know­ing what you feel. He has devot­ed his
    career to map­ping out what is respon­si­ble for our expe­ri­ence of “self.” The
    Feel­ing of What Hap­pens is, for me, his most impor­tant book, and read­ing
    it was a revelation.5 Dama­sio starts by point­ing out the deep divide between
    our sense of self and the sen­so­ry life of our bod­ies. As he poet­i­cal­ly
    explains, “Some­times we use our minds not to dis­cov­er facts, but to hide
    them.… One of the things the screen hides most effec­tive­ly is the body,
    our own body, by which I mean the ins of it, its inte­ri­ors. Like a veil thrown
    over the skin to secure its mod­esty, the screen par­tial­ly removes from the
    mind the inner states of the body, those that con­sti­tute the flow of life as it
    wan­ders in the jour­ney of each day.”6
    He goes on to describe how this “screen” can work in our favor by
    enabling us to attend to press­ing prob­lems in the out­side world. Yet it has a
    cost: “It tends to pre­vent us from sens­ing the pos­si­ble ori­gin and nature of
    what we call self.”7 Build­ing on the cen­tu­ry-old work of William James,
    Dama­sio argues that the core of our self-aware­ness rests on the phys­i­cal
    sen­sa­tions that con­vey the inner states of the body:
    [P]rimordial feel­ings pro­vide a direct expe­ri­ence of one’s own
    liv­ing body, word­less, unadorned, and con­nect­ed to noth­ing but
    sheer exis­tence. These pri­mor­dial feel­ings reflect the cur­rent state
    of the body along var­ied dimen­sions, … along the scale that
    ranges from plea­sure to pain, and they orig­i­nate at the lev­el of the
    brain stem rather than the cere­bral cor­tex. All feel­ings of emo­tion
    are com­plex musi­cal vari­a­tions on pri­mor­dial feelings.8
    Our sen­so­ry world takes shape even before we are born. In the womb
    we feel amni­ot­ic flu­id against our skin, we hear the faint sounds of rush­ing
    blood and a diges­tive tract at work, we pitch and roll with our mother’s
    move­ments. After birth, phys­i­cal sen­sa­tion defines our rela­tion­ship to
    our­selves and to our sur­round­ings. We start off being our wet­ness, hunger,
    sati­a­tion, and sleepi­ness. A cacoph­o­ny of incom­pre­hen­si­ble sounds and
    images press­es in on our pris­tine ner­vous sys­tem. Even after we acquire
    con­scious­ness and lan­guage, our bod­i­ly sens­ing sys­tem pro­vides cru­cial
    feed­back on our moment-to-moment con­di­tion. Its con­stant hum
    com­mu­ni­cates changes in our vis­cera and in the mus­cles of our face, tor­so,
    and extrem­i­ties that sig­nal pain and com­fort, as well as urges such as
    hunger and sex­u­al arousal. What is tak­ing place around us also affects our
    phys­i­cal sen­sa­tions. See­ing some­one we rec­og­nize, hear­ing par­tic­u­lar
    sounds—a piece of music, a siren—or sens­ing a shift in tem­per­a­ture all
    change our focus of atten­tion and, with­out our being aware of it, prime our
    sub­se­quent thoughts and actions.
    As we have seen, the job of the brain is to con­stant­ly mon­i­tor and
    eval­u­ate what is going on with­in and around us. These eval­u­a­tions are
    trans­mit­ted by chem­i­cal mes­sages in the blood­stream and elec­tri­cal
    mes­sages in our nerves, caus­ing sub­tle or dra­mat­ic changes through­out the
    body and brain. These shifts usu­al­ly occur entire­ly with­out con­scious input
    or aware­ness: The sub­cor­ti­cal regions of the brain are astound­ing­ly effi­cient
    in reg­u­lat­ing our breath­ing, heart­beat, diges­tion, hor­mone secre­tion, and
    immune sys­tem. How­ev­er, these sys­tems can become over­whelmed if we
    are chal­lenged by an ongo­ing threat, or even the per­cep­tion of threat. This
    accounts for the wide array of phys­i­cal prob­lems researchers have
    doc­u­ment­ed in trau­ma­tized peo­ple.
    Yet our con­scious self also plays a vital role in main­tain­ing our inner
    equi­lib­ri­um: We need to reg­is­ter and act on our phys­i­cal sen­sa­tions to keep
    our bod­ies safe. Real­iz­ing we’re cold com­pels us to put on a sweater;
    feel­ing hun­gry or spacey tells us our blood sug­ar is low and spurs us to get
    a snack; the pres­sure of a full blad­der sends us to the bath­room. Dama­sio
    points out that all of the brain struc­tures that reg­is­ter back­ground feel­ings
    are locat­ed near areas that con­trol basic house­keep­ing func­tions, such as
    breath­ing, appetite, elim­i­na­tion, and sleep/wake cycles: “This is because the
    con­se­quences of hav­ing emo­tion and atten­tion are entire­ly relat­ed to the
    fun­da­men­tal busi­ness of man­ag­ing life with­in the organ­ism. It is not
    pos­si­ble to man­age life and main­tain home­o­sta­t­ic bal­ance with­out data on
    the cur­rent state of the organism’s body.”9 Dama­sio calls these
    house­keep­ing areas of the brain the “pro­to-self,” because they cre­ate the
    “word­less knowl­edge” that under­lies our con­scious sense of self.
    THE SELF UNDER THREAT
    In 2000 Dama­sio and his col­leagues pub­lished an arti­cle in the world’s
    fore­most sci­en­tif­ic pub­li­ca­tion, Sci­ence, which report­ed that reliv­ing a
    strong neg­a­tive emo­tion caus­es sig­nif­i­cant changes in the brain areas that
    receive nerve sig­nals from the mus­cles, gut, and skin—areas that are cru­cial
    for reg­u­lat­ing basic bod­i­ly func­tions. The team’s brain scans showed that
    recall­ing an emo­tion­al event from the past caus­es us to actu­al­ly
    reex­pe­ri­ence the vis­cer­al sen­sa­tions felt dur­ing the orig­i­nal event. Each type
    of emo­tion pro­duced a char­ac­ter­is­tic pat­tern, dis­tinct from the oth­ers. For
    exam­ple, a par­tic­u­lar part of the brain stem was “active in sad­ness and
    anger, but not in hap­pi­ness or fear.”10 All of these brain regions are below
    the lim­bic sys­tem, to which emo­tions are tra­di­tion­al­ly assigned, yet we
    acknowl­edge their involve­ment every time we use one of the com­mon
    expres­sions that link strong emo­tions with the body: “You make me sick”;
    “It made my skin crawl”; “I was all choked up”; “My heart sank”; “He
    makes me bris­tle.”
    The ele­men­tary self sys­tem in the brain stem and lim­bic sys­tem is
    mas­sive­ly acti­vat­ed when peo­ple are faced with the threat of anni­hi­la­tion,
    which results in an over­whelm­ing sense of fear and ter­ror accom­pa­nied by
    intense phys­i­o­log­i­cal arousal. To peo­ple who are reliv­ing a trau­ma, noth­ing
    makes sense; they are trapped in a life-or-death sit­u­a­tion, a state of
    par­a­lyz­ing fear or blind rage. Mind and body are con­stant­ly aroused, as if
    they are in immi­nent dan­ger. They star­tle in response to the slight­est nois­es
    and are frus­trat­ed by small irri­ta­tions. Their sleep is chron­i­cal­ly dis­turbed,
    and food often los­es its sen­su­al plea­sures. This in turn can trig­ger des­per­ate
    attempts to shut those feel­ings down by freez­ing and dissociation.11
    How do peo­ple regain con­trol when their ani­mal brains are stuck in a
    fight for sur­vival? If what goes on deep inside our ani­mal brains dic­tates
    how we feel, and if our body sen­sa­tions are orches­trat­ed by sub­cor­ti­cal
    (sub­con­scious) brain struc­tures, how much con­trol over them can we
    actu­al­ly have?
    AGENCY: OWNING YOUR LIFE
    “Agency” is the tech­ni­cal term for the feel­ing of being in charge of your
    life: know­ing where you stand, know­ing that you have a say in what
    hap­pens to you, know­ing that you have some abil­i­ty to shape your
    cir­cum­stances. The vet­er­ans who put their fists through dry­wall at the VA
    were try­ing to assert their agency—to make some­thing hap­pen. But they
    end­ed up feel­ing even more out of con­trol, and many of these once-
    con­fi­dent men were trapped in a cycle between fran­tic activ­i­ty and
    immo­bil­i­ty.
    Agency starts with what sci­en­tists call inte­ro­cep­tion, our aware­ness of
    our sub­tle sen­so­ry, body-based feel­ings: the greater that aware­ness, the
    greater our poten­tial to con­trol our lives. Know­ing what we feel is the first
    step to know­ing why we feel that way. If we are aware of the con­stant
    changes in our inner and out­er envi­ron­ment, we can mobi­lize to man­age
    them. But we can’t do this unless our watch­tow­er, the MPFC, learns to
    observe what is going on inside us. This is why mind­ful­ness prac­tice, which
    strength­ens the MPFC, is a cor­ner­stone of recov­ery from trauma.12
    After I saw the won­der­ful movie March of the Pen­guins, I found
    myself think­ing about some of my patients. The pen­guins are sto­ic and
    endear­ing, and it’s trag­ic to learn how, from time immemo­r­i­al, they have
    trudged sev­en­ty miles inland from the sea, endured inde­scrib­able hard­ships
    to reach their breed­ing grounds, lost numer­ous viable eggs to expo­sure, and
    then, almost starv­ing, dragged them­selves back to the ocean. If pen­guins
    had our frontal lobes, they would have used their lit­tle flip­pers to build
    igloos, devised a bet­ter divi­sion of labor, and reor­ga­nized their food
    sup­plies. Many of my patients have sur­vived trau­ma through tremen­dous
    courage and per­sis­tence, only to get into the same kinds of trou­ble over and
    over again. Trau­ma has shut down their inner com­pass and robbed them of
    the imag­i­na­tion they need to cre­ate some­thing bet­ter.
    The neu­ro­science of self­hood and agency val­i­dates the kinds of somat­ic
    ther­a­pies that my friends Peter Levine13 and Pat Ogden14 have devel­oped.
    I’ll dis­cuss these and oth­er sen­so­ri­mo­tor approach­es in more detail in part
    V, but in essence their aim is three­fold:
    to draw out the sen­so­ry infor­ma­tion that is blocked and frozen
    by trau­ma;
    to help patients befriend (rather than sup­press) the ener­gies
    released by that inner expe­ri­ence;
    to com­plete the self-pre­serv­ing phys­i­cal actions that were
    thwart­ed when they were trapped, restrained, or immo­bi­lized by
    ter­ror.
    Our gut feel­ings sig­nal what is safe, life sus­tain­ing, or threat­en­ing, even
    if we can­not quite explain why we feel a par­tic­u­lar way. Our sen­so­ry
    inte­ri­or­i­ty con­tin­u­ous­ly sends us sub­tle mes­sages about the needs of our
    organ­ism. Gut feel­ings also help us to eval­u­ate what is going on around us.
    They warn us that the guy who is approach­ing feels creepy, but they also
    con­vey that a room with west­ern expo­sure sur­round­ed by daylilies makes us
    feel serene. If you have a com­fort­able con­nec­tion with your inner
    sensations—if you can trust them to give you accu­rate information—you
    will feel in charge of your body, your feel­ings, and your self.
    How­ev­er, trau­ma­tized peo­ple chron­i­cal­ly feel unsafe inside their
    bod­ies: The past is alive in the form of gnaw­ing inte­ri­or dis­com­fort. Their
    bod­ies are con­stant­ly bom­bard­ed by vis­cer­al warn­ing signs, and, in an
    attempt to con­trol these process­es, they often become expert at ignor­ing
    their gut feel­ings and in numb­ing aware­ness of what is played out inside.
    They learn to hide from their selves.
    The more peo­ple try to push away and ignore inter­nal warn­ing signs,
    the more like­ly they are to take over and leave them bewil­dered, con­fused,
    and ashamed. Peo­ple who can­not com­fort­ably notice what is going on
    inside become vul­ner­a­ble to respond to any sen­so­ry shift either by shut­ting
    down or by going into a panic—they devel­op a fear of fear itself.
    We now know that pan­ic symp­toms are main­tained large­ly because the
    indi­vid­ual devel­ops a fear of the bod­i­ly sen­sa­tions asso­ci­at­ed with pan­ic
    attacks. The attack may be trig­gered by some­thing he or she knows is
    irra­tional, but fear of the sen­sa­tions keeps them esca­lat­ing into a full-body
    emer­gency. “Scared stiff” and “frozen in fear” (col­laps­ing and going numb)
    describe pre­cise­ly what ter­ror and trau­ma feel like. They are its vis­cer­al
    foun­da­tion. The expe­ri­ence of fear derives from prim­i­tive respons­es to
    threat where escape is thwart­ed in some way. People’s lives will be held
    hostage to fear until that vis­cer­al expe­ri­ence changes.
    The price for ignor­ing or dis­tort­ing the body’s mes­sages is being unable
    to detect what is tru­ly dan­ger­ous or harm­ful for you and, just as bad, what is
    safe or nour­ish­ing. Self-reg­u­la­tion depends on hav­ing a friend­ly
    rela­tion­ship with your body. With­out it you have to rely on exter­nal
    regulation—from med­ica­tion, drugs like alco­hol, con­stant reas­sur­ance, or
    com­pul­sive com­pli­ance with the wish­es of oth­ers.
    Many of my patients respond to stress not by notic­ing and nam­ing it
    but by devel­op­ing migraine headaches or asth­ma attacks.15 Sandy, a
    mid­dle-aged vis­it­ing nurse, told me she’d felt ter­ri­fied and lone­ly as a child,
    unseen by her alco­holic par­ents. She dealt with this by becom­ing def­er­en­tial
    to every­body she depend­ed on (includ­ing me, her ther­a­pist). When­ev­er her
    hus­band made an insen­si­tive remark, she would come down with an asth­ma
    attack. By the time she noticed that she couldn’t breathe, it was too late for
    an inhaler to be effec­tive, and she had to be tak­en to the emer­gency room.
    Sup­press­ing our inner cries for help does not stop our stress hor­mones
    from mobi­liz­ing the body. Even though Sandy had learned to ignore her
    rela­tion­ship prob­lems and block out her phys­i­cal dis­tress sig­nals, they
    showed up in symp­toms that demand­ed her atten­tion. Her ther­a­py focused
    on iden­ti­fy­ing the link between her phys­i­cal sen­sa­tions and her emo­tions,
    and I also encour­aged her to enroll in a kick­box­ing pro­gram. She had no
    emer­gency room vis­its dur­ing the three years she was my patient.
    Somat­ic symp­toms for which no clear phys­i­cal basis can be found are
    ubiq­ui­tous in trau­ma­tized chil­dren and adults. They can include chron­ic
    back and neck pain, fibromyal­gia, migraines, diges­tive prob­lems, spas­tic
    colon/irritable bow­el syn­drome, chron­ic fatigue, and some forms of
    asthma.16 Trau­ma­tized chil­dren have fifty times the rate of asth­ma as their
    non­trau­ma­tized peers.17 Stud­ies have shown that many chil­dren and adults
    with fatal asth­ma attacks were not aware of hav­ing breath­ing prob­lems
    before the attacks.
    ALEXITHYMIA: NO WORDS FOR FEELINGS
    I had a wid­owed aunt with a painful trau­ma his­to­ry who became an
    hon­orary grand­moth­er to our chil­dren. She came on fre­quent vis­its that
    were marked by much doing—making cur­tains, rear­rang­ing kitchen
    shelves, sewing children’s clothes—and very lit­tle talk­ing. She was always
    eager to please, but it was dif­fi­cult to fig­ure out what she enjoyed. After
    sev­er­al days of exchang­ing pleas­antries, con­ver­sa­tion would come to a halt,
    and I’d have to work hard to fill the long silences. On the last day of her
    vis­its I’d dri­ve her to the air­port, where she’d give me a stiff good-bye hug
    while tears streamed down her face. With­out a trace of irony she’d then
    com­plain that the cold wind at Logan Inter­na­tion­al Air­port made her eyes
    water. Her body felt the sad­ness that her mind couldn’t register—she was
    leav­ing our young fam­i­ly, her clos­est liv­ing rel­a­tives.
    Psy­chi­a­trists call this phe­nom­e­non alexithymia—Greek for not hav­ing
    words for feel­ings. Many trau­ma­tized chil­dren and adults sim­ply can­not
    describe what they are feel­ing because they can­not iden­ti­fy what their
    phys­i­cal sen­sa­tions mean. They may look furi­ous but deny that they are
    angry; they may appear ter­ri­fied but say that they are fine. Not being able to
    dis­cern what is going on inside their bod­ies caus­es them to be out of touch
    with their needs, and they have trou­ble tak­ing care of them­selves, whether it
    involves eat­ing the right amount at the right time or get­ting the sleep they
    need.
    Like my aunt, alex­ithymics sub­sti­tute the lan­guage of action for that of
    emo­tion. When asked, “How would you feel if you saw a truck com­ing at
    you at eighty miles per hour?” most peo­ple would say, “I’d be ter­ri­fied” or
    “I’d be frozen with fear.” An alex­ithymic might reply, “How would I feel? I
    don’t know.… I’d get out of the way.”18 They tend to reg­is­ter emo­tions as
    phys­i­cal prob­lems rather than as sig­nals that some­thing deserves their
    atten­tion. Instead of feel­ing angry or sad, they expe­ri­ence mus­cle pain,
    bow­el irreg­u­lar­i­ties, or oth­er symp­toms for which no cause can be found.
    About three quar­ters of patients with anorex­ia ner­vosa, and more than half
    of all patients with bulim­ia, are bewil­dered by their emo­tion­al feel­ings and
    have great dif­fi­cul­ty describ­ing them.19 When researchers showed pic­tures
    of angry or dis­tressed faces to peo­ple with alex­ithymia, they could not
    fig­ure out what those peo­ple were feeling.20
    One of the first peo­ple who taught me about alex­ithymia was the
    psy­chi­a­trist Hen­ry Krys­tal, who worked with more than a thou­sand
    Holo­caust sur­vivors in his effort to under­stand mas­sive psy­chic trauma.21
    Krys­tal, him­self a con­cen­tra­tion camp sur­vivor, found that many of his
    patients were pro­fes­sion­al­ly suc­cess­ful, but their inti­mate rela­tion­ships were
    bleak and dis­tant. Sup­press­ing their feel­ings had made it pos­si­ble to attend
    to the busi­ness of the world, but at a price. They learned to shut down their
    once over­whelm­ing emo­tions, and, as a result, they no longer rec­og­nized
    what they were feel­ing. Few of them had any inter­est in ther­a­py.
    Paul Frewen at the Uni­ver­si­ty of West­ern Ontario did a series of brain
    scans of peo­ple with PTSD who suf­fered from alex­ithymia. One of the
    par­tic­i­pants told him: “I don’t know what I feel, it’s like my head and body
    aren’t con­nect­ed. I’m liv­ing in a tun­nel, a fog, no mat­ter what hap­pens it’s
    the same reaction—numbness, noth­ing. Hav­ing a bub­ble bath and being
    burned or raped is the same feel­ing. My brain doesn’t feel.” Frewen and his
    col­league Ruth Lanius found that the more peo­ple were out of touch with
    their feel­ings, the less activ­i­ty they had in the self-sens­ing areas of the
    brain.22
    Because trau­ma­tized peo­ple often have trou­ble sens­ing what is going
    on in their bod­ies, they lack a nuanced response to frus­tra­tion. They either
    react to stress by becom­ing “spaced out” or with exces­sive anger. What­ev­er
    their response, they often can’t tell what is upset­ting them. This fail­ure to be
    in touch with their bod­ies con­tributes to their well-doc­u­ment­ed lack of self-
    pro­tec­tion and high rates of revictimization23 and also to their remark­able
    dif­fi­cul­ties feel­ing plea­sure, sen­su­al­i­ty, and hav­ing a sense of mean­ing.
    Peo­ple with alex­ithymia can get bet­ter only by learn­ing to rec­og­nize
    the rela­tion­ship between their phys­i­cal sen­sa­tions and their emo­tions, much
    as col­or­blind peo­ple can only enter the world of col­or by learn­ing to
    dis­tin­guish and appre­ci­ate shades of gray. Like my aunt and Hen­ry
    Krystal’s patients, they usu­al­ly are reluc­tant to do that: Most seem to have
    made an uncon­scious deci­sion that it is bet­ter to keep vis­it­ing doc­tors and
    treat­ing ail­ments that don’t heal than to do the painful work of fac­ing the
    demons of the past.
    DEPERSONALIZATION
    One step fur­ther down on the lad­der to self-obliv­ion is deper­son­al­iza­tion—
    los­ing your sense of your­self. Ute’s brain scan in chap­ter 4 is, in its very
    blank­ness, a vivid illus­tra­tion of deper­son­al­iza­tion. Deper­son­al­iza­tion is
    com­mon dur­ing trau­mat­ic expe­ri­ences. I was once mugged late at night in a
    park close to my home and, float­ing above the scene, saw myself lying in
    the snow with a small head wound, sur­round­ed by three knife-wield­ing
    teenagers. I dis­so­ci­at­ed the pain of their stab wounds on my hands and did
    not feel the slight­est fear as I calm­ly nego­ti­at­ed for the return of my
    emp­tied wal­let.
    I did not devel­op PTSD, part­ly, I think, because I was intense­ly curi­ous
    about hav­ing an expe­ri­ence I had stud­ied so close­ly in oth­ers, and part­ly
    because I had the delu­sion that I would be able make a draw­ing of my
    mug­gers to show to the police. Of course, they were nev­er caught, but my
    fan­ta­sy of revenge must have giv­en me a sat­is­fy­ing sense of agency.
    Trau­ma­tized peo­ple are not so for­tu­nate and feel sep­a­rat­ed from their
    bod­ies. One par­tic­u­lar­ly good descrip­tion of deper­son­al­iza­tion comes from
    the Ger­man psy­cho­an­a­lyst Paul Schilder, writ­ing in Berlin in 1928:24 “To
    the deper­son­al­ized indi­vid­ual the world appears strange, pecu­liar, for­eign,
    dream-like. Objects appear at times strange­ly dimin­ished in size, at times
    flat. Sounds appear to come from a dis­tance.… The emo­tions like­wise
    under­go marked alter­ation. Patients com­plain that they are capa­ble of
    expe­ri­enc­ing nei­ther pain nor plea­sure.… They have become strangers to
    them­selves.”
    I was fas­ci­nat­ed to learn that a group of neu­ro­sci­en­tists at the
    Uni­ver­si­ty of Geneva25 had induced sim­i­lar out-of-body expe­ri­ences by
    deliv­er­ing mild elec­tric cur­rent to a spe­cif­ic spot in the brain, the tem­po­ral
    pari­etal junc­tion. In one patient this pro­duced a sen­sa­tion that she was
    hang­ing from the ceil­ing, look­ing down at her body; in anoth­er it induced
    an eerie feel­ing that some­one was stand­ing behind her. This research
    con­firms what our patients tell us: that the self can be detached from the
    body and live a phan­tom exis­tence on its own. Sim­i­lar­ly, Lanius and
    Frewen, as well as a group of researchers at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Gronin­gen in
    the Netherlands,26 did brain scans on peo­ple who dis­so­ci­at­ed their ter­ror
    and found that the fear cen­ters of the brain sim­ply shut down as they
    recalled the event.
    BEFRIENDING THE BODY
    Trau­ma vic­tims can­not recov­er until they become famil­iar with and
    befriend the sen­sa­tions in their bod­ies. Being fright­ened means that you live
    in a body that is always on guard. Angry peo­ple live in angry bod­ies. The
    bod­ies of child-abuse vic­tims are tense and defen­sive until they find a way
    to relax and feel safe. In order to change, peo­ple need to become aware of
    their sen­sa­tions and the way that their bod­ies inter­act with the world around
    them. Phys­i­cal self-aware­ness is the first step in releas­ing the tyran­ny of the
    past.
    How can peo­ple open up to and explore their inter­nal world of
    sen­sa­tions and emo­tions? In my prac­tice I begin the process by help­ing my
    patients to first notice and then describe the feel­ings in their bodies—not
    emo­tions such as anger or anx­i­ety or fear but the phys­i­cal sen­sa­tions
    beneath the emo­tions: pres­sure, heat, mus­cu­lar ten­sion, tin­gling, cav­ing in,
    feel­ing hol­low, and so on. I also work on iden­ti­fy­ing the sen­sa­tions
    asso­ci­at­ed with relax­ation or plea­sure. I help them become aware of their
    breath, their ges­tures and move­ments. I ask them to pay atten­tion to sub­tle
    shifts in their bod­ies, such as tight­ness in their chests or gnaw­ing in their
    bel­lies, when they talk about neg­a­tive events that they claim did not both­er
    them.
    Notic­ing sen­sa­tions for the first time can be quite dis­tress­ing, and it
    may pre­cip­i­tate flash­backs in which peo­ple curl up or assume defen­sive
    pos­tures. These are somat­ic reen­act­ments of the undi­gest­ed trau­ma and
    most like­ly rep­re­sent the pos­tures they assumed when the trau­ma occurred.
    Images and phys­i­cal sen­sa­tions may del­uge patients at this point, and the
    ther­a­pist must be famil­iar with ways to stem tor­rents of sen­sa­tion and
    emo­tion to pre­vent them from becom­ing retrau­ma­tized by access­ing the
    past. (School­teach­ers, nurs­es, and police offi­cers are often very skilled at
    sooth­ing ter­ror reac­tions because many of them are con­front­ed almost dai­ly
    with out-of-con­trol or painful­ly dis­or­ga­nized peo­ple.)
    All too often, how­ev­er, drugs such as Abil­i­fy, Zyprexa, and Sero­quel,
    are pre­scribed instead of teach­ing peo­ple the skills to deal with such
    dis­tress­ing phys­i­cal reac­tions. Of course, med­ica­tions only blunt sen­sa­tions
    and do noth­ing to resolve them or trans­form them from tox­ic agents into
    allies.
    The most nat­ur­al way for human beings to calm them­selves when they
    are upset is by cling­ing to anoth­er per­son. This means that patients who
    have been phys­i­cal­ly or sex­u­al­ly vio­lat­ed face a dilem­ma: They des­per­ate­ly
    crave touch while simul­ta­ne­ous­ly being ter­ri­fied of body con­tact. The mind
    needs to be reed­u­cat­ed to feel phys­i­cal sen­sa­tions, and the body needs to be
    helped to tol­er­ate and enjoy the com­forts of touch. Indi­vid­u­als who lack
    emo­tion­al aware­ness are able, with prac­tice, to con­nect their phys­i­cal
    sen­sa­tions to psy­cho­log­i­cal events. Then they can slow­ly recon­nect with
    themselves.27
    CONNECTING WITH YOURSELF, CONNECTING WITH
    OTHERS
    I’ll end this chap­ter with one final study that demon­strates the cost of los­ing
    your body. After Ruth Lanius and her group scanned the idling brain, they
    focused on anoth­er ques­tion from every­day life: What hap­pens in
    chron­i­cal­ly trau­ma­tized peo­ple when they make face-to-face con­tact?
    Many patients who come to my office are unable to make eye con­tact. I
    imme­di­ate­ly know how dis­tressed they are by their dif­fi­cul­ty meet­ing my
    gaze. It always turns out that they feel dis­gust­ing and that they can’t stand
    hav­ing me see how despi­ca­ble they are. It nev­er occurred to me that these
    intense feel­ings of shame would be reflect­ed in abnor­mal brain acti­va­tion.
    Ruth Lanius once again showed that mind and brain are indis­tin­guish­able—
    what hap­pens in one is reg­is­tered in the oth­er.

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