He is correct on so many levels that I really hope this gets out to everyone in time. His insights from the wisdom he has gained from his understanding of his innerworld and outer world is breathtaking. Being able to listen to him and understand what he has to say is very very critically important right now more then ever.
This is profoundly insightful. I'm a surgeon, but I see a lot of patients with chronic pain issues, body image issues, etc and often if you dig a little bit with simple questions, you'll find trauma. It's a wrecking ball that destroys people slowly and silently.
I am a CSA survivor. I was coming out of anesthesia & they were removing my Foley. I started swinging. Anesthesiologists never conceptualize their patients. 1 in 4 women have been s-xually assaulted.
Thank you for sharing your perspective. It's crucial to recognize the deep-seated impact trauma can have on physical health. Your insight as a surgeon sheds light on the importance of addressing mental health alongside physical ailments.
And this is why I think more people should think harder about having children. I see so much unresolved trauma in parents around me. You are ABSOLUTELY messing your kids up. Deal with your shit before having kids so that the kid doesn't have to spend a lifetime undoing all the damage you caused.
Then, their children will go to school and bullied other normal children. Next, they will complain those be bullied children must do something wrong to trigger their children.
@MengHuaHung Of course. But a child that is a bully does not know he/ she needs to see a therapist. That is the parents' responsibility. And, furthermore, it is our responsibility as adults to heal our traumas. But you cannot expect a child to know/ do that.
Both myself and my husband were abused as young children. We are not having kids, for me the realisation I had been abused put me into a deep depression, after being depressed from age 6. I couldn’t willingly bring a child into my darkness and now I am hitting 40 and feel like I am finally moving out of the darkness I am thankful we didnt have children.
Trauma puts us in survival mode. Because we've experienced bad things, harm, etc. our nervous system gets stuck in hypervigilance / hyper alertness, etc. to keep us from further harm. It's just our body doing its job, trying to protect us and ensure our survival. However, we weren't designed to be in some kind of a life or death situation avoidance mode 24/7. When we don't get out of these survival modes, other important processes in the body get neglected; digestion, growth, fighting against disease, healing, learning, etc. That's why trauma and the resulting chronic survival mode can eventually cause all kinds of health problems or chronic illnesses. A combination of psychotherapy and somatic therapy works wonders for breaking these patterns and getting our health back.
Very well said. I'm finally addressing this in my own life and have realized I'm strong as hell, but need to set these psychological burdens down. Lifting weights, walking often, a healthy plant-strong diet, somatic massage, sleep, and learning through guests like this have helped so much and I'm digging out of this 45-year rut. So happy to feel like I've found a path, but it's hard daily work and small daily habits.
You're exactly right and that is what happened to me. I've been in a brain retraining program for a year and it's healing my chronic illnesses from childhood and adult trauma and helping my depression and anxiety from the trauma.
Same -- because of my childhood trauma-- I didn’t want kids. This helped me really understand BECAUSE- of my trauma- and family dysfunction. The family lineage stops with me.
@@clintonparker4141 very much helped 😌I talk very openly about the trauma from my childhood now after burying it when it was happening.. it helps me process it and accept.
Eight minutes into this episode, and I thought of something, and in the scope of vegetable gardening... If you are reaching the end of your growing season and you want your tomatoes to finish ripening, you stress the plant - either by under-watering or taking a shovel to the roots.. The plant becomes stressed and will put energy into ripening fruit in order to have seeds that will survive. Omg humans are just like this. As children, we adapt much like the traumatized plant in order to survive and have even the smallest bits of us left to keep going. Fascinating.
I took a childhood trauma therapy class online. The therapist told us about a conversation he had with a former client. I can’t remember the exact words he used. He told the man if you hit your kids you are teaching them to hit their kids. The man said, but my kids are children right now. I don’t have any grandchildren. The therapist said yes I know but you’re teaching them that this is the right way to discipline and facilitating them disciplining their kids the way you discipline them. The therapist was also talking about sexual abuse. He said that all children who are sexually abused do not grow up to sexually abuse children. However, all pedophiles were sexually abused as children. I thought that was a profound statement. What I learned overall was that any trauma a child experiences is likely to be repeated in future generations, unless that person when they become an adult is able to work through their trauma in a healthy way. I have also heard Dr. John Delony mention that trauma affects how children perceive the world and how their body responds to the world. I believe that wholeheartedly.
that man without the foresight of the ripple effect to later generations - that's low IQ first level thinking and sadly they probably just shouldn't procreate. I had no idea that people could be so dense, wow
If you grow up in a world that is scary, it's natural that you will live in fear. If you experience a world where sexual boundaries are crossed, it's understandable that you will understand those boundaries can be crossed. If you don't have the skillset to manage fear or boundaries, then both become much more active.
@geekfreak618they didn't say 'all' gay people...they said 'alot' I know 3 lesbian's who yes, was all abused as Children.... there is probably some studies on this somewhere I'd guess !
6 men sexually abused me between ages 5 and 20. 3 were my mom's husband's. She married 5 times. A revolving bedroom door and monsters in my bed. I have fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue and chronic pain, and breast cancer, which I caught early and survived.
This interview has moved me to tears... The level of compassionate energy Dr Conti radiates out is mind blowing to me. His understanding and insights into traumas helped me heal too.
This episode should be shared widely to raise awareness of people about how traumas can affect them emotionally and physically. Thank you Dr. Conti for your devotion.
The problem with psychiatry and the conventional mental health system is that the role of trauma behind so many of the so-called "mental illnesses" is almost always overlooked or downplayed. Bandaids (pills) don't fix bullet holes (trauma).
There is a huge amount of generational trauma in the indigenous peoples of the British Empire (and the U.S.). The government took the children and held them in church-run schools for years. Severe trauma to the parents, but especially the children who were mistreated and sexually abused in many cases. This children grew up to be parents and didn’t know what to do to raise their kids. Such a horrific crime committed against these people.
I fully believe this. I know my mom died of stress and trauma in her life, and she had a million diagnosed illnesses…but I have always said it’s trauma and her stress in her whole life, happy to see this being studied and talked about.
I'm so sorry that happened to both of your moms. The world definitely needs to understand what we're learning here, so we can have less of these instances.
He doesn't talk about the nervous system (part of the brain) and how trauma/high stress sets the nervous system to the sympathetic nervous system path, which in turn activates the adrenal glands. The adrenal glands produce cortisol raising blood sugar levels and then insulin. This causes inflammation in the body/immune system, which will cause auto-immune diseases. He did not even mention that a person with stored trauma not only needs talk therapy but needs to be taught how to reset their nervous system through breathing exercises/meditation.
If he does not talk about this then this podcast is not good. That is such a big part in finding the path lol. But still didn’t listen yet starting now
Hpa axis is one aspect and explanation . He talks so well about so many aspects of trauma . Dont dismiss truths he talks about . Not everybody needs to talk on everyting in one podcast
I think he is doing his best to share important information to the general public, but it is such a large subject that he can't possibly cover it all in a single 2 hour podcast. My impression of this interview is that he is trying to educate people at the first and basic level of what trauma is, which will start having more people ask themselves important questions. I appreciate that maybe it didn't feel like it went far enough for someone like yourself who has learned more than what was presented here, but I think it's great that this information is becoming more visible for those who have no idea.
He's talking at a higher level of abstraction. Just because he didn't talk at your preferred layer of abstraction - physiological - does not minimize the value of his understanding.
I am Australian and have complex PTSD/childhood trauma. My life has been hell and still is and I'm 64. I have two grown up sons, and for various reasons won't be having children of their own. While this is heartbreaking not only for my sons, but also me, unable to be a grandmother. My psychologist (trauma specialist) and I were discussing this, and my upside to this situation is that the buck will stop. I'm not being flippant when I say this, but it's true. There will be no more epigenetic trauma being transferred on through our family. I wish people would realise ''that children are NOT RESILENT''. Wonderful human being Dr. Paul Conti is, such an interesting interview. Thank you
The original resilience research was done years ago in Oslo. It was confined purely to what makes sexually abused children resilient. The answer turned out to be the belief by their mothers that they were telling the truth. I met the researcher. Academics 'forget' to admit who did the first positive study, then they 'borrow' the concept and overextend it until it is meaningless.
I lost the only human being who ever loved me. I’ve been aging from that and the indigent state and environment that I live in. I have two serious car accidents one requiring two surgeries. My daughter rejected me and my sister says my broken and crushed leg is not her responsibility. I know I’m going down hill. Just not fast enough. I wish I could die faster because there is no hope for me. I can’t support myself 2000 on SSDI is more traumatic trying to live in.
I almost died last year from appendicitis and I know it was because I was stuck in a really toxic relationship with a narcissistic, then I realized my mother was the same way. so sad
This was me in 2009! Appendicitis...then they found Stage 4 endometriosis. It was my awakening to the relationship I was in and my mother. Happy you are still here!
My mom has Parkinson's. Her father passed away when she was 3 and she had an abusive step father. My mom was shipped off to boarding school at 9. She is the strongest person I know.
I don't mean to depreciate this topic and how it relates to people but I have new appreciation for what my new to me 4 y.o. dog from the SPCA may have experienced. He is reactive to new people and especially men.
No what you are saying is true with people and domesticated animals and is very relevant. Only wild animals are able to shake off trauma and not have it affect them.
Your approach as a "story teller" resonates with me a great deal. I have struggled with admitting to myself that this is exactly what I'm trying to do through my card collage creations. Much like you, I have themes and images that show up over and over in my work. I very much would like to transition into art journaling and combining more mediums in my work. You have inspired me greatly. When you took out the scrapbooking ephemera and foam dots to create your composition, I finally realized that I can move past making cards and experiment with something deeper. I think I have been telling myself for far too long that putting my collage in a card format somehow makes it "acceptable". Like I need permission to end up with something tangibly "useful" or maybe it's not worth doing. You have helped me to realize that it doesn't have to be this way for me. I am nervous about making this transition, but also excited too. I hope I have the courage to move forward. Thank you very much for sharing yourself in this way.
Why did I know this, already? Hearing it from an erudite professional just gives me confidence in my innate comprehension of the human experience. Thank you💕
I learned in a biology class that we carry many genes that can give us a disease in life..like they are dormant. Later in life depending on your environment or life choices.. these diseases can surface.
I think a large proportion of trauma derives from 50 years of progressively more and more economic suppression during which time Americans are working more and more while earning less and less. I call this pattern, which was created by American economic elites, 'economic violence.' Deaths of despair, for example, occur much more frequently in those regions of the US that have been utterly economically destabilized. This is not to imply that those in the upper middle class and beyond do not suffer from other kinds of trauma, but we're really missing the mark, here, by not engaging with the possibility that the degradation of millions of people's personal economies is central to this entire theme.
@briananderson8428-- The "giant sucking sound" is that of jobs leaving the U.S. and leaving it's people in many cases unable to provide for themselves at all or at a lower level than before the great shift away from American production. And now the climate change hoax is just furthering that shift of jobs.
Dear Steve, listening to this episode made me cry because you are helping the world with the work you do. If this message ever gets through to you, EMDR is the key to trauma healing and should be spread worldwide and the technique should be at the heart of trauma healing treatment. Message from a cured patient - EMDR ❤.
Dang this is very alarming. I have two parents with a lot of trauma from their childhood. I have a bit, but not nearly as much as them. I heard about it being passed down but I didn't know there was scientific proof about that.
I'm on a mission to understand myself and help myself, not make excuses for the trauma or blame my mother for not nurturing me because she just didn't.
Interesting. I am an identical twin who was not severely damaged by childhood trauma. But my twin sister reworked her childhood trauma in a completely different way. In the end, I have a family, children and I may say a pretty good life. And she is lonely, without children, depressed and with a lot of illnesses. She is only 37. 😢 So I do believe it’s not just theoretical. She is physically “older” than me…
I suffered SA from age 4 - 10 then I found my voice and told someone, my entire family disowned me. By the time I was 12 I was homeless, age 13 pregnet, 14 18 months in a mental hospital 16 gang r*pped 19 married to a drug addict that beat me daily but by 28 found a healthy relationship and have been married 21 years now. I'm only just over the past 3 years becoming stable. My health is awful, I'm 50 on oxygen, have Bipolar 1, arthritis, digestive problems and have had cancer 2 times. I'm a farmer drug addict that got clean at 28 and struggle everyday to find 3 things to be greatful for.😢😢😢
Hi Steven, I didn't know where to put this, so here it is...I think you have to talk to the "Alaskan Avenger", Jason Vucovich. I just saw a documentary about him and he has paid a price to be who he is that NO ONE should ever have to pay. He's articulate, thoughtful, and has some solid ideas for tackling the issue that has plagued him since childhood. Thanks!
It makes me tear up that I and others have to be the 'beneficiaries' of trauma experiences, and therefore, predisposed to so much baseline bodily illness and weakness. I'm figuratively and literally sick and tired from all of the repetitive cycles of being literally sick and tired...however, I did discover Dr. Paul Conti's interviews and have it saved as a "watch later" so I can refer back to them. Listening to little bits of insights from his help me a bit and hope it helps you a bit too. His insights aren't just from a place of academic and intellectual knowledge; but from his own experiences too and we can innately sense this.
Coming from an Italian American family as a child I was very aware how we were looked down on. My grandparents would not teach us the Italian language because they didn’t want us to be ridiculed like they had been. My maternal great grandparents had to pass as Germans to get a rent back in the early 20th century. Another great grandfather was murdered for being EYE Talian. Sterotypes of the Italian gangster, and mob movies are actually very disturbing. Italians through the decades have been looked upon as less then. I always felt different around other non Italians. Feelings that have added more trauma to my life especially after being abused by a mother who simply couldn’t stand me. Emotional, physical, verbal, and psychological abuse for years as a child. For many of us life has been a major challenge.
The topics that are explored are rooted on the political systems and how these shape us. Consider brining to your show Dr. Richard Wolf or Dra. Harriet Fraad… they would explain the why behind anxiety, violence, depression inequality, etc
My father got PD, and his father had it also. Both were ministers. Both were not good or present fathers. I had a v stressful childhood and am now hoping I don’t get the same diagnosis.
It makes sense to me that if your body is not getting enough nutrition (because of standard western diet OR mutations in Methylation process-or both) your body is less able to handle stress/trauma. "Trauma is anything that overwhems your body's coping mechanisms".
A must watch interview, not once but many times. Thank you. You should invite Dr. Peter Breggins and also Tim Fletcher. In reference to changes to the brain by trauma, a person who has some information is Dr. Alphonzo Monzo.
Trauma is the reason why I developed rheumatoid arthritis at the age of 21. Trauma healing and functional medicine is the reason why I am in remission for three years. 💪💪
Really enjoyed the mental stimulation of this podcast, given the amazing verbal reasoning skills of the interviewee (and the interviewer of course). "We have a lot of hammers in medicine, so we see a lot of nails"
For the substance abuse of things with how it can ease the pain of trauma. I've always been aware of it's a crutch. Not taking the sustaining approach in my life, to numb or balance the stress. I've actually found during major stressful events in my life I tend to more shutdown and not use substances to figure out what I'm feeling and how I should deal with it. Which I still know it doesn't make it the best approach, I just feel luckily I'm able to spot that and take care of it the best way possible.
Dr. Paul Conti you are making positive impact to someone’s life . Your explanations were simple and anyone can understand.I enjoyed listening to this podcast. Thankyou #TheDiaryOfACEO
My parents immigrated in the 1950’s and stayed within their community. Yet, As a Mexican American daughter.. I learned to assimilate into mainstream cultures (American, Asian , etc.) to survive.
Thanks for this one. I have been working on all my traumas from my childhood. I had a really bad childhood. Parents did everything they shouldn't have to me. Meditation has really help me grow. I have forgiven them for everything. I have quite smoking weed and cigarettes this past year a truly have control of my life again. But I still will have random times almost daily that I get really high anxiety for no dang reason and have to talk myself out of them. I think I gave my 12 year old son anxiety 😢
People will subscribe if we need or want to. I understand, In Sales, we have been taught to always ask for the sale. Squeaky wheel gets the oil, yet for us who watch every episode and has subscribed... listening for the ask to subscribe segment is getting to be too much Sometimes people need to listen to a podcast a few times before we make a commitment. Just like any relationship, give people time to come to the conclusion that we need/ want to listen to you. Or perhaps the ask could come at the end of the podcast. I know the backlash this comment will bring from others, yet this is how i feel.
Thats true every kid is born with different nervous system, and sometimes one different experience in life can trigger trauma.Alcoholism of my father didnt affect my older brother the way it did to me. I can't stand my mother for her hypocrisy and narcissistic personality, but it doesn't really bother him, he is not that sensitive like me, Maybe because he as a man perceives things differently? From his perspective, I am exaggerating the problem because in the 1990s most families were broken, he normalises pathology. I realized how my parents emotional neglect made my life difficult for many years.. If not information from the Internet about trauma disorder, I wouldn't know what mechanisms drive me and why life was so painful. it turned out that many of my character traits are not my own, but mechanisms based on fear and shame.This knowledge about complex trauma can change live, if only one wants to change sth
What you say sounds believable but I had an extremely challenging childhood being institutionalized for more than 9 years in horrible circumstances but I'm 72 and everyone thinks I'm 55.
I’ve had different kind of trauma, skull fracture, hit in head with a baseball bat, in the right frontal lobe. I am opposite from what you mentioned, I’m looking younger than my age. Why is that❓I’m 50 and look in early 30’s, and personality is somewhere around mid 29’s
Brilliant episode but why are we not talking about preventing childhood trauma? We insist on voting in governments that choose to cut budgets to all services that help children and families in the UK. Why when we know the massive impact and financial cost on society. We need to nurture our children much more and the world will be a kinder place to live in.
Let’s look at historical child abuse right back to the beginning of civilisation since we are all affected by these ancestors then we could presume that no one person is not affected by the off shots of trauma & child abuse … in animal life we recognise that they have built in awareness of likely predators … i think human young people have these to … i was a victim of CA i am now a survivor & i move forward … the choice i had as being in horrific abuse situations where fatalities occurred … i recognised that i could adjust my composure (people please) to survive the scenarios which in fact were from different adult males in their hundreds to one or two who were not violent but the abuse still is far more damaging than the general public are aware… i was on a call to a local authority personnel … after discussing a news article relating to CA her the reply was strikingly typical email of those not in the know … “ so long as my kids are safe I’m ok … from a personnel in authority i found that to be vile…. 1 dose this imply that authorities are instructed to ignore ? 2 are the general public not aware of how historical pedophilia is do we all need retraining 3 what is the fall out of trauma that no one will avoid those affected by abuse because we are all affected 4 are the authorities ignoring this purposely using generations to job create ? We all like to think there’s a realistic remedy but a 100 per cent survivors = what .. i think identifying mental illness as one group is reckless lets be real here child trauma or abuse by any means is damaging & is WW so it should be renamed as WW international wellness campaign because “ then we’re all in we all we all make an effort to see the damage we start a change for the good… there’s no stigma we all move forward
I wish he could speak a little bit slow! He has extremely significant information helpful. That's how to share but he speaks so fast and was my anxiety. It makes me so difficult for me at least to be able to continue to the course. I hope you can read this and you would appreciate it is okay for you to just breathe and slow down as you speak so people can listen to you.
@@Powernabcalm down, trauma is a real issue. It should not be seen as a crutch to do nothing in life, some people use their trauma as aspiration 'not to end up like that' or 'to do something better for their community' but trauma definitely needs to be addressed instead of stigmatized.
I hear you... I have not even been aware that these can be associated with childhood trauma and once I learned it, I sought help and am on a healing path. I am even doing better professionally! I still need some help, not going to pretend that a few sessions will magically heal , it takes time and effort. But it is definitely doable, even if not from the start.
@@Powernabbuilding strong mental health is the key to resilience. We are in the mess we are in today because this has been ignored. But I’m going to watch the whole podcast to learn more.
No, you are talking BS. Just imagine, if all people were identical to Andrew Tate, the real Andrew Tate would be miserable. Narcissists and psychopaths need people to exploit, abuse, control and hurt sadistic as they are. It's been like that since the beginning of time, because they even wrote an ancient book on the issue, called The Bible. It's been an arms race between the sadists and the rest of empathic, sociable people. Today, the means of control are so subversive that we feel traumatised without even knowing where it's coming from. So, on the contrary, society is becoming worse, not softer.
Knowing it’s a rebellion against a life that sucks……This is particularly true when you know your trauma, you have been successful, you are successful, you value mental health and seek treatment as much as you take care of yourself physically, and in spite of that you find yourself in a toxic environment/relationship/situation! Thanks SofoArchon!!!! 😊
This is on point! I was diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder about 14 years ago. And have been on meds since. I found out a year and a half ago that I actually have complex PTSD from chronic and ongoing trauma I experienced from my childhood, teen years, and young adult life. Grief, abuse, neglect, sexual trauma, etc. I knew my childhood was F’d, but I didn’t realize I had PTSD. Didn’t even know someone not in the military could have PTSD. I was in treatment 6 months out of 2023 due to a lifelong battle of addiction/substance abuse disorder. I am doing better now and my awareness of triggers has increased to the point that I am able to apply newly learned coping skills to get through really big feelings that I’ve always stuffed my entire life. I was living in survival mode for nearly my entire 39 years of life. Nobody should have to live this way. I’m on a mission as well to help continue this conversation and make it more common knowledge!
I have a similar level of trauma as yours and suppressed my feelings for many years by constantly working to the point of exhaustion to avoid my feelings then i had a major mental breakdown that spiraled me into 8 years of on and off again hell of some type of off the rails partying and different drug use I finally ended up homeless and loss of family relationships that got me to snap out it and really work on my health but could have died many times over a miracle I made it threw and now I constantly watch podcast to learn more and more how to deal without pills or street drugs, also side note my thyroid affected my hormones on my eighth year of failed rehab attempts and mental drug prescriptions and they finally prescribed me levothyroxine and that’s the only thing I take daily to help with the chemical imbalance I have it’s helped me tremendously to get an accurate diagnosis and proper treatment ❤
Thank you for sharing your comment it made me feel not so alone in my ongoing recovery journey and I’m very sorry for your trauma and wish you every day of healing and growth 😊
Steven, I love that you ask "what does that mean?"! It's a super power to be vulnerable and say "I don't understand this, please help me understand." ... helps me a ton!
@@Eudaimonia88 That's not true. He's not only talking to his interviewer; he's asking questions that his viewers want answered. I imagine he already knows the answers to a lot of the questions he asks just because of the research he (or his assistants) do on their interviewees.
My mother suffered for over a decade from Parkinsons disease, and then to make things worse got dementia too. She had an incredibly difficult and stressful childhood, coupled with a traumatic adult life at the hads of a volitile and dangerous husband. I have ALWAYS believed the sustained trauma she suffered on and off over her life changed her brain, and ultimately contributed to her parkinsons disease. Her neurologist downplayed the impact but i know it in my gut to be true. You cant live through what my mother did and not come out forever damaged.
My mum developed Parkinsons when she was pregnant with me. She also developed dementia near the end of her life. This whole concept of trauma possibly being a cause of Parkinsons has rocked my world...
Sorry for the loss of your mother. Autistic catatonia is frequently misdiagnosed as dementia. The vast majority of autism in the world is undiagnosed unaware and intellectually compensating. Telling you this to validate your intuition, not provoke anger or regret. Alzheimer's is an egodecompensatory end stage regression, but if she didn't have Alzheimer's the Parkinson's makes me think it might've been misdiagnosed autistic catatonia.
Sat here with tears in my eyes. My parents abused me in childhood... I'm absolutely convinced they had unresolved trauma of their own. I've had therapy on and off since I was 18, and I'm now 44. During that time, I was also s*x@lly assaulted twice by two different men, been in an emotionally abusive relationship, struggled briefly with alcohol (my father was an alcoholic).... I'm utterly EXHAUSTED... I struggle with self-care, I have very little executive function, live with depression and anxiety, my mother passed away from a stroke in 2019 which pummelled me with unexpected grief. I've never children despite desperately wanting them, because I would NEVER forgive myself if I did anything (yes, I'm scared of myself turning into my parents, despite never harming anyone else), I also wouldn't risk passing on generational trauma to my children so the cycle ends with me permanently.
Jesus is the truth the way and the life he can heal all trauma I know because the bible says he is near to the broken hearted and crushed of spirit and He healed me Call him he’s waiting
How this episode is the most important one on the podcast and the one with some of the lowest views, honestly concerns me. What this man is saying is so so priceless ♥️
As someone who was born to an alcoholic mother. As someone who was emotionally and physically neglected by that mother, and 6 months later given away to an orphanage because that mother didn't want to care for me anymore, only to be again neglected emotionally and physically for another 4 more years. It changed how I view the world today. As a 1-4 year old. You need a mother figure. Someone who can show you love and kindness. You need a father as well, to show you courage and bravery. I was born into a world that never cared for me since day 1. Iv have since been diagnosed with Anti-Social Personality Disorder, Avoident Attachment Disorder, and Reactive Attachment Disorder. I was forced to survive, and adapt in a world that didn't care for me, so I unfortunately have learned to not care for it. I wish greatly to feel anything but emptiness. I see love all around me, but to never have it myself causes me to be self sabotaged a lot in my life.
Appreciate how Dr. Conti speaks so calmly and kindly about this topic. His tone makes this easier to listen to than it would be otherwise. A difficult subject delivered with care.
The body holds the score. As a person who was abused under age 6, I cannot remember my abuse in a physical sense but I do remember the feelings and how the person made me feel. I 100% believe that I will die early from a disease brought on from behaviours I have used from age 6 to cope with depression and feelings that I did not know the reason for until I started having flashbacks about my abuse. If you have not suffered CSA it will be hard to take in this realisation.
The fact that you have awareness I believe is half the battle to recovery and a choice you used to make healthier life decisions that will impact your health. Studies show how lifestyle changes can reverse nearly everything including aging.
The thing he said in the beginning about reflexive guilt and shame compelling us to keep it in or hide it is so real. I find it really difficult to be understood when I try to explain the impact things had on me to my therapist, because I end up minimizing the severity of it with my delivery, I think. It's hard. He focuses so much on my actions and not enough about processing my emotions. So I know I need to switch to a trauma-informed therapist. But it also doesn't help that a lot of people think having been bullied isn't a trauma. They don't think it's that serious. It's refreshing to hear from someone who gets it.
It doesn't have to be serious your making it more, are you still being bullied? Stop carrying that past and make a future. Your therapist is focused on your actions because you may think your processing something one way but you can lie to yourself your actions are the truth.
You are your actions, they are the trauma one brings to the world. If the mental you isn't expressed it's just a dream. What you do is what effects others and defines you to the world the rest exists ONLY in your head.
You're spot on. Bullying is/can be traumatizing for sure. I agree, processing the emotions for someone like yourself is likely exactly what you need. Emotions vs actions? Better to say emotions + actions. Similar to a road trip in a car. The actions = clear destination and driving forward. The emotions = lighten your load. Both are important for your road trip.
Thank you Steven for having the guest on and highlighting this issue, that society does not want to talk about. I was sexually abused from age 3 and have suffered both mentally and physically. Thankfully I now have a wonderful husband and children, and a good life but it's not been an easy road.
Our children are our biggest mirrors , our greatest teachers... our path to healing. I embraced parenting with all my CPTSD baggage and my children hold me accountable to do the work DAILY. They are my saving grace. I needed a love bigger than myself to face the work and stop fighting, flighting, freezing & fawning. They give me that in abundance ❤ Also DOAC has helped me join a lot of dots & give me courage to seek help. I now journal, alongside CBT & the work is both equally painful & enlightening. The results is im more resilent & resourceful. My kids reflect back the same qualities. This is true success for me. Imagine a world with resilient and resourceful people or even just a few who can support others... Thank you Steven for making me understand im not alone & there's support out there, sometimes it's a book, sometimes its writing, and sometimes it's simply listening to another xx
Thank you for your kind comment. I spent most of my life underestimating my personal power. It's wonderful to no longer be confined to the past & now living a more fulfilling present @aishwaryapriya9416
Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.
Can you help with the reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. Very hard to get a reliable source here in Australia. Really need!
Yes, dr.sporessss I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.
I wish they were readily available in my place. Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He is 59 & has so many mental health issues plus probable CTE & a TBI that left him in a coma 8 days. It's too late now I had to get a TPO as he's 6'6 300+ pound homicidal maniac. He's constantly talking about killing someone. He's violent. Anyone reading this Familiar w/ BPD know if it is common for an obsession with violence.
I’ve suffered terrible social anxiety and panic. I’m sure this hasn’t been helped by having a borderline mother and a schizophrenic father , and 7 foster homes .. my brain feels like it’s hard wired to see threat or danger even if there isn’t any danger . It’s an emotional toll on my nervous system . Hoping one day i can try plant medicine .
@sofiamagdalena2629 in your mind and body. Grounding is connecting to the present moment. Not grounding outside walking barefoot, although, both w benefits. Work w a trauma specialist who can teach
From 4 to 16 years old I was in a total of 22 foster homes now I'm 33 2 children don't think I've had much trauma but I look back and think myself lucky to be fostered by healthy tight nit families even though some where only temporary homes 🤔 maybe I'm just different on how to deal with things to others it depends on the individual I was lucky to go abroad had good birthdays and Christmas saw my biological mum once a fortnight I was closer to my nana other than my mum we don't have that mother daughter relationship probably never will either
0:00: ⚠ Trauma's intergenerational impact on genes, aging, and mental health; questioning pill-based solutions. 8:42: 💔 Unaddressed childhood trauma led to mental health struggles and reluctance to seek help. 16:41: 🧠 Trauma in childhood can lead to increased risk of autoimmune disorders and early death due to gene transcription changes. 25:22: ⚖ The impact of childhood trauma on siblings can vary due to different factors like nature, nurture, and emotional attunement. 33:16: 🧠 Impact of trauma on brain development and vulnerability towards mental health issues in young adulthood. 41:51: ⚕ Abscesses in the body can cause non-specific symptoms, leading to a need for surgical intervention. 49:52: 🧠 Impact of trauma on brain responses and life narratives. 58:25: 🧠 Impact of trauma on mood regulation areas in the brain leading to cognitive blind spots and altered perception. 1:06:54: 💡 The limbic system in the brain, driven by emotions, overrides logic when facing trauma, impacting decision-making. 1:14:52: ⚔ Surviving a lion attack leads to self-reflection and behavior change for future prevention. 1:23:24: 💤 Impact of trauma on sleep and its link to post-trauma syndrome. 1:30:56: 💔 Childhood trauma leads to poor self-care, inflammation, and weight retention affecting overall health. 1:39:06: 💡 Recognizing the lasting impact of childhood trauma and reframing triggering memories to understand their power. Recapped using Tammy AI
Your shows are compelling, fascinating & extremely useful. I appreciate your content. For the past month, all of the outstanding guests you've interviewed have been at the forefront of information pertaining to a recent traumatic event perpetrated upon me by a sibling. It is so difficult to get & find information on trauma & how it changes the brain & biology of a person & reading people and events that substantially change people in profound ways. Thank you. I then subscribe & follow the people you interview. After all, how would any person out in your audience ever be able to be aware of these amazing people & their unique insights & immense help. You've changed the knowledge I been seeking to acquire 💯
I'm in a brain retraining program fixing my chronic illnesses from trauma. A big part of the program is Internal Family Systems. I was sick for 21 years. In a year of doing the Gupta retraining program I am 80% to 90% better. Everything he is saying is dead on.
I experienced childhood sexual assault from 5 to 11, DV between my parents, family violence, slut shamed by a whole town, DV, mental & abuse as an adult. I’ve had depression since before I knew what it was, didn’t start to remember the childhood SA until mid/late 20’s (as I became a parent). I’ve attempted to end my life more than once & still struggle with ideation weekly. My whole life I’ve felt different, ashamed, small. No where feels like home, no where is truly safe. I’ve now got long term chronic pain, fibromyalgia & autoimmune hepatitis - all presented during my 40’s. I was trying to unravel it all when the health conditions started presenting & had to stop . I’m now again trying to get myself into treatment, with very limited funds, it’s not an easy task. If I dropped dead tomorrow from a heart attack I wouldn’t be sad about it, it’s so hard to stay.
If you like this episode please can you do me a little favour and hit the like button on the video! I really appreciate your kindness x ❤👊🏾
Why are you secretly ruining your kids' lives number 1? You're cheating on your wife with another woman
Kindness makes You the most beautiful Person in the World, no matter what You look like.
No problem. Thank you
Done, every time, without hesitation. Your interviews have changed my life. Thank you.
He is correct on so many levels that I really hope this gets out to everyone in time. His insights from the wisdom he has gained from his understanding of his innerworld and outer world is breathtaking.
Being able to listen to him and understand what he has to say is very very critically important right now more then ever.
This is profoundly insightful. I'm a surgeon, but I see a lot of patients with chronic pain issues, body image issues, etc and often if you dig a little bit with simple questions, you'll find trauma. It's a wrecking ball that destroys people slowly and silently.
I am a CSA survivor. I was coming out of anesthesia & they were removing my Foley. I started swinging. Anesthesiologists never conceptualize their patients. 1 in 4 women have been s-xually assaulted.
have to end my own life due to severe trauma, being unloved, abused & dreadfully neglected
@@peanut1001x don't let darkness win....
Thank you for sharing your perspective. It's crucial to recognize the deep-seated impact trauma can have on physical health. Your insight as a surgeon sheds light on the importance of addressing mental health alongside physical ailments.
I believe taking the time with someone to let them be quite and affirmation. See staying away from triggers.
And this is why I think more people should think harder about having children. I see so much unresolved trauma in parents around me. You are ABSOLUTELY messing your kids up. Deal with your shit before having kids so that the kid doesn't have to spend a lifetime undoing all the damage you caused.
Then, their children will go to school and bullied other normal children. Next, they will complain those be bullied children must do something wrong to trigger their children.
@MengHuaHung This is why we need to have compassion for the bully... because it is a sign that something is not okay in his/her household.
@@refreshingtwist I have to say. They should go to doctor. I was bullied by those people in a long period of time
@MengHuaHung Of course. But a child that is a bully does not know he/ she needs to see a therapist. That is the parents' responsibility. And, furthermore, it is our responsibility as adults to heal our traumas. But you cannot expect a child to know/ do that.
Both myself and my husband were abused as young children. We are not having kids, for me the realisation I had been abused put me into a deep depression, after being depressed from age 6. I couldn’t willingly bring a child into my darkness and now I am hitting 40 and feel like I am finally moving out of the darkness I am thankful we didnt have children.
Trauma puts us in survival mode. Because we've experienced bad things, harm, etc. our nervous system gets stuck in hypervigilance / hyper alertness, etc. to keep us from further harm. It's just our body doing its job, trying to protect us and ensure our survival. However, we weren't designed to be in some kind of a life or death situation avoidance mode 24/7. When we don't get out of these survival modes, other important processes in the body get neglected; digestion, growth, fighting against disease, healing, learning, etc. That's why trauma and the resulting chronic survival mode can eventually cause all kinds of health problems or chronic illnesses. A combination of psychotherapy and somatic therapy works wonders for breaking these patterns and getting our health back.
Very well said. I'm finally addressing this in my own life and have realized I'm strong as hell, but need to set these psychological burdens down. Lifting weights, walking often, a healthy plant-strong diet, somatic massage, sleep, and learning through guests like this have helped so much and I'm digging out of this 45-year rut. So happy to feel like I've found a path, but it's hard daily work and small daily habits.
@@lauramonahan9343Well done 👍 keep at it. May you have calm mind and a happy heart.
You're exactly right and that is what happened to me. I've been in a brain retraining program for a year and it's healing my chronic illnesses from childhood and adult trauma and helping my depression and anxiety from the trauma.
Thats crazy 😢
Absolutely, agree 100%! We end up with panic attacks and adrenal fatigue. Very hard on the body from years of this extreme stress.
I’m a childhood abuse survivor and I often wonder how different I may have been if I was raised in a healthy family. It’s sad.
Same -- because of my childhood trauma-- I didn’t want kids. This helped me really understand BECAUSE- of my trauma- and family dysfunction. The family lineage stops with me.
Same here too very sad😢
I’m hoping this episode helped you
@@clintonparker4141 very much helped 😌I talk very openly about the trauma from my childhood now after burying it when it was happening.. it helps me process it and accept.
Yes it is its ruined me
Eight minutes into this episode, and I thought of something, and in the scope of vegetable gardening...
If you are reaching the end of your growing season and you want your tomatoes to finish ripening, you stress the plant - either by under-watering or taking a shovel to the roots..
The plant becomes stressed and will put energy into ripening fruit in order to have seeds that will survive.
Omg humans are just like this.
As children, we adapt much like the traumatized plant in order to survive and have even the smallest bits of us left to keep going.
Fascinating.
never heard that about the tomatoes, but I'll never forget it because it makes sense. I'll ruminate on your comparison.
I took a childhood trauma therapy class online. The therapist told us about a conversation he had with a former client. I can’t remember the exact words he used. He told the man if you hit your kids you are teaching them to hit their kids. The man said, but my kids are children right now. I don’t have any grandchildren. The therapist said yes I know but you’re teaching them that this is the right way to discipline and facilitating them disciplining their kids the way you discipline them. The therapist was also talking about sexual abuse. He said that all children who are sexually abused do not grow up to sexually abuse children. However, all pedophiles were sexually abused as children. I thought that was a profound statement. What I learned overall was that any trauma a child experiences is likely to be repeated in future generations, unless that person when they become an adult is able to work through their trauma in a healthy way. I have also heard Dr. John Delony mention that trauma affects how children perceive the world and how their body responds to the world. I believe that wholeheartedly.
that man without the foresight of the ripple effect to later generations - that's low IQ first level thinking and sadly they probably just shouldn't procreate. I had no idea that people could be so dense, wow
I have noticed that a lot of men who say they were sexually abused end up becoming gay also. I think this must be linked.
Pedophiles are born not made. There brains are wired different from birth. Same with gay people. Your facts are good. That therapist was low quality.
If you grow up in a world that is scary, it's natural that you will live in fear. If you experience a world where sexual boundaries are crossed, it's understandable that you will understand those boundaries can be crossed. If you don't have the skillset to manage fear or boundaries, then both become much more active.
@geekfreak618they didn't say 'all' gay people...they said 'alot'
I know 3 lesbian's who yes, was all abused as Children.... there is probably some studies on this somewhere I'd guess !
6 men sexually abused me between ages 5 and 20. 3 were my mom's husband's. She married 5 times. A revolving bedroom door and monsters in my bed. I have fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue and chronic pain, and breast cancer, which I caught early and survived.
Don’t think moma knew? A.K.A: a genuine Mother fucker
I'm so very sorry that you had to suffer so much because of these evil monsters. I will pray for you immediately.
Crazy! I am so sorry that you had to go through this.
Horrific. You truly are a survivor on every level
This makes me equally sad and angry and I continue to wonder why men get away with this😢
This interview has moved me to tears... The level of compassionate energy Dr Conti radiates out is mind blowing to me. His understanding and insights into traumas helped me heal too.
Absolutely Dr. Conti is a gift to humanity.
Very moving yes 😢
This episode should be shared widely to raise awareness of people about how traumas can affect them emotionally and physically. Thank you Dr. Conti for your devotion.
Matthew Thomas Crooks 🤔
The problem with psychiatry and the conventional mental health system is that the role of trauma behind so many of the so-called "mental illnesses" is almost always overlooked or downplayed. Bandaids (pills) don't fix bullet holes (trauma).
There is a huge amount of generational trauma in the indigenous peoples of the British Empire (and the U.S.). The government took the children and held them in church-run schools for years. Severe trauma to the parents, but especially the children who were mistreated and sexually abused in many cases. This children grew up to be parents and didn’t know what to do to raise their kids. Such a horrific crime committed against these people.
I fully believe this. I know my mom died of stress and trauma in her life, and she had a million diagnosed illnesses…but I have always said it’s trauma and her stress in her whole life, happy to see this being studied and talked about.
Exactly the same thing happened to my mother, this all makes sense😔
Or perhaps she came to the natural end of her life.
@@GymSlayer_J🙏🙏
I'm so sorry that happened to both of your moms. The world definitely needs to understand what we're learning here, so we can have less of these instances.
Happened to my father. He was only 40 when he died.
He doesn't talk about the nervous system (part of the brain) and how trauma/high stress sets the nervous system to the sympathetic nervous system path, which in turn activates the adrenal glands. The adrenal glands produce cortisol raising blood sugar levels and then insulin. This causes inflammation in the body/immune system, which will cause auto-immune diseases. He did not even mention that a person with stored trauma not only needs talk therapy but needs to be taught how to reset their nervous system through breathing exercises/meditation.
If he does not talk about this then this podcast is not good. That is such a big part in finding the path lol. But still didn’t listen yet starting now
Hpa axis is one aspect and explanation . He talks so well about so many aspects of trauma .
Dont dismiss truths he talks about . Not everybody needs to talk on everyting in one podcast
I think he is doing his best to share important information to the general public, but it is such a large subject that he can't possibly cover it all in a single 2 hour podcast. My impression of this interview is that he is trying to educate people at the first and basic level of what trauma is, which will start having more people ask themselves important questions.
I appreciate that maybe it didn't feel like it went far enough for someone like yourself who has learned more than what was presented here, but I think it's great that this information is becoming more visible for those who have no idea.
Breathing and meditation isn’t going to do a damn thing without social support and a truly safe environment.
He's talking at a higher level of abstraction. Just because he didn't talk at your preferred layer of abstraction - physiological - does not minimize the value of his understanding.
I am Australian and have complex PTSD/childhood trauma. My life has been hell and still is and I'm 64. I have two grown up sons, and for various reasons won't be having children of their own. While this is heartbreaking not only for my sons, but also me, unable to be a grandmother. My psychologist (trauma specialist) and I were discussing this, and my upside to this situation is that the buck will stop. I'm not being flippant when I say this, but it's true. There will be no more epigenetic trauma being transferred on through our family. I wish people would realise ''that children are NOT RESILENT''. Wonderful human being Dr. Paul Conti is, such an interesting interview. Thank you
The original resilience research was done years ago in Oslo. It was confined purely to what makes sexually abused children resilient. The answer turned out to be the belief by their mothers that they were telling the truth. I met the researcher. Academics 'forget' to admit who did the first positive study, then they 'borrow' the concept and overextend it until it is meaningless.
So true… when my Mom passed .. I aged. Grieving triggered my fast forward aging. I see it and I feel it!
Me too
I lost the only human being who ever loved me. I’ve been aging from that and the indigent state and environment that I live in. I have two serious car accidents one requiring two surgeries. My daughter rejected me and my sister says my broken and crushed leg is not her responsibility. I know I’m going down hill. Just not fast enough. I wish I could die faster because there is no hope for me. I can’t support myself 2000 on SSDI is more traumatic trying to live in.
Talk to Adult Protective Services.. they have resources.. hang in there .. God bless.
I almost died last year from appendicitis and I know it was because I was stuck in a really toxic relationship with a narcissistic, then I realized my mother was the same way. so sad
This was me in 2009! Appendicitis...then they found Stage 4 endometriosis. It was my awakening to the relationship I was in and my mother. Happy you are still here!
I’m glad that you got out 😮. All of the best to you ❤❤❤
How to be quoting some of mainly important points to listen to, everything that was said at these INTERVIEW deserves attention to.
My mom has Parkinson's. Her father passed away when she was 3 and she had an abusive step father. My mom was shipped off to boarding school at 9. She is the strongest person I know.
I don't mean to depreciate this topic and how it relates to people but I have new appreciation for what my new to me 4 y.o. dog from the SPCA may have experienced. He is reactive to new people and especially men.
No what you are saying is true with people and domesticated animals and is very relevant. Only wild animals are able to shake off trauma and not have it affect them.
Your approach as a "story teller" resonates with me a great deal. I have struggled with admitting to myself that this is exactly what I'm trying to do through my card collage creations. Much like you, I have themes and images that show up over and over in my work. I very much would like to transition into art journaling and combining more mediums in my work. You have inspired me greatly. When you took out the scrapbooking ephemera and foam dots to create your composition, I finally realized that I can move past making cards and experiment with something deeper. I think I have been telling myself for far too long that putting my collage in a card format somehow makes it "acceptable". Like I need permission to end up with something tangibly "useful" or maybe it's not worth doing. You have helped me to realize that it doesn't have to be this way for me. I am nervous about making this transition, but also excited too. I hope I have the courage to move forward. Thank you very much for sharing yourself in this way.
A great episode! Paul has articulated trauma with compassion and acceptance. May we all take a leaf from his book. ❤
Why did I know this, already? Hearing it from an erudite professional just gives me confidence in my innate comprehension of the human experience. Thank you💕
I learned in a biology class that we carry many genes that can give us a disease in life..like they are dormant.
Later in life depending on your environment or life choices.. these diseases can surface.
I think a large proportion of trauma derives from 50 years of progressively more and more economic suppression during which time Americans are working more and more while earning less and less. I call this pattern, which was created by American economic elites, 'economic violence.' Deaths of despair, for example, occur much more frequently in those regions of the US that have been utterly economically destabilized. This is not to imply that those in the upper middle class and beyond do not suffer from other kinds of trauma, but we're really missing the mark, here, by not engaging with the possibility that the degradation of millions of people's personal economies is central to this entire theme.
@briananderson8428-- The "giant sucking sound" is that of jobs leaving the U.S. and leaving it's people in many cases unable to provide for themselves at all or at a lower level than before the great shift away from American production. And now the climate change hoax is just furthering that shift of jobs.
I can see it.
Dear Steve, listening to this episode made me cry because you are helping the world with the work you do. If this message ever gets through to you, EMDR is the key to trauma healing and should be spread worldwide and the technique should be at the heart of trauma healing treatment. Message from a cured patient - EMDR ❤.
Your ending 30 secs summary was heartfelt and beautiful I'm sure it must have meant a lot to hear it.🙏
2:07 its an incredible show. I love all the guests and the ending questions. Brilliant 👏 Thanks so much for creating all this content.
Dang this is very alarming. I have two parents with a lot of trauma from their childhood. I have a bit, but not nearly as much as them. I heard about it being passed down but I didn't know there was scientific proof about that.
I'm on a mission to understand myself and help myself, not make excuses for the trauma or blame my mother for not nurturing me because she just didn't.
Interesting. I am an identical twin who was not severely damaged by childhood trauma. But my twin sister reworked her childhood trauma in a completely different way. In the end, I have a family, children and I may say a pretty good life. And she is lonely, without children, depressed and with a lot of illnesses. She is only 37. 😢 So I do believe it’s not just theoretical. She is physically “older” than me…
I suffered SA from age 4 - 10 then I found my voice and told someone, my entire family disowned me. By the time I was 12 I was homeless, age 13 pregnet, 14 18 months in a mental hospital 16 gang r*pped 19 married to a drug addict that beat me daily but by 28 found a healthy relationship and have been married 21 years now. I'm only just over the past 3 years becoming stable. My health is awful, I'm 50 on oxygen, have Bipolar 1, arthritis, digestive problems and have had cancer 2 times. I'm a farmer drug addict that got clean at 28 and struggle everyday to find 3 things to be greatful for.😢😢😢
Hi Steven, I didn't know where to put this, so here it is...I think you have to talk to the "Alaskan Avenger", Jason Vucovich. I just saw a documentary about him and he has paid a price to be who he is that NO ONE should ever have to pay. He's articulate, thoughtful, and has some solid ideas for tackling the issue that has plagued him since childhood. Thanks!
It makes me tear up that I and others have to be the 'beneficiaries' of trauma experiences, and therefore, predisposed to so much baseline bodily illness and weakness. I'm figuratively and literally sick and tired from all of the repetitive cycles of being literally sick and tired...however, I did discover Dr. Paul Conti's interviews and have it saved as a "watch later" so I can refer back to them. Listening to little bits of insights from his help me a bit and hope it helps you a bit too. His insights aren't just from a place of academic and intellectual knowledge; but from his own experiences too and we can innately sense this.
So real. Confronting and many answers.
That is me there. Have to listen again.❤
Coming from an Italian American family as a child I was very aware how we were looked down on. My grandparents would not teach us the Italian language because they didn’t want us to be ridiculed like they had been. My maternal great grandparents had to pass as Germans to get a rent back in the early 20th century. Another great grandfather was murdered for being EYE Talian. Sterotypes of the Italian gangster, and mob movies are actually very disturbing. Italians through the decades have been looked upon as less then. I always felt different around other non Italians. Feelings that have added more trauma to my life especially after being abused by a mother who simply couldn’t stand me. Emotional, physical, verbal, and psychological abuse for years as a child. For many of us life has been a major challenge.
Can you please do a podcast with an allergy expert? Love what you do and share
I absolutely love and respect Paul Conti, thanks for all your illicidating information and from the heart.
Being Alive is Traumatic
no, it's difficult. That's different.
Depends who you are it can be more then difficult
Yes it is this lifetime has been for me.
The topics that are explored are rooted on the political systems and how these shape us. Consider brining to your show Dr. Richard Wolf or Dra. Harriet Fraad… they would explain the why behind anxiety, violence, depression inequality, etc
My father got PD, and his father had it also. Both were ministers. Both were not good or present fathers. I had a v stressful childhood and am now hoping I don’t get the same diagnosis.
This is a great conversation, ready for it
It makes sense to me that if your body is not getting enough nutrition (because of standard western diet OR mutations in Methylation process-or both) your body is less able to handle stress/trauma. "Trauma is anything that overwhems your body's coping mechanisms".
Great informative and healing interview. Thank you guys 🧘🏻♀️🧠❤️
A must watch interview, not once but many times. Thank you. You should invite Dr. Peter Breggins and also Tim Fletcher. In reference to changes to the brain by trauma, a person who has some information is Dr. Alphonzo Monzo.
Trauma is the reason why I developed rheumatoid arthritis at the age of 21. Trauma healing and functional medicine is the reason why I am in remission for three years. 💪💪
I will be listening to this again, many times I think
Really enjoyed the mental stimulation of this podcast, given the amazing verbal reasoning skills of the interviewee (and the interviewer of course). "We have a lot of hammers in medicine, so we see a lot of nails"
I needed this ❤thank you!
Incredible conversation. Thank you
For the substance abuse of things with how it can ease the pain of trauma. I've always been aware of it's a crutch. Not taking the sustaining approach in my life, to numb or balance the stress. I've actually found during major stressful events in my life I tend to more shutdown and not use substances to figure out what I'm feeling and how I should deal with it. Which I still know it doesn't make it the best approach, I just feel luckily I'm able to spot that and take care of it the best way possible.
I wish you'd get Jony Ive on your show, he was the soothing voice of a generation who undoubtedly has so much to share.
I really wanted to know what Question Robert Green left, and even the way he phrases it shows his literary soul❤
Thank you for this ❤
Dr. Paul Conti you are making positive impact to someone’s life . Your explanations were simple and anyone can understand.I enjoyed listening to this podcast. Thankyou #TheDiaryOfACEO
My parents immigrated in the 1950’s and stayed within their community.
Yet, As a Mexican American daughter.. I learned to assimilate into mainstream cultures (American, Asian , etc.) to survive.
In a childhood abuse survivor who spent the first 7 years of my life in a children’s home…..I have lupus
Doctors never address this ever. I’ve told doctors I’m a childhood trauma survivor.
Thanks for this one. I have been working on all my traumas from my childhood. I had a really bad childhood. Parents did everything they shouldn't have to me. Meditation has really help me grow. I have forgiven them for everything. I have quite smoking weed and cigarettes this past year a truly have control of my life again. But I still will have random times almost daily that I get really high anxiety for no dang reason and have to talk myself out of them. I think I gave my 12 year old son anxiety 😢
Great and insightful conversations much grattitude ❤
Just woke up from a dream reiterating some of my trauma
People will subscribe if we need or want to. I understand, In Sales, we have been taught to always ask for the sale. Squeaky wheel gets the oil, yet for us who watch every episode and has subscribed... listening for the ask to subscribe segment is getting to be too much
Sometimes people need to listen to a podcast a few times before we make a commitment. Just like any relationship, give people time to come to the conclusion that we need/ want to listen to you. Or perhaps the ask could come at the end of the podcast.
I know the backlash this comment will bring from others, yet this is how i feel.
Who cares if he’s treated the Kardashians or Lady Gaga. How does that make any difference?
Bc they see the best doctors/practitioners so the fact that they saw him means he’s at the top of his field.
Thats true every kid is born with different nervous system, and sometimes one different experience in life can trigger trauma.Alcoholism of my father didnt affect my older brother the way it did to me. I can't stand my mother for her hypocrisy and narcissistic personality, but it doesn't really bother him, he is not that sensitive like me, Maybe because he as a man perceives things differently? From his perspective, I am exaggerating the problem because in the 1990s most families were broken, he normalises pathology. I realized how my parents emotional neglect made my life difficult for many years.. If not information from the Internet about trauma disorder, I wouldn't know what mechanisms drive me and why life was so painful. it turned out that many of my character traits are not my own, but mechanisms based on fear and shame.This knowledge about complex trauma can change live, if only one wants to change sth
❤thank you Doctor! Great questions host!
Very very moving ❤ thank you
What you say sounds believable but I had an extremely challenging childhood being institutionalized for more than 9 years in horrible circumstances but I'm 72 and everyone thinks I'm 55.
I’ve had different kind of trauma, skull fracture, hit in head with a baseball bat, in the right frontal lobe. I am opposite from what you mentioned, I’m looking younger than my age. Why is that❓I’m 50 and look in early 30’s, and personality is somewhere around mid 29’s
Car crashes aren’t all caused by people driving recklessly…
It’s not about the experience as much as it is how the person perceived it.
Brilliant episode but why are we not talking about preventing childhood trauma? We insist on voting in governments that choose to cut budgets to all services that help children and families in the UK. Why when we know the massive impact and financial cost on society. We need to nurture our children much more and the world will be a kinder place to live in.
Let’s look at historical child abuse right back to the beginning of civilisation since we are all affected by these ancestors then we could presume that no one person is not affected by the off shots of trauma & child abuse … in animal life we recognise that they have built in awareness of likely predators … i think human young people have these to … i was a victim of CA i am now a survivor & i move forward … the choice i had as being in horrific abuse situations where fatalities occurred … i recognised that i could adjust my composure (people please) to survive the scenarios which in fact were from different adult males in their hundreds to one or two who were not violent but the abuse still is far more damaging than the general public are aware… i was on a call to a local authority personnel … after discussing a news article relating to CA her the reply was strikingly typical email of those not in the know … “ so long as my kids are safe I’m ok … from a personnel in authority i found that to be vile…. 1 dose this imply that authorities are instructed to ignore ? 2 are the general public not aware of how historical pedophilia is do we all need retraining 3 what is the fall out of trauma that no one will avoid those affected by abuse because we are all affected 4 are the authorities ignoring this purposely using generations to job create ? We all like to think there’s a realistic remedy but a 100 per cent survivors = what .. i think identifying mental illness as one group is reckless lets be real here child trauma or abuse by any means is damaging & is WW so it should be renamed as WW international wellness campaign because “ then we’re all in we all we all make an effort to see the damage we start a change for the good… there’s no stigma we all move forward
I wish he could speak a little bit slow! He has extremely significant information helpful. That's how to share but he speaks so fast and was my anxiety. It makes me so difficult for me at least to be able to continue to the course. I hope you can read this and you would appreciate it is okay for you to just breathe and slow down as you speak so people can listen to you.
Laziness, procrastination and depression are often the spirit’s rebellion against a life that sucks.
@@Powernabcalm down, trauma is a real issue. It should not be seen as a crutch to do nothing in life, some people use their trauma as aspiration 'not to end up like that' or 'to do something better for their community' but trauma definitely needs to be addressed instead of stigmatized.
I hear you... I have not even been aware that these can be associated with childhood trauma and once I learned it, I sought help and am on a healing path. I am even doing better professionally! I still need some help, not going to pretend that a few sessions will magically heal , it takes time and effort. But it is definitely doable, even if not from the start.
@@Powernabbuilding strong mental health is the key to resilience. We are in the mess we are in today because this has been ignored. But I’m going to watch the whole podcast to learn more.
No, you are talking BS. Just imagine, if all people were identical to Andrew Tate, the real Andrew Tate would be miserable. Narcissists and psychopaths need people to exploit, abuse, control and hurt sadistic as they are. It's been like that since the beginning of time, because they even wrote an ancient book on the issue, called The Bible. It's been an arms race between the sadists and the rest of empathic, sociable people. Today, the means of control are so subversive that we feel traumatised without even knowing where it's coming from. So, on the contrary, society is becoming worse, not softer.
Knowing it’s a rebellion against a life that sucks……This is particularly true when you know your trauma, you have been successful, you are successful, you value mental health and seek treatment as much as you take care of yourself physically, and in spite of that you find yourself in a toxic environment/relationship/situation! Thanks SofoArchon!!!! 😊
This is on point! I was diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder about 14 years ago. And have been on meds since. I found out a year and a half ago that I actually have complex PTSD from chronic and ongoing trauma I experienced from my childhood, teen years, and young adult life. Grief, abuse, neglect, sexual trauma, etc. I knew my childhood was F’d, but I didn’t realize I had PTSD. Didn’t even know someone not in the military could have PTSD. I was in treatment 6 months out of 2023 due to a lifelong battle of addiction/substance abuse disorder. I am doing better now and my awareness of triggers has increased to the point that I am able to apply newly learned coping skills to get through really big feelings that I’ve always stuffed my entire life. I was living in survival mode for nearly my entire 39 years of life. Nobody should have to live this way. I’m on a mission as well to help continue this conversation and make it more common knowledge!
I thinking bullying and stress was the prequel to my diagnosis of ME and fibromyalgia.
Thank you for your reply to this
I have a similar level of trauma as yours and suppressed my feelings for many years by constantly working to the point of exhaustion to avoid my feelings then i had a major mental breakdown that spiraled me into 8 years of on and off again hell of some type of off the rails partying and different drug use I finally ended up homeless and loss of family relationships that got me to snap out it and really work on my health but could have died many times over a miracle I made it threw and now I constantly watch podcast to learn more and more how to deal without pills or street drugs, also side note my thyroid affected my hormones on my eighth year of failed rehab attempts and mental drug prescriptions and they finally prescribed me levothyroxine and that’s the only thing I take daily to help with the chemical imbalance I have it’s helped me tremendously to get an accurate diagnosis and proper treatment ❤
Thank you for sharing your comment it made me feel not so alone in my ongoing recovery journey and I’m very sorry for your trauma and wish you every day of healing and growth 😊
My brother and I are working on a project to promote more awareness through music or short film 🎥
Steven, I love that you ask "what does that mean?"! It's a super power to be vulnerable and say "I don't understand this, please help me understand." ... helps me a ton!
That's just the sign of a good interviewer; it's not a big deal, but I'm pleased you're helped by it.
I know :) I am just complimenting him
😂 .... vulnerable!! Steven Bartlett really doesn't understand very much. When he asks he isn’t vulnerable, he's just mostly in the dark.
@@Eudaimonia88 That's not true. He's not only talking to his interviewer; he's asking questions that his viewers want answered.
I imagine he already knows the answers to a lot of the questions he asks just because of the research he (or his assistants) do on their interviewees.
I always say "better to look stupid for asking, than be stupid for not knowing" haha
My mother suffered for over a decade from Parkinsons disease, and then to make things worse got dementia too. She had an incredibly difficult and stressful childhood, coupled with a traumatic adult life at the hads of a volitile and dangerous husband. I have ALWAYS believed the sustained trauma she suffered on and off over her life changed her brain, and ultimately contributed to her parkinsons disease. Her neurologist downplayed the impact but i know it in my gut to be true. You cant live through what my mother did and not come out forever damaged.
😢poor thing. So sorry to hear that.
Do you have the same issue as your mother?
My mum developed Parkinsons when she was pregnant with me. She also developed dementia near the end of her life.
This whole concept of trauma possibly being a cause of Parkinsons has rocked my world...
Sorry for the loss of your mother. Autistic catatonia is frequently misdiagnosed as dementia. The vast majority of autism in the world is undiagnosed unaware and intellectually compensating. Telling you this to validate your intuition, not provoke anger or regret. Alzheimer's is an egodecompensatory end stage regression, but if she didn't have Alzheimer's the Parkinson's makes me think it might've been misdiagnosed autistic catatonia.
Agree with you 💯% 👍
😩😥
Trauma is the source of many illnesses and medical conditions 😢
Absolutely, trauma can manifest in many physical and mental health conditions. Recognizing and addressing it is key to overall well-being.
I've listened to this podcast atleast 6 times. His gentleness and humility is amazing. I sleep to this podcast. Thank you steve
I am listening for the second time and agree its good to repeat what is good and positive.
Sat here with tears in my eyes. My parents abused me in childhood... I'm absolutely convinced they had unresolved trauma of their own. I've had therapy on and off since I was 18, and I'm now 44. During that time, I was also s*x@lly assaulted twice by two different men, been in an emotionally abusive relationship, struggled briefly with alcohol (my father was an alcoholic).... I'm utterly EXHAUSTED... I struggle with self-care, I have very little executive function, live with depression and anxiety, my mother passed away from a stroke in 2019 which pummelled me with unexpected grief. I've never children despite desperately wanting them, because I would NEVER forgive myself if I did anything (yes, I'm scared of myself turning into my parents, despite never harming anyone else), I also wouldn't risk passing on generational trauma to my children so the cycle ends with me permanently.
You can heal.
I have so much respect for that choice.
I am following the same path: the cycle ends with me!
I wish I could give you a hug.
Hello, how wonderful a person you are, because you can see all the dirt on top of your true love.
Jesus is the truth the way and the life he can heal all trauma I know because the bible says he is near to the broken hearted and crushed of spirit and
He healed me
Call him
he’s waiting
How this episode is the most important one on the podcast and the one with some of the lowest views, honestly concerns me. What this man is saying is so so priceless ♥️
As someone who was born to an alcoholic mother. As someone who was emotionally and physically neglected by that mother, and 6 months later given away to an orphanage because that mother didn't want to care for me anymore, only to be again neglected emotionally and physically for another 4 more years. It changed how I view the world today.
As a 1-4 year old. You need a mother figure. Someone who can show you love and kindness. You need a father as well, to show you courage and bravery. I was born into a world that never cared for me since day 1.
Iv have since been diagnosed with Anti-Social Personality Disorder, Avoident Attachment Disorder, and Reactive Attachment Disorder.
I was forced to survive, and adapt in a world that didn't care for me, so I unfortunately have learned to not care for it. I wish greatly to feel anything but emptiness. I see love all around me, but to never have it myself causes me to be self sabotaged a lot in my life.
Jesus wept at the evil in this world. Jesus loves you ❤
@@FaithfulandTrue949 Thanks.
Have you tried psychotherapy? I was emotionally neglected from birth and psychotherapy changed my life. Could it help you?
@@CAEO416 I'm too self aware for therapy to help. I just found ways to deal with it myself.
@ivanstayner8818 EMDR is effective with a good practitioner. Yes we are hyper-selfaware and hypervigilant. There is hope, keep trying 🕊
Appreciate how Dr. Conti speaks so calmly and kindly about this topic. His tone makes this easier to listen to than it would be otherwise. A difficult subject delivered with care.
Very useful episode. As a teacher for 25 years, I've saw the impact trauma can have on a young persons ability to learn.
The body holds the score. As a person who was abused under age 6, I cannot remember my abuse in a physical sense but I do remember the feelings and how the person made me feel. I 100% believe that I will die early from a disease brought on from behaviours I have used from age 6 to cope with depression and feelings that I did not know the reason for until I started having flashbacks about my abuse. If you have not suffered CSA it will be hard to take in this realisation.
The fact that you have awareness I believe is half the battle to recovery and a choice you used to make healthier life decisions that will impact your health. Studies show how lifestyle changes can reverse nearly everything including aging.
The thing he said in the beginning about reflexive guilt and shame compelling us to keep it in or hide it is so real. I find it really difficult to be understood when I try to explain the impact things had on me to my therapist, because I end up minimizing the severity of it with my delivery, I think. It's hard. He focuses so much on my actions and not enough about processing my emotions. So I know I need to switch to a trauma-informed therapist. But it also doesn't help that a lot of people think having been bullied isn't a trauma. They don't think it's that serious. It's refreshing to hear from someone who gets it.
It doesn't have to be serious your making it more, are you still being bullied? Stop carrying that past and make a future. Your therapist is focused on your actions because you may think your processing something one way but you can lie to yourself your actions are the truth.
You are your actions, they are the trauma one brings to the world. If the mental you isn't expressed it's just a dream. What you do is what effects others and defines you to the world the rest exists ONLY in your head.
You're spot on. Bullying is/can be traumatizing for sure. I agree, processing the emotions for someone like yourself is likely exactly what you need. Emotions vs actions? Better to say emotions + actions. Similar to a road trip in a car. The actions = clear destination and driving forward. The emotions = lighten your load. Both are important for your road trip.
@@MindsetBliss That makes a lot of sense
I resign my campaign and endorse@@MindsetBliss both is the ♎ balance ⚖️
Thank you Steven for having the guest on and highlighting this issue, that society does not want to talk about. I was sexually abused from age 3 and have suffered both mentally and physically. Thankfully I now have a wonderful husband and children, and a good life but it's not been an easy road.
I'm so sorry that happened. Wishing you all the best in blessings and miracles in your journey of life❤
Bless you, I'm so happy you now have the life you deserve. I cannot imagine the inner fortitude it took to get there ❤
When you see people around thriving because they never had any traumatic event... I envy them 😢
Outstanding, OUTSTANDING interview! This was truly an amazing gift to humanity!
Wow, I've never heard anyone talk about feeling cursed. I've asked myself that same thing.
Our children are our biggest mirrors , our greatest teachers... our path to healing. I embraced parenting with all my CPTSD baggage and my children hold me accountable to do the work DAILY. They are my saving grace. I needed a love bigger than myself to face the work and stop fighting, flighting, freezing & fawning. They give me that in abundance ❤ Also DOAC has helped me join a lot of dots & give me courage to seek help. I now journal, alongside CBT & the work is both equally painful & enlightening. The results is im more resilent & resourceful. My kids reflect back the same qualities. This is true success for me.
Imagine a world with resilient and resourceful people or even just a few who can support others...
Thank you Steven for making me understand im not alone & there's support out there, sometimes it's a book, sometimes its writing, and sometimes it's simply listening to another xx
This is so life affirming
More power to tou
Thank you for your kind comment. I spent most of my life underestimating my personal power. It's wonderful to no longer be confined to the past & now living a more fulfilling present @aishwaryapriya9416
This sounds just like me.
Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.
Can you help with the reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. Very hard to get a reliable source here in Australia. Really need!
Yes, dr.sporessss I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.
I wish they were readily available in my place.
Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He is 59 & has so many mental health issues plus probable CTE & a TBI that left him in a coma 8 days. It's too late now I had to get a TPO as he's 6'6 300+ pound homicidal maniac.
He's constantly talking about killing someone.
He's violent. Anyone reading this Familiar w/ BPD know if it is common for an obsession with violence.
Is he on instagram?
Yes he is. dr.sporessss
I’ve suffered terrible social anxiety and panic. I’m sure this hasn’t been helped by having a borderline mother and a schizophrenic father , and 7 foster homes .. my brain feels like it’s hard wired to see threat or danger even if there isn’t any danger . It’s an emotional toll on my nervous system . Hoping one day i can try plant medicine .
That is the brain by design. Lol
How do you "ground" yourself? Where do you find safety?
@sofiamagdalena2629 in your mind and body. Grounding is connecting to the present moment.
Not grounding outside walking barefoot, although, both w benefits. Work w a trauma specialist who can teach
@@sofiamagdalena2629 mindfulness helps … but sometimes in certain situations the inner critic takes hold regardless
From 4 to 16 years old I was in a total of 22 foster homes now I'm 33 2 children don't think I've had much trauma but I look back and think myself lucky to be fostered by healthy tight nit families even though some where only temporary homes 🤔 maybe I'm just different on how to deal with things to others it depends on the individual I was lucky to go abroad had good birthdays and Christmas saw my biological mum once a fortnight I was closer to my nana other than my mum we don't have that mother daughter relationship probably never will either
0:00: ⚠ Trauma's intergenerational impact on genes, aging, and mental health; questioning pill-based solutions.
8:42: 💔 Unaddressed childhood trauma led to mental health struggles and reluctance to seek help.
16:41: 🧠 Trauma in childhood can lead to increased risk of autoimmune disorders and early death due to gene transcription changes.
25:22: ⚖ The impact of childhood trauma on siblings can vary due to different factors like nature, nurture, and emotional attunement.
33:16: 🧠 Impact of trauma on brain development and vulnerability towards mental health issues in young adulthood.
41:51: ⚕ Abscesses in the body can cause non-specific symptoms, leading to a need for surgical intervention.
49:52: 🧠 Impact of trauma on brain responses and life narratives.
58:25: 🧠 Impact of trauma on mood regulation areas in the brain leading to cognitive blind spots and altered perception.
1:06:54: 💡 The limbic system in the brain, driven by emotions, overrides logic when facing trauma, impacting decision-making.
1:14:52: ⚔ Surviving a lion attack leads to self-reflection and behavior change for future prevention.
1:23:24: 💤 Impact of trauma on sleep and its link to post-trauma syndrome.
1:30:56: 💔 Childhood trauma leads to poor self-care, inflammation, and weight retention affecting overall health.
1:39:06: 💡 Recognizing the lasting impact of childhood trauma and reframing triggering memories to understand their power.
Recapped using Tammy AI
Your shows are compelling, fascinating & extremely useful. I appreciate your content. For the past month, all of the outstanding guests you've interviewed have been at the forefront of information pertaining to a recent traumatic event perpetrated upon me by a sibling. It is so difficult to get & find information on trauma & how it changes the brain & biology of a person & reading people and events that substantially change people in profound ways. Thank you. I then subscribe & follow the people you interview. After all, how would any person out in your audience ever be able to be aware of these amazing people & their unique insights & immense help. You've changed the knowledge I been seeking to acquire 💯
I'm in a brain retraining program fixing my chronic illnesses from trauma. A big part of the program is Internal Family Systems. I was sick for 21 years. In a year of doing the Gupta retraining program I am 80% to 90% better. Everything he is saying is dead on.
I really do believe 'Spirituality' is the answer and more importantly is the truth ❤
Spirituality…not religion
Define spiritually. If you say, "I'm spiritual", how does that look?
Yes the world would be a much happier place religion brings evil people and disorder in the world.
I reversed my rheumatoid arthritis by addressing my trauma in therapy. The difference is profound.
what type of therapy did you have please?
The intro got me hooked. You just got your self a new subscriber all the way from Tanzania - East Africa!
Hi @MsDarkrabbit, I’m your neighbor from Zambia
@@oliviabanda3914 lovely! I have been seeing clips from this account but never really spent time watching. Today, am binge watching things 😂
I experienced childhood sexual assault from 5 to 11, DV between my parents, family violence, slut shamed by a whole town, DV, mental & abuse as an adult.
I’ve had depression since before I knew what it was, didn’t start to remember the childhood SA until mid/late 20’s (as I became a parent).
I’ve attempted to end my life more than once & still struggle with ideation weekly.
My whole life I’ve felt different, ashamed, small. No where feels like home, no where is truly safe.
I’ve now got long term chronic pain, fibromyalgia & autoimmune hepatitis - all presented during my 40’s.
I was trying to unravel it all when the health conditions started presenting & had to stop . I’m now again trying to get myself into treatment, with very limited funds, it’s not an easy task.
If I dropped dead tomorrow from a heart attack I wouldn’t be sad about it, it’s so hard to stay.