The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma
14. LANGUAGE: MIRACLE AND TYRANNY
by testsuphomeAdminYou 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.
I
CHAPTER 14
LANGUAGE: MIRACLE AND
TYRANNY
Give sorrow words; the grief that does not speak knits up the o’er
wrought heart and bids it break.
—William Shakespeare, Macbeth
We can hardly bear to look. The shadow may carry the best of the
life we have not lived. Go into the basement, the attic, the refuse
bin. Find gold there. Find an animal who has not been fed or
watered. It is you!! This neglected, exiled animal, hungry for
attention, is a part of your self.
—Marion Woodman (as quoted by Stephen Cope in The Great Work of Your Life)
n September 2001 several organizations, including the National Institutes
of Health, Pfizer pharmaceuticals, and the New York Times Company
Foundation, organized expert panels to recommend the best treatments for
people traumatized by the attacks on the World Trade Center. Because
many widely used trauma interventions had never been carefully evaluated
in random communities (as opposed to patients who seek psychiatric help),
I thought that this presented an extraordinary opportunity to compare how
well a variety of different approaches would work. My colleagues were
more conservative, and after lengthy deliberations the committees
recommended only two forms of treatment: psychoanalytically oriented
therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy. Why analytic talk therapy? Since
Manhattan is one of the last bastions of Freudian psychoanalysis, it would
have been bad politics to exclude a substantial proportion of local mental
health practitioners. Why CBT? Because behavioral treatment can be
broken down into concrete steps and “manualized” into uniform protocols,
it is the favorite treatment of academic researchers, another group that could
not be ignored. After the recommendations were approved, we sat back and
waited for New Yorkers to find their way to therapists’ offices. Almost
nobody showed up.
Dr. Spencer Eth, who ran the psychiatry department at the now-defunct
St. Vincent’s Hospital in Greenwich Village, was curious where survivors
had turned for help, and early in 2002, together with some medical students,
he conducted a survey of 225 people who had escaped from the Twin
Towers. Asked what had been most helpful in overcoming the effects of
their experience, the survivors credited acupuncture, massage, yoga, and
EMDR, in that order.1 Among rescue workers, massages were particularly
popular. Eth’s survey suggests that the most helpful interventions focused
on relieving the physical burdens generated by trauma. The disparity
between the survivors’ experience and the experts’ recommendations is
intriguing. Of course, we don’t know how many survivors eventually did
seek out more traditional therapies. But the apparent lack of interest in talk
therapy raises a basic question: What good is it to talk about your trauma?
THE UNSPEAKABLE TRUTH
Therapists have an undying faith in the capacity of talk to resolve trauma.
That confidence dates back to 1893, when Freud (and his mentor, Breuer)
wrote that trauma “immediately and permanently disappeared when we had
succeeded in bringing clearly to light the memory of the event by which it
was provoked and in arousing its accompanying affect, and when the
patient had described that event in the greatest possible detail and had put
the affect into words.”2
Unfortunately, it’s not so simple: Traumatic events are almost
impossible to put into words. This is true for all of us, not just for people
who suffer from PTSD. The initial imprints of the events of September 11
were not stories but images: frantic people running down the street, their
faces covered with ash; an airplane smashing into Tower One of the World
Trade Center; the distant specks that were people jumping hand in hand.
Those images were replayed over and over, in our minds and on the TV
screen, until Mayor Giuliani and the media helped us create a narrative we
could share with one another.
In Seven Pillars of Wisdom T. E. Lawrence wrote of his war
experiences: “We learned that there were pangs too sharp, griefs too deep,
ecstasies too high for our finite selves to register. When emotion reached
this pitch the mind choked; and memory went white till the circumstances
were humdrum once more.”3 While trauma keeps us dumbfounded, the path
out of it is paved with words, carefully assembled, piece by piece, until the
whole story can be revealed.
BREAKING THE SILENCE
Activists in the early campaign for AIDS awareness created a powerful
slogan: “Silence = Death.” Silence about trauma also leads to death—the
death of the soul. Silence reinforces the godforsaken isolation of trauma.
Being able to say aloud to another human being, “I was raped” or “I was
battered by my husband” or “My parents called it discipline, but it was
abuse” or “I’m not making it since I got back from Iraq,” is a sign that
healing can begin.
We may think we can control our grief, our terror, or our shame by
remaining silent, but naming offers the possibility of a different kind of
control. When Adam was put in charge of the animal kingdom in the Book
of Genesis, his first act was to give a name to every living creature.
If you’ve been hurt, you need to acknowledge and name what happened
to you. I know that from personal experience: As long as I had no place
where I could let myself know what it was like when my father locked me
in the cellar of our house for various three-year-old offenses, I was
chronically preoccupied with being exiled and abandoned. Only when I
could talk about how that little boy felt, only when I could forgive him for
having been as scared and submissive as he was, did I start to enjoy the
pleasure of my own company. Feeling listened to and understood changes
our physiology; being able to articulate a complex feeling, and having our
feelings recognized, lights up our limbic brain and creates an “aha
moment.” In contrast, being met by silence and incomprehension kills the
spirit. Or, as John Bowlby so memorably put it: “What can not be spoken to
the [m]other cannot be told to the self.”
If you hide from yourself the fact that an uncle molested you when you
were young, you are vulnerable to react to triggers like an animal in a
thunderstorm: with a full-body response to the hormones that signal
“danger.” Without language and context, your awareness may be limited to:
“I’m scared.” Yet, determined to stay in control, you are likely to avoid
anybody or anything that reminds you even vaguely of your trauma. You
may also alternate between being inhibited and being uptight or reactive
and explosive—all without knowing why.
As long as you keep secrets and suppress information, you are
fundamentally at war with yourself. Hiding your core feelings takes an
enormous amount of energy, it saps your motivation to pursue worthwhile
goals, and it leaves you feeling bored and shut down. Meanwhile, stress
hormones keep flooding your body, leading to headaches, muscle aches,
problems with your bowels or sexual functions—and irrational behaviors
that may embarrass you and hurt the people around you. Only after you
identify the source of these responses can you start using your feelings as
signals of problems that require your urgent attention.
Ignoring inner reality also eats away at your sense of self, identity, and
purpose. Clinical psychologist Edna Foa and her colleagues developed the
Posttraumatic Cognitions Inventory to assess how patients think about
themselves.4 Symptoms of PTSD often include statements like “I feel dead
inside,” “I will never be able to feel normal emotions again,” “I have
permanently changed for the worse,” “I feel like an object, not like a
person,” “I have no future,” and “I feel like I don’t know myself anymore.”
The critical issue is allowing yourself to know what you know. That
takes an enormous amount of courage. In What It Is Like to Go to War,
Vietnam veteran Karl Marlantes grapples with his memories of belonging to
a brilliantly effective Marine combat unit and confronts the terrible split he
discovered inside himself:
For years I was unaware of the need to heal that split, and there
was no one, after I returned, to point this out to me.… Why did I
assume there was only one person inside me? … There’s a part of
me that just loves maiming, killing, and torturing. This part of me
isn’t all of me. I have other elements that indeed are just the
opposite, of which I am proud. So am I a killer? No, but part of me
is. Am I a torturer? No, but part of me is. Do I feel horror and
sadness when I read in the newspapers of an abused child? Yes.
But am I fascinated?5
Marlantes tells us that his road to recovery required learning to tell the
truth, even if that truth was brutally painful.
Death, destruction, and sorrow need to be constantly justified in the
absence of some overarching meaning for the suffering. Lack of this
overarching meaning encourages making things up, lying, to fill the gap in
meaning.6
I’d never been able to tell anyone what was going on inside. So I
forced these images back, away, for years. I began to reintegrate
that split-off part of my experience only after I actually began to
imagine that kid as a kid, my kid perhaps. Then, out came this
overwhelming sadness—and healing. Integrating the feelings of
sadness, rage, or all of the above with the action should be
standard operating procedure for all soldiers who have killed face-
to-face. It requires no sophisticated psychological training. Just
form groups under a fellow squad or platoon member who has had
a few days of group leadership training and encourage people to
talk.7
Getting perspective on your terror and sharing it with others can
reestablish the feeling that you are a member of the human race. After the
Vietnam veterans I treated joined a therapy group where they could share
the atrocities they had witnessed and committed, they reported beginning to
open their hearts to their girlfriends.
THE MIRACLE OF SELF-DISCOVERY
Discovering your Self in language is always an epiphany, even if finding
the words to describe your inner reality can be an agonizing process. That is
why I find Helen Keller’s account of how she was “born into language”8 so
inspiring.
When Helen was nineteen months old and just starting to talk, a viral
infection robbed her of her sight and hearing. Now deaf, blind, and mute,
this lovely, lively child turned into an untamed, isolated creature. After five
desperate years her family invited a partially blind teacher, Anne Sullivan,
to come from Boston to their home in rural Alabama as Helen’s tutor. Anne
began immediately to teach Helen the manual alphabet, spelling words into
her hand letter by letter, but it took ten weeks of trying to connect with this
wild child before the breakthrough occurred. It came as Anne spelled the
word “water” into one of Helen’s hands while she held the other under the
water pump.
Helen later recalled that moment in The Story of My Life: “Water! That
word startled my soul, and it awoke, full of the spirit of the morning.…
Until that day my mind had been like a darkened chamber, waiting for
words to enter and light the lamp, which is thought. I learned a great many
words that day.”
Learning the names of things enabled the child not only to create an
inner representation of the invisible and inaudible physical reality around
her but also to find herself: Six months later she started to use the first-
person “I.”
Helen’s story reminds me of the abused, recalcitrant, uncommunicative
kids we see in our residential treatment programs. Before she acquired
language, she was bewildered and self-centered—looking back, she called
that creature “Phantom.” And indeed, our kids come across as phantoms
until they can discover who they are and feel safe enough to communicate
what is going on with them.
In a later book, The World I Live In, Keller again described her birth
into selfhood: “Before my teacher came to me, I did not know that I am. I
lived in a world that was a no-world.… I had neither will nor intellect.…
I can remember all this, not because I knew that it was so, but because I
have tactual memory. It enables me to remember that I never contracted my
forehead in the act of thinking.”9
Helen’s “tactual” memories—memories based only on touch—could
not be shared. But language opened up the possibility of joining a
community. At age eight, when Helen went with Anne to the Perkins
Institution for the Blind in Boston (where Sullivan herself had trained), she
became able to communicate with other children for the first time: “Oh,
what happiness!” she wrote. “To talk freely with other children! To feel at
home in the great world!”
Helen’s discovery of language with the help of Anne Sullivan captures
the essence of a therapeutic relationship: finding words where words were
absent before and, as a result, being able to share your deepest pain and
deepest feelings with another human being. This is one of most profound
experiences we can have, and such resonance, in which hitherto unspoken
words can be discovered, uttered, and received, is fundamental to healing
the isolation of trauma—especially if other people in our lives have ignored
or silenced us. Communicating fully is the opposite of being traumatized.
KNOWING YOURSELF OR TELLING YOUR STORY?
OUR DUAL AWARENESS SYSTEM
Anyone who enters talk therapy, however, almost immediately confronts the
limitations of language. This was true of my own psychoanalysis. While I
talk easily and can tell interesting tales, I quickly realized how difficult it
was to feel my feelings deeply and simultaneously report them to someone
else. When I got in touch with the most intimate, painful, or confusing
moments of my life, I often found myself faced with a choice: I could either
focus on reliving old scenes in my mind’s eye and let myself feel what I had
felt back then, or I could tell my analyst logically and coherently what had
transpired. When I chose the latter, I would quickly lose touch with myself
and start to focus on his opinion of what I was telling him. The slightest
hint of doubt or judgment would shut me down, and I would shift my
attention to regaining his approval.
Since then neuroscience research has shown that we possess two
distinct forms of self-awareness: one that keeps track of the self across time
and one that registers the self in the present moment. The first, our
autobiographical self, creates connections among experiences and
assembles them into a coherent story. This system is rooted in language.
Our narratives change with the telling, as our perspective changes and as we
incorporate new input.
The other system, moment-to-moment self-awareness, is based
primarily in physical sensations, but if we feel safe are not rushed, we can
find words to communicate that experience as well. These two ways of
knowing are localized in different parts of the brain that are largely
disconnected from each other.10 Only the system devoted to self-awareness,
which is based in the medial prefrontal cortex, can change the emotional
brain.
In the groups I used to lead for veterans, I could sometimes see these
two systems working side by side. The soldiers told horrible tales of death
and destruction, but I noticed that their bodies often simultaneously radiated
a sense of pride and belonging. Similarly, many patients tell me about the
happy families they grew up in while their bodies are slumped over and
their voices sound anxious and uptight. One system creates a story for
public consumption, and if we tell that story often enough, we are likely to
start believing that it contains the whole truth. But the other system registers
a different truth: how we experience the situation deep inside. It is this
second system that needs to be accessed, befriended, and reconciled.
Just recently at my teaching hospital, a group of psychiatric residents
and I interviewed a young woman with temporal lobe epilepsy who was
being evaluated following a suicide attempt. The residents asked her
standard questions about her symptoms, the medications she was taking,
how old she was when the diagnosis was made, what had made her try to
kill herself. She responded in a flat, matter-of-fact voice: She’d been five
when she was diagnosed. She’d lost her job; she knew she’d been faking it;
she felt worthless. For some reason one of the residents asked whether she
had been sexually abused. That question surprised me: She had given us no
indication that she had had problems with intimacy or sexuality, and I
wondered if the doctor was pursuing a private agenda.
Yet the story our patient told did not explain why she had fallen apart
after losing her job. So I asked her what it had been like for that five-year-
old girl to be told that something was wrong with her brain. That forced her
to check in with herself, as she had no ready-made script for that question.
In a subdued tone of voice she told us that the worst part of her diagnosis
was that afterward her father wanted nothing more to do with her: “He just
saw me as a defective child.” Nobody had supported her, she said, so she
basically had to manage by herself.
I then asked her how she felt now about that little girl with newly
diagnosed epilepsy who was left on her own. Instead of crying for her
loneliness or being angry about the lack of support, she said fiercely: “She
was stupid, whiny, and dependent. She should have stepped up to the plate
and sucked it up.” That passion obviously came from the part of her that
had valiantly tried to cope with her distress, and I acknowledged that it
probably had helped her survive back then. I asked her to allow that
frightened, abandoned girl to tell her what it had been like to be all alone,
her illness compounded by family rejection. She started to sob and kept
quiet for a long time until finally she said: “No, she did not deserve that.
She should have been supported; somebody should have looked after her.”
Then she shifted again and proudly told me about her accomplishments—
how much she’d achieved despite that lack of support. Public story and
inner experience finally met.
THE BODY IS THE BRIDGE
Trauma stories lessen the isolation of trauma, and they provide an
explanation for why people suffer the way they do. They allow doctors to
make diagnoses, so that they can address problems like insomnia, rage,
nightmares, or numbing. Stories can also provide people with a target to
blame. Blaming is a universal human trait that helps people feel good while
feeling bad, or, as my old teacher Elvin Semrad used to say: “Hate makes
the world go round.” But stories also obscure a more important issue,
namely, that trauma radically changes people: that in fact they no longer are
“themselves.”
It is excruciatingly difficult to put that feeling of no longer being
yourself into words. Language evolved primarily to share “things out
there,” not to communicate our inner feelings, our interiority. (Again, the
language center of the brain is about as far removed from the center for
experiencing one’s self as is geographically possible.) Most of us are better
at describing someone else than we are at describing ourselves. As I once
heard Harvard psychologist Jerome Kagan say: “The task of describing
most private experiences can be likened to reaching down to a deep well to
pick up small fragile crystal figures while you are wearing thick leather
mittens.”11
We can get past the slipperiness of words by engaging the self-
observing, body-based self system, which speaks through sensations, tone
of voice, and body tensions. Being able to perceive visceral sensations is
the very foundation of emotional awareness.12 If a patient tells me that he
was eight when his father deserted the family, I am likely to stop and ask
him to check in with himself: What happens inside when he tells me about
that boy who never saw his father again? Where is it registered in his body?
When you activate your gut feelings and listen to your heartbreak—when
you follow the interoceptive pathways to your innermost recesses—things
begin to change.
WRITING TO YOURSELF
There are other ways to access your inner world of feelings. One of the
most effective is through writing. Most of us have poured out our hearts in
angry, accusatory, plaintive, or sad letters after people have betrayed or
abandoned us. Doing so almost always makes us feel better, even if we
never send them. When you write to yourself, you don’t have to worry
about other people’s judgment—you just listen to your own thoughts and let
their flow take over. Later, when you reread what you wrote, you often
discover surprising truths.
As functioning members of society, we’re supposed to be “cool” in our
day-to-day interactions and subordinate our feelings to the task at hand.
When we talk with someone with whom we don’t feel completely safe, our
social editor jumps in on full alert and our guard is up. Writing is different.
If you ask your editor to leave you alone for a while, things will come out
that you had no idea were there. You are free to go into a sort of a trance
state in which your pen (or keyboard) seems to channel whatever bubbles
up from inside. You can connect those self-observing and narrative parts of
your brain without worrying about the reception you’ll get.
In the practice called free writing, you can use any object as your own
personal Rorschach test for entering a stream of associations. Simply write
the first thing that comes to your mind as you look at the object in front of
you and then keep going without stopping, rereading, or crossing out. A
wooden spoon on the counter may trigger memories of making tomato
sauce with your grandmother—or of being beaten as a child. The teapot
that’s been passed down for generations may take you meandering to the
furthest reaches of your mind to the loved ones you’ve lost or family
holidays that were a mix of love and conflict. Soon an image will emerge,
then a memory, and then a paragraph to record it. Whatever shows up on the
paper will be a manifestation of associations that are uniquely yours.
My patients often bring in fragments of writing and drawings about
memories that they may not yet be ready to discuss. Reading the content out
loud would probably overwhelm them, but they want me to be aware of
what they are wrestling with. I tell them how much I appreciate their
courage in allowing themselves to explore hitherto hidden parts of
themselves and in entrusting me with them. These tentative
communications guide my treatment plan—for example, by helping me to
decide whether to add somatic processing, neurofeedback, or EMDR to our
current work.
As far as I’m aware, the first systematic test of the power of language
to relieve trauma was done in 1986, when James Pennebaker at the
University of Texas in Austin turned his introductory psychology class into
an experimental laboratory. Pennebaker started off with a healthy respect
for the importance of inhibition, of keeping things to yourself, which he
viewed as the glue of civilization.13 But he also assumed that people pay a
price for trying to suppress being aware of the elephant in the room.
He began by asking each student to identify a deeply personal
experience that they’d found very stressful or traumatic. He then divided
the class into three groups: One would write about what was currently
going on in their lives; the second would write about the details of the
traumatic or stressful event; and the third would recount the facts of the
experience, their feelings and emotions about it, and what impact they
thought this event had had on their lives. All of the students wrote
continuously for fifteen minutes on four consecutive days while sitting
alone in a small cubicle in the psychology building.
The students took the study very seriously; many revealed secrets that
they had never told anyone. They often cried as they wrote, and many
confided in the course assistants that they’d become preoccupied with these
experiences. Of the two hundred participants, sixty-five wrote about a
childhood trauma. Although the death of a family member was the most
frequent topic, 22 percent of the women and 10 percent of the men reported
sexual trauma prior to the age of seventeen.
The researchers asked the students about their health and were
surprised how often the students spontaneously reported histories of major
and minor health problems: cancer, high blood pressure, ulcers, flu,
headaches, and earaches.14 Those who reported a traumatic sexual
experience in childhood had been hospitalized an average of 1.7 days in the
previous year—almost twice the rate of the others.
The team then compared the number of visits to the student health
center participants had made during the month prior to the study to the
number in the month following it. The group that had written about both the
facts and the emotions related to their trauma clearly benefited the most:
They had a 50 percent drop in doctor visits compared with the other two
groups. Writing about their deepest thoughts and feelings about traumas had
improved their mood and resulted in a more optimistic attitude and better
physical health.
When the students themselves were asked to assess the study, they
focused on how it had increased their self-understanding: “It helped me
think about what I felt during those times. I never realized how it affected
me before.” “I had to think and resolve past experiences. One result of the
experiment was peace of mind. To have to write about emotions and
feelings helped me understand how I felt and why.”15
In a subsequent study Pennebaker asked half of a group of seventy-two
students to talk into a tape recorder about the most traumatic experience of
their lives; the other half discussed their plans for the rest of the day. As
they spoke, researchers monitored their physiological reactions: blood
pleasure, heart rate, muscle tension, and hand temperature.16 This study had
similar results: Those who allowed themselves to feel their emotions
showed significant physiological changes, both immediate and long term.
During their confessions blood pressure, heart rate, and other autonomic
functions increased, but afterward their arousal fell to levels below where
they had been at the start of the study. The drop in blood pressure could still
be measured six weeks after the experiment ended.
It is now widely accepted that stressful experiences—whether divorce
or final exams or loneliness—have a negative effect on immune function,
but this was a highly controversial notion at the time of Pennebaker’s study.
Building on his protocols, a team of researchers at the Ohio State University
College of Medicine compared two groups of students who wrote either
about a personal trauma or about a superficial topic.17 Again, those who
wrote about personal traumas had fewer visits to the student health center,
and their improved health correlated with improved immune function, as
measured by the action of T lymphocytes (natural killer cells) and other
immune markers in the blood. This effect was most obvious directly after
the experiment, but it could still be the detected six weeks later. Writing
experiments from around the world, with grade school students, nursing
home residents, medical students, maximum-security prisoners, arthritis
sufferers, new mothers, and rape victims, consistently show that writing
about upsetting events improves physical and mental health.
Another aspect of Pennebaker’s studies caught my attention: When his
subjects talked about intimate or difficult issues, they often changed their
tone of voice and speaking style. The differences were so striking that
Pennebaker wondered if he had mixed up his tapes. For example, one
woman described her plans for the day in a childlike, high-pitched voice,
but a few minutes later, when she described stealing one hundred dollars
from an open cash register, both the volume and pitch of her voice became
so much lower that she sounded like an entirely different person.
Alterations in emotional states were also reflected in the subjects’
handwriting. As participants changed topics, they might move from cursive
to block letters and back to cursive; there were also variations in the slant of
the letters and in the pressure of their pens.
Such changes are called “switching” in clinical practice, and we see
them often in individuals with trauma histories. Patients activate distinctly
different emotional and physiological states as they move from one topic to
another. Switching manifests not only as remarkably different vocal patterns
but also in different facial expressions and body movements. Some patients
even appear to change their personal identity, from timid to forceful and
aggressive or from anxiously compliant to starkly seductive. When they
write about their deepest fears, their handwriting often becomes more
childlike and primitive.
If patients who present in such dramatically different states are treated
as fakes, or if they are told to stop showing their unpredictably annoying
parts, they are likely to become mute. They probably will continue to seek
help, but after they have been silenced they will transmit their cries for help
not by talking but by acting: with suicide attempts, depression, and rage
attacks. As we will see in chapter 17, they will improve only if both patient
and therapist appreciate the roles that these different states have played in
their survival.
ART, MUSIC, AND DANCE
There are thousands of art, music, and dance therapists who do beautiful
work with abused children, soldiers suffering from PTSD, incest victims,
refugees, and torture survivors, and numerous accounts attest to the
effectiveness of expressive therapies.18 However, at this point we know
very little about how they work or about the specific aspects of traumatic
stress they address, and it would present an enormous logistical and
financial challenge to do the research necessary to establish their value
scientifically.
The capacity of art, music, and dance to circumvent the speechlessness
that comes with terror may be one reason they are used as trauma
treatments in cultures around the world. One of the few systematic studies
to compare nonverbal artistic expression with writing was done by James
Pennebaker and Anne Krantz, a San Francisco dance and movement
therapist.19 One-third of a group of sixty-four students was asked to
disclose a personal traumatic experience through expressive body
movements for at least ten minutes a day for three consecutive days and
then to write about it for another ten minutes. A second group danced but
did not write about their trauma, and a third group engaged in a routine
exercise program. Over the three following months members of all groups
reported that they felt happier and healthier. However, only the expressive
movement group that also wrote showed objective evidence: better physical
health and an improved grade-point average. (The study did not evaluate
specific PTSD symptoms.) Pennebaker and Krantz concluded: “The mere
expression of the trauma is not sufficient. Health does appear to require
translating experiences into language.”
However, we still do not know whether this conclusion—that language
is essential to healing—is, in fact, always true. Writing studies that have
focused on PTSD symptoms (as opposed to general health) have been
disappointing. When I discussed this with Pennebaker, he cautioned me that
most writing studies of PTSD patients have been done in group settings
where participants were expected to share their stories. He reiterated the
point I’ve made above—that the object of writing is to write to yourself, to
let your self know what you have been trying to avoid.
THE LIMITS OF LANGUAGE
Trauma overwhelms listeners as well as speakers. In The Great War in
Modern Memory, his masterful study of World War I, Paul Fussell
comments brilliantly on the zone of silence that trauma creates:
One of the cruxes of war … is the collision between events and
the language available—or thought appropriate—to describe
them.… Logically there is no reason why the English language
could not perfectly well render the actuality of … warfare: it is
rich in terms like blood, terror, agony, madness, shit, cruelty,
murder, sell-out, pain and hoax, as well as phrases like legs blown
off, intestines gushing out over his hands, screaming all night,
bleeding to death from the rectum, and the like.… The problem
was less one of “language” than of gentility and optimism.… The
real reason [that soldiers fall silent] is that soldiers have discovered
that no one is very interested in the bad news they have to report.
What listener wants to be torn and shaken when he doesn’t have to
be? We have made unspeakable mean indescribable: it really
means nasty.20
Talking about painful events doesn’t necessarily establish community
—often quite the contrary. Families and organizations may reject members
who air the dirty laundry; friends and family can lose patience with people
who get stuck in their grief or hurt. This is one reason why trauma victims
often withdraw and why their stories become rote narratives, edited into a
form least likely to provoke rejection.
It is an enormous challenge to find safe places to express the pain of
trauma, which is why survivor groups like Alcoholics Anonymous, Adult
Children of Alcoholics, Narcotics Anonymous, and other support groups
can be so critical. Finding a responsive community in which to tell your
truth makes recovery possible. That is also why survivors need professional
therapists who are trained to listen to the agonizing details of their lives. I
recall the first time a veteran told me about killing a child in Vietnam. I had
a vivid flashback to when I was about seven years old and my father told
me that a child next door had been beaten to death by Nazi soldiers in front
of our house for showing a lack of respect. My reaction to the veteran’s
confession was too much to bear, and I had to end the session. That is why
therapists need to have done their own intensive therapy, so they can take
care of themselves and remain emotionally available to their patients, even
when their patients’ stories arouse feelings of rage or revulsion.
A different problem arises when trauma victims themselves become
literally speechless—when the language area of the brain shuts down.21 I
have seen this shutdown in the courtroom in many immigration cases and
also in a case brought against a perpetrator of mass slaughter in Rwanda.
When asked to testify about their experiences, victims often become so
overwhelmed that they are barely able to speak or are hijacked into such
panic that they can’t clearly articulate what happened to them. Their
testimony is often dismissed as being too chaotic, confused, and fragmented
to be credible.
Others try to recount their history in a way that keeps them from being
triggered. This can make them come across as evasive and unreliable
witnesses. I have seen dozens of legal cases dismissed because asylum
seekers were unable to give coherent accounts of their reasons for fleeing.
I’ve also known numerous veterans whose claims were denied by the
Veterans Administration because they could not tell precisely what had
happened to them.
Confusion and mutism are routine in therapy offices: We fully expect
that our patients will become overwhelmed if we keep pressing them for the
details of their story. For that reason we’ve learned to “pendulate” our
approach to trauma, to use a term coined by my friend Peter Levine. We
don’t avoid confronting the details, but we teach our patients how to safely
dip one toe in the water and then take it out again, thus approaching the
truth gradually.
We start by establishing inner “islands of safety” within the body.22
This means helping patients identify parts of the body, postures, or
movements where they can ground themselves whenever they feel stuck,
terrified, or enraged. These parts usually lie outside the reach of the vagus
nerve, which carries the messages of panic to the chest, abdomen, and
throat, and they can serve as allies in integrating the trauma. I might ask a
patient if her hands feel okay, and if she says yes, I’ll ask her to move them,
exploring their lightness and warmth and flexibility. Later, if I see her chest
tighten and her breath almost disappear, I can stop her and ask her to focus
on her hands and move them, so that she can feel herself as separate from
the trauma. Or I might ask her to focus on her out breath and notice how she
can change it, or ask her to lift her arms up and down with each breath—a
qigong movement.
For some patients tapping acupressure points is a good anchor.23 I ask
others to feel the weight of their body in the chair or to plant their feet on
the floor. I might ask a patient who is collapsing into silence to see what
happens when he sits up straight. Some patients discover their own islands
of safety—they begin to “get” that they can create body sensations to
counterbalance feeling out of control. This sets the stage for trauma
resolution: pendulating between states of exploration and safety, between
language and body, between remembering the past and feeling alive in the
present.
DEALING WITH REALITY
Dealing with traumatic memories is, however, just the beginning of
treatment. Numerous studies have found that people with PTSD have more
general problems with focused attention and with learning new
information.24 Alexander McFarlane did a simple test: He asked a group of
people to name as many words beginning with the letter B as they could in
one minute. Normal subjects averaged fifteen words; those with PTSD
averaged three or four. Normal subjects hesitated when they saw
threatening words like “blood,” “wound,” or “rape”; McFarlane’s PTSD
subjects reacted just as hesitantly to ordinary words like “wool,” “ice
cream,” and “bicycle.”25
After a while most people with PTSD don’t spend a great deal of time
or effort on dealing with the past—their problem is simply making it
through the day. Even traumatized patients who are making real
contributions in teaching, business, medicine, or the arts and who are
successfully raising their children expend a lot more energy on the everyday
tasks of living than do ordinary mortals.
Yet another pitfall of language is the illusion that our thinking can
easily be corrected if it doesn’t “make sense.” The “cognitive” part of
cognitive behavioral therapy focuses on changing such “dysfunctional
thinking.” This is a top-down approach to change in which the therapist
challenges or “reframes” negative cognitions, as in “Let’s compare your
feelings that you are to blame for your rape with the actual facts of the
matter” or “Let’s compare your terror of driving with the statistics about
road safety today.”
I’m reminded of the distraught woman who once came to our clinic
asking for help with her two-month-old because the baby was “so selfish.”
Would she have benefited from a fact sheet on child development or an
explanation of the concept of altruism? Such information would be unlikely
to help her until she gained access to the frightened, abandoned parts of
herself—the parts expressed by her terror of dependence.
There is no question traumatized people have irrational thoughts: “I
was to blame for being so sexy.” “The other guys weren’t afraid—they’re
real men.” “I should have known better than to walk down that street.” It’s
best to treat those thoughts as cognitive flashbacks—you don’t argue with
them any more than you would argue with someone who keeps having
visual flashbacks of a terrible accident. They are residues of traumatic
incidents: thoughts they were thinking when, or shortly after, the traumas
occurred that are reactivated under stressful conditions. A better way to
treat them is with EMDR, the subject of the following chapter.
BECOMING SOME BODY
The reason people become overwhelmed by telling their stories, and the
reason they have cognitive flashbacks, is that their brains have changed. As
Freud and Breuer observed, trauma does not simply act as a releasing agent
for symptoms. Rather, “the psychical trauma—or more precisely the
memory of the trauma—acts like a foreign body which long after its entry
must continue to be regarded as an agent that still is at work.”26 Like a
splinter that causes an infection, it is the body’s response to the foreign
object that becomes the problem more than the object itself.
Modern neuroscience solidly supports Freud’s notion that many of our
conscious thoughts are complex rationalizations for the flood of instincts,
reflexes, motives, and deep-seated memories that emanate from the
unconscious. As we have seen, trauma interferes with the proper
functioning of brain areas that manage and interpret experience. A robust
sense of self—one that allows a person to state confidently, “This is what I
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