Surviving Trauma: The Theory of Structural Dissociation and Defense Mechanisms

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  • Опубликовано: 27 янв 2025

Комментарии • 15

  • @EmmaChasteen-g7z
    @EmmaChasteen-g7z 7 месяцев назад +10

    Put it on 1.5x if your brain was getting frustrated with the audio for some reason.

    • @independantfree1891
      @independantfree1891 17 дней назад +1

      Thank you, I find 1.25 is the best speed for me to absorb what this brilliant woman is teaching!

  • @MultiKoko73
    @MultiKoko73 2 месяца назад +1

    So, you go to the doctor and they only examine half of you. I think the split is not in the brain, but rather between the head and the body. We are humans, body and spirit. Emotions, thoughts. A holistic approach in medicine is much needed.

    • @independantfree1891
      @independantfree1891 17 дней назад +1

      I agree with what you say. Trying to find physicians and other health care clinicians that are able to marry their ability to analysis and understand what is going on with a person.

    • @MultiKoko73
      @MultiKoko73 17 дней назад

      @independantfree1891 what do you mean more precisely?

    • @leeleeturn
      @leeleeturn 17 дней назад

      @@MultiKoko73 do you know anything about neuroscience? It's exploded in the last decade. They can now "see" what's going on in the brain. The part that connects the two halves of the brain is literally smaller and less developed in people with complex PTSD. The brain corresponds to the mind. Janina Fisher is using the most advanced neuroscience behind her theory. It makes perfect sense. The right brain is nonverbal and timeless. Emotional flashbacks happen as if the original abuser were standing right in front of the person rather than say, their boss, or another authority figure. The left analytical verbal side is especially not accessible under those circumstances.. That's why Fisher is such a proponent of mindfulness (a mind body intervention, note) because bringing awareness to the present moment calms the right brain and allows the left brain to come online. Then the person can unblend from the panicky aspects of themselves and talk to them as separate parts. I find this super helpful in feeling grounded in my more mature self and growing my love and compassion for myself.

    • @leeleeturn
      @leeleeturn 17 дней назад

      do you know anything about neuroscience? It's exploded in the last decade. They can now "see" what's going on in the brain. The part that connects the two halves of the brain is literally smaller and less developed in people with complex PTSD. The brain corresponds to the mind. Janina Fisher is using the most advanced neuroscience behind her theory. It makes perfect sense. The right brain is nonverbal and timeless. Emotional flashbacks happen as if the original abuser were standing right in front of the person rather than say, their boss, or another authority figure. The left analytical verbal side is especially not accessible under those circumstances.. That's why Fisher is such a proponent of mindfulness (a mind body intervention, note) because bringing awareness to the present moment calms the right brain and allows the left brain to come online. Then the person can unblend from the panicky aspects of themselves and talk to them as separate parts. I find this super helpful in feeling grounded in my more mature self and growing my love and compassion for myself.

    • @leeleeturn
      @leeleeturn 17 дней назад

      @@MultiKoko73 @MultiKoko73 do you know anything about neuroscience? It's exploded in the last decade. They can now "see" what's going on in the brain. The part that connects the two halves of the brain is literally smaller and less developed in people with complex PTSD. The brain corresponds to the mind. Janina Fisher is using the most advanced neuroscience behind her theory. It makes perfect sense. The right brain is nonverbal and timeless. Emotional flashbacks happen as if the original abuser were standing right in front of the person rather than say, their boss, or another authority figure. The left analytical verbal side is especially not accessible under those circumstances.. That's why Fisher is such a proponent of mindfulness (a mind body intervention, note) because bringing awareness to the present moment calms the right brain and allows the left brain to come online. Then the person can unblend from the panicky aspects of themselves and talk to them as separate parts. I find this super helpful in feeling grounded in my more mature self and growing my love and compassion for myself.

  • @tmking7483
    @tmking7483 3 месяца назад

    You're a story teller mostly
    I know your going to say don't devalue me.
    Well - I don't agree with your model - I'm not devaluing u - I'm correcting your cognitive dissonance so u won't be traumatized by all the misinformation your spreading in the world of trauma

    • @mayday2639
      @mayday2639 Месяц назад

      As someone with DID, shut the fuck up, this is giving me words I never had to describe my experience and it's not as simple as this single video. This one is a very basic overview of something you understand nothing about, so go do proper work before you go after the very little tools trauma survivors have to exist

  • @tmking7483
    @tmking7483 3 месяца назад

    The cry for help is a ventral vagal response to a difficult situation not a trauma response. See Doctor Porges. Your structural dissociation fragmentation parts blabla has caused so much trauma to the traumatized - why don't u retire.

    • @leeleeturn
      @leeleeturn 2 месяца назад +1

      Speak for yourself! Her work is helping me a great deal!

    • @independantfree1891
      @independantfree1891 17 дней назад

      Some of us understand it and need to hear it that way. I can understand it could be a trauma trigger for others that don't like being told how they think.

    • @leeleeturn
      @leeleeturn 17 дней назад

      @@tmking7483 Do you know anything about neuroscience? It's exploded in the last decade. They can now "see" what's going on in the brain. The part that connects the two halves of the brain is literally smaller and less developed in people with complex PTSD. The brain corresponds to the mind. Janina Fisher is using the most advanced neuroscience behind her theory. It makes perfect sense. The right brain is nonverbal and timeless. Emotional flashbacks happen as if the original abuser were standing right in front of the person rather than say, their boss, or another authority figure. The left analytical verbal side is not accessible. That's why Fisher is such a proponent of mindfulness (a mind body intervention, note) because bringing awareness to the present moment calms the right brain and allows the left brain to come online. Then the person can unblend from the panicky aspects of themselves and talk to them as separate parts. I find this super helpful in feeling grounded in my more mature self and growing my love and compassion for myself.