
“The dark night of the soul is a journey into light, a journey from your darkness into the strength and hidden resources of your soul.” ~Caroline Myss
Growing up in a household with both parents, my grandmothers, and pets, people often assumed we were the picture-perfect family. I participated in dance classes and sports, and we also had a lot of extended family gatherings. We lived in a pretty nice neighborhood, went to good schools, and both of my parents worked and were educated.
But, from a very young age, I witnessed and experienced frightening events and images no child should ever have to see and go through. While I normalized these ongoing inappropriate and tragic images and incidents, I had no idea what they were doing to my mental and emotional health.
I was often afraid to go to bed as a child—I knew I would wet it and that I’d be ridiculed by my father the next morning for doing so.
Family members and friends would constantly point out to me that I would jump and flinch at any loud noise, and in my teens till early twenties, people who knew me well told me I was defensive, ready to fight, and had a chip on my shoulder.
They were right.
I was.
Being raised in a hectic household felt like a pressure cooker that kept me on high alert and walking around on eggshells.
While my family was good at making sure we had a roof over heads, they were also good at making sure I did not divulge family secrets, kept up appearances at all times, and was ultra-focused on image management.
In fact, they were so good at convincing us we were stable and normal that I overlooked my father’s love of rage, intense frustration, silent treatment, stonewalling, and dizzying word salad speak. I also chose to look away when he’d give a really good and thorough spanking.
My mother’s idea of coping was avoiding, not speaking up, and ignoring tough family moments and me.
Because I considered myself to be strong, I chose to speak up on her behalf, protect her, and focus on only the good things that happened in our family while suppressing all of the darkness that our family was centered around.
While I was so busy feeling the need to protect others, I didn’t feel psychologically or physically protected in my own household.
At the same time, I found myself trying to get away from the constant chaotic energy in my household by hiding out in my bedroom while writing copious journal entries, trying to make sense of the scariness and secrets.
Despite requesting from my parents several times to see a family therapist, I was always met back with, “Why? We don’t believe in therapy. We’re fine. There’s no reason to go.”
I was clearly asking for support but was being denied the help I felt I needed.
The first time I ever saw a therapist was when I was eighteen. My college offered therapy as part of our tuition, and I couldn’t wait to go. I’m not sure that I knew exactly what I wanted to talk about back then, but I think I was hoping the therapist would have a magic question that would unleash a series of answers regarding my deep feelings, sensitivities, and challenging upbringing.
Sadly, when both sessions with that college therapist resulted in him asking me to talk to a teddy bear and punch it, I never went back.
It wasn’t till I was in my mid-twenties when I saw my next therapist because I was concerned about a relationship I was in at the time. On occasion, I brought up my upbringing, and so that therapist administered Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), a common technique used with PTSD patients and people who’ve experienced trauma. Unfortunately, it was not clearly explained why we were doing EMDR, and so the core problem wasn’t really addressed, and I left work with that therapist with no diagnosis.
In 2018, after a series of ongoing events within my family, I chose estrangement. While I’d been working in the mental health industry for two decades, I had no idea how estrangement would wreak havoc on my emotional well-being. I truly was not well-prepared for taking such a devastating decision.
Immediately, I was plagued with a daily bombardment of terrifying childhood and adult memories I had completely forgotten. No matter what I did or how I coped, they painfully persisted.
Insomnia became my new “best friend,” and I felt agitated, apathetic, and numb.
In waking life, intrusive and bizarre invasive images came to me from nowhere, and while trying to keep it all together, I wondered if I was losing my mind and what would happen to me.
I always felt I knew myself well. And I considered myself to be practical, pragmatic, and down-to-earth. Additionally, I’d never been scared to face any challenge head-on, but this seemed to be a beast that wouldn’t quit.
In life, I was a go-getter, went after my dreams, traveled the world, and had been working for myself for the past seventeen years.
In fact, I worked hard and diligently through yoga, breathwork, journaling, Reiki, coaching, therapy, and so many other modalities to get to my truth. But making this one choice to be estranged from my family—which I felt was the best and only option at that point to preserve my well-being—seemed to open up Pandora’s Box, and no matter how many tools I had, it felt like nothing worked.
From the summer of 2018 till January 2020, I didn’t recognize myself.
I felt disengaged from life and from my soul.
I didn’t want to go outside, which was odd because I’m a huge nature lover.
I lost interest in my favorite hobby and pastime of surfing. This felt so shocking—it felt so counterintuitive. I had no reason to no longer want to surf, but suddenly I felt so removed from it.
Life was blah and dull, and I felt completely disconnected.
Not being able to access the root cause of what I thought might be an identity crisis left me terror-stricken—especially being a hopeful and optimistic person.
One day, after constant communication with my husband over my family estrangement and resulting emotional chaos, my husband told me, “I don’t think I’m equipped to help you anymore. I think it’s time to see a therapist.”
He was right. While I tried to use my tools daily, I needed somebody highly trained to inform me of what I was actually going through and what to expect. I made an immediate appointment with a local psychologist and felt relieved that some answers might be around the corner.
As my husband and I waited in the doctor’s office for the therapist to call my name, I felt excited and curious.
The therapist conducted a full intake, which left me feeling relieved and shocked—in all the years I’d worked with countless therapists, I’d never had a proper intake! The intake was comprehensive, and I was given the chance to talk about my childhood all the way up till present day.
Once I completed the intake, the therapist said, “You have PTSD. You’ve experienced trauma and abuse. I want you to see a specialist.”
With just those few sentences, I felt my whole body relax. My shoulders lightened. My jaw was no longer stiff. I had so much more headspace, and it was like I finally knew the truth. In that moment, I stopped buying into focusing only on all the good times of my childhood and finally faced openly the dysfunction that was there, too.
I’d worked so hard all my life to keep up the appearance and image of having a perfect family that without even realizing it, I was doing extreme damage to myself by not admitting what I’d been through and witnessed.
It’s been nearly six months since my diagnosis, and I can gratefully say that life has come back to my version of “normal” and fulfilling. I’m back on my surfboard and am joyful and curious about life again. The invasive images have stopped, and I’m sleeping better.
Being diagnosed with PTSD didn’t feel like a stigma; it actually brought me back home to me. PTSD brought my soul back to life.
Debunking Myths
There are many myths surrounding the topic of PTSD that I feel are important to debunk.
Myth #1: PTSD only happens to war veterans.
Truth: Research shows that children and people who’ve never experienced combat can have PTSD. People can experience PTSD if they’ve been in an accident, experienced any form of abuse and dysfunction, or even through the course of grieving the death of a loved one.
Myth #2 PTSD is something that only happens to men.
Truth: About 10% of women will experience PTSD in their lifetime, and women are twice as likely to develop PTSD as men. Between 3 and 15% of girls who’ve had a trauma develop PTSD, and between 1-6% of boys who’ve experienced some form of trauma develop PTSD.
Myth #3 Your therapist or doctor will diagnose you straight away.
Truth: PTSD is commonly overlooked and often goes undetected. One of the reasons this happens is because a person might not experience the PTSD symptoms straight away; in fact, sometimes it isn’t until years later that an individual starts to experience symptoms related to a traumatic event. Additionally, therapists require that a patient experience all of the documented symptoms of PTSD or at least one of the symptoms for one straight month.
In my case, it took me two decades, countless therapists, mental health professionals, coaches, and healers before I was finally officially diagnosed with PTSD this year.
Myth #4: PTSD only happens due to recurring events.
Truth: One event can be enough to bring on PTSD.
Myth #5: You cannot function or live the life of your dreams if you have PTSD.
Truth: Sometimes undiagnosed PTSD is the very thing that is preventing you from moving forward on your life plans and goals because, without you knowing it, the symptoms are preventing you from focus, clarity, and confidence. It is absolutely possible to live the life you desire even if you have PTSD.
Myth #6: You’re not normal and cannot have a fulfilling life if you have PTSD.
Truth: You are normal. You’re still whole and complete even if you have PTSD. And, it is possible that you can have an even more fulfilling, peaceful, and connected life once receiving such a diagnosis because you will learn how to manage and minimize symptoms while practicing being more mindful, still, and deeply engaged in your life.
Common Symptoms
- Walking around defensively. Waiting for somebody to shout, attack, or hurt you. Walking around on eggshells and hyper-vigilance.
- Hyper-arousal. Jumping and flinching at the sound of a door slamming, loud noises, or family or friends yelling and talking loudly.
- Possibly angry when you hear another chew loudly, swallow or gulp, or even the smell of cigarettes or another substance may put you on edge and make you irritable.
- Feeling claustrophobic or annoyed if somebody stands too close to you in the supermarket or on the street.
- May not be able to tolerate crowds or a lot of people.
- Ruminating, having obsessive thoughts or intrusive thoughts that scare you. Sudden invasive images while awake that are random, seem to make no sense, and go against your core values.
- Digestion issues and food allergies
- Overworking and perfectionism
- People-pleasing and proving
- Over-explaining, justifying, over-apologizing
- Feeling numb, disconnected, apathetic
- Dissociation blacking out
- Brain fog—mixing up words like saying “yesterday” instead of tomorrow
- Decreased interest in things that once truly mattered and were enjoyable to you
- Inability to remember trauma or have blocked it
- A flooding of difficult memories or instances throughout your waking day
- Insomnia or constant disrupted sleep
- Nightmares
- Difficult focusing
Tips for Coping with PTSD
The tips below are a little “toolkit” I put together with my therapist, as well as extensive research I conducted. While I have found these tips have helped me with my PTSD, this is not a “one-size-fits-all” package. You may have to experiment a bit on what works best for you. For me, using a combination of the tips below helped a lot.
1. Guided meditation and guided visualization.
With PTSD, it’s important to give the brain a break to calm down your adrenals and stop trauma and anxiety responses. Positive guided visualization helps reduce stress and has you visualize successful and positive scenarios while also having you focus on the breath.
2. Reiki, massage, and acupuncture (if you don’t have a phobia with needles).
If touch triggers you, this may not be the coping method for you. For me, these modalities showed me I was safe to be touched and were very relaxing.
3. Stress-reducing foods.
Studies have shown that eating blueberries, dairy, non-processed cheese, green vegetables, and almonds and drinking chamomile tea have a significant reduction in PTSD symptoms while bringing on rather immediate calm.
4. Pet therapy.
Petting your cat, listening to their purrs, for example, can calm the nerves and help soothe the PTSD symptoms.
5. Mantras and meditation.
Research shows that saying or chanting a mantra during meditation have been one of the most beneficial ways to reduce PTSD symptoms.
6. Practicing gentleness.
Consciously and intentionally eat, drink, talk, drive, shower, brush your teeth, and do all other daily activities gently. When practicing gentleness, you respond versus react and are less prone to trauma and anxiety responses.
7. Avoiding caffeine and alcohol.
Studies show alcohol and caffeine trigger nightmares and invasive images and rev up the central nervous system.
8. Listening to binaural beats.
The tones and beats of binaural beats have been shown to significantly help with better and deeper sleep, reduce anxiety, help boost confidence, and encourage relaxation.
My hope in sharing my personal story of having PTSD is that you will reframe your PTSD experience by seeing just how resilient and courageous you actually are. Instead of believing PTSD is a debilitating disorder, I hope you can view it as something that challenges you to find your truth and wakes you up to what matters most in your life so you can live the life of your dreams and purpose.
About Laurie Santos
Laurie Santos is a Certified Co-Creative and Co-Active Life Coach of seventeen years. She’s also a Reiki Master, has a Master of Science in Justice and a Bachelor of Science in Anthropology. Since 2007, Laurie’s been an expat having lived in Africa, The Middle East, and Europe. You can sign up for her Soul Supplements newsletter at lifecoachlaurie.com or check out her weekly Soul Session at Instagram at Life Coach Laurie.










Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine.
So much like me, all the symptoms were mine, but never knew it was PTSD. Thank you. Feeling better but its been a hard road.
Cyndi – Those diagnosed with PTSD may have different clinical signs and symptoms. Medication may help some, but not others. PTSD is complicated, and so are those who suffer with it. The DSM (The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) sets the criteria for diagnosing PTSD. Every psychologist or psychiatrist, is not qualified to make a PTSD diagnosis. A trained trauma professional, i.e., a psychologist or psychiatrist is most important for diagnosing PTSD. And yes, a traumatic childhood can be the cause of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. It is sometimes referred to as CPTSD or C-PTSD.
Great article, thanks.. also cptsd is worth mentioning, as you can walk around not ever knowing why life feels so difficult and minimizing emotions and childhood experiences. It’s like putting the pieces of the puzzle together.. thanks for sharing your experiences and holistic tips 🙂
Laurie illustrates perfectly how a person can be high-functioning while this condition hides in plain sight. It’s great to hear she has tackled it head-on here and is sharing her experience.
Thank you Laurie for sharing your authentic experience and research into PTSD. This information could be a lifesaver for people who are living with the debilitating condition.
Wow, it’s clear to me that my childhood wasn’t super easy… But this just made me realize how much I’ve been forced to normalize the chaos. It’s unfortunate that I can’t afford a therapist right now, but I’ll try and learn more, thank you for writing this… might have just shifted my whole reality.
I found this article speaks from the heart and true experience. I see how it has affected my life over the years. It can be a real struggle and you can become self critical not understanding what your experiencing.
Getting the right therapist is vital. Self care and self compassion is really important but I found it difficult at time. Yoga and running really helped me.
Find what work’s, know things don’t have to always be like this and you are not alone.
So many ideas how to recover here.
Beautiful article that will help so many people.
Yoga, journaling, mindfulness and EMDR were the tools I used to combat C-PTDS that resurfaced after I had kids (their cries were super triggering). Also making lifestyle changes was important: quality sleep, long walks, switching to decaf, gardening, meditating, and yes, adaptin a doggo 🙂
Laurie, I don’t even know what to say, I have had the same upbringing and then having consistent abusive relationships. I wanted to end my life for so long, been to 3 counseling sessions (I never ask for help) and it just made me believe no one can help me. People around me who saw how I dealt with life thought I was crazy. It hurt. I would sweat profusely, shake and my thoughts were going haywire.
Those intrusive thoughts were awful, I could be driving and then a very vivid episode of someone I love getting killed or an awful accident happening comes out of no where. I was so jumpy and would wake up in POOLS of sweat without remembering what nightmare I had.
I will try finding the right therapist, I still deal with almost 85% of those symptoms. I have been working with journaling, Reiki, massage therapy, and meditation. I’ll get there I know I will, thank you for sharing it’s possible.
A contact of mine, Aruna Harish, asked me to copy/paste her private message to me regarding this article because after several attempts to load her comment here and have her email verified by Disqus, for some reason, she’s not receiving the verification email. Here’s her comment which she gave me permission to paste here:
A very touching and awareness filled article on PTSD by Laurie. A lot of people struggle from PTSD and dont realize. For a person with PTSD managing everyday life can be hard and it might seem like there is no light at the end of the tunnel. Trauma can be of so many different kinds and life post trauma is experienced differently by different people. Laurie has courageously shared her heartfelt story casting light on so many aspects and symptoms and ways to overcome PTSD and uplift oneself from a scary, paralyzing place to being best version of ourselves. I was so fortunate to attend Life Coach Laurie’s weekly live sessions and monthly summits on her instagram @lifecoachlaurie on great topics that guides us to lead life from soul. And it has helped me so much after having gone through PTSD myself. Life Coach Laurie has been not only touching lives but changing lives in amazing ways. Sincerely, Aruna Harish
Thank you Aruna for your heartfelt message. It means a lot the ongoing support and encouragement you give to others and to me after what you’ve shared you have also gone through yourself! Sending so much love, Laurie
Hi Madeleine, thank you SO much for reading, taking the time to comment and to share your lovely feedback. You’re so right about C-PTSD (this is what I have). You’re so welcome for the the holistic tips—please stay in touch and I would love to know how they worked for you! Sending love, Laurie <3
Wow, thank you so much, Sonia, for your kind words, understanding and intuition. You really hit the nail-on-the-head how it is indeed possible to have a “normal” life, if you will, go about your day, and be “high-functioning” while still living with PTSD/C-PTSD and maybe not even know it. I feel like your comment is very reassuring for those who are aware/have had a diagnosis with PTSD—it can make them feel a life of inner peace and fulfillment is attainable and those who maybe are in the process of being diagnosed can find hope and optimism in what you’ve stated here. Thanks so much for reading the article and commenting—thank you for your kind and loving support!
Eeeek, the doggo!!!! What kind of doggie did you get? Pets can help so much, right? (if they’re not triggering). Thank goodness I’m not triggered by pets either because I’m a huge animal lover. One of the worst parts of my CPTSD was the invasive images—did you have that? OMG, it was so scary because it had to do with animals and I was like, “What IS going on???” It sounds like we have the same tools, Joanna! LOVE what you’re doing to minimize your symptoms. Oh wow, that must have been very challenging to have had your kiddos be triggers—I am SO proud of you for taking care of you. Sending so much love, Laurie
Thank you SO much, Celeste, for reading and commenting. I sure hope it helps others—gosh, it would have helped me immensely so long ago had I known I had it. So, I do hope others reading this article will feel they may have an epiphany or wake-up if they have PTSD or C-PTSD and aren’t aware of it. Thank you so much again. Hugs, Laurie
Hi Nada, I replied back to you but I no longer see the comment! Do you see it on your side? Oh no! I hope it isn’t gone! I wrote you a long message back ! <3
Hi Arian, I am so sorry to hear that you, too, had a childhood that wasn’t easy. I so hear you and get you when you say you were forced to normalize the chaos—this is one of the biggest challenges to being able to see, feel, recognize things like PTSD, CPTSD, OCD and other things because the truth is, you’re very strong and resilient—you found so many ways to overcome what you experienced and that’s why oftentimes we don’t know that what we’re experiencing could indeed be symptoms of something. In my case, when I was growing up and in my 20’s, there was this big myth that only combat veterans got PTSD so I never thought I could have something like it. Are you familiar with Nedra Tawwab? She’s a therapist on Instagram who posts amazing signs and symptoms of various things due to being raised in a certain type of environment. I realize it’s not therapy but reading her posts could bring you into the light on some issues. I love her stuff. Also, if you can’t afford a therapist right now, journaling can help a lot—do you journal? I ask because if you note down the things, feelings, signs, symptoms you’re having and have had over a period of time, when you do go to work with your therapist, your journal entries can help a lot. On YouTube, I highly recommend listening to Binaural Beats. They’re free. You can just keep them on while you’re at home relaxing—you can leave them playing in the background; it’s just gentle music. And, you can also always do guided meditations that are free on YouTube, too. I also love Yoga with Adriene on YouTube—she has amazing free Yoga classes especially for Stress, Anxiety, and other topics. For me, listening go binaural beats, doing guided meditations and doing yoga with Adriene help me a lot so see if that feels good for you. Of course, these things don’t replace therapy and an official diagnosis but they bring you calm, bring you peace, and make you feel good 😀 And, if you’d like, I have a monthly free newsletter where I share a free guided visualization each month that I create which can also help you. My details are in my bio. Thanks so much for writing, Arian. I hope this helps <3 Love, Laurie
Hi Karen, thank you so much for your kind words, feedback and personal share regarding your experience with PTSD. I’m very sorry you’ve experienced it, too, and I really appreciate you informing us how yoga and running have really helped you. There are a lot of studies specifically talking about how running really helps to minimize PTSD so I’m happy it suits you! I love your advice at the end: “Find what works (because you’re right, it’s not a one-size-fits-all-package), things don’t always have to be like this and you’re not alone.” These are such encouraging and supportive words that people with C-PTSD and PTSD need to hear. Thank you very much and I appreciate your loving wisdom. Take good care of you! <3 Love, Laurie
OMG Ari, I couldn’t be happier to know you suddenly felt more whole—oh wow, this is just wonderful! I am really proud of you. That’s such a beautiful experience to finally be able to fall into. The cognitive dissonance is deep when having been raised in chaos. I’m happy you’re meeting yourself where you are. Personally, I feel it’s okay if it’s challenging to find things that stick—it’s okay to use a tool here and there in-the-moment; I’ve worked this way myself because of that reactionary, knee-jerk, impulsive environment I was raised it. I guess it’s more about continuing to invest in the self no matter how that shows up so long as it is in support of you, your heart and soul, and feels healthy. Oh! I’ve got an OUTSTANDING book recommendation: Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents by Dr. Lindsay C. Gibson. It’s literally a life-changer. She writes to tenderly, compassionately and gently and you feel so seen, witnessed, felt and heard. The book has exercises as well which I found quite comforting. You can get it on Amazon and ibooks I believe. If I can support you in any other ways or if you have any other comments or just want to chat about this subject, feel free to reach out. I am rooting for you, Ari! Sending so much love, Laurie <3
Hi Laurie, and no I don’t see the comment on my side, I would’ve loved to have read it! Thank you so much for even commenting, I will check my inbox maybe it’s there?
You are so kind, thank you so much for your reply (the first & second time!) I greatly appreciate your time.
Reading this sincere reply made me cry, but it means so much to me hearing it from you. I hope I find the right therapist as well, it’s something I’m still looking into. Going through 3 different therapists and not getting the help I need is very discouraging but I know it’s possible. I’m really proud of myself too, thank you <3
I haven't actually looked into therapy groups, I was too busy pushing the world away. I will look into that! Just posting here was a big leap for me, that's why your feedback emotionall impacted me. I also never thought about facebook, i usually keep away from social media, but I think that would help greatly! I'm grateful for stopping on this article and joining this site and having so many people relating to these issues. Thank you!
When I had seen a naturopath she told me about tapping and I've been doing Brad Yates videos since, they do help so much.
I have read about EMDR, I really want to try that I feel like I have a lot more than needs to be resurfaced, I've dissociated and used recreational drugs for so long to cover up my emotions and situations that I don't remember much. I can now say it's been almost 3 months free from any type of stimulant, that includes coffee. My CNS really needed it.
Thank you, I will take your consideration into MUCH consideration, cognitive therapy will be my first step, and then EMDR.
I will keep in touch, you have given me even more strength and motivation to further my progress, talk soon and I thank you for everything that you do and sharing. You have impacted me greatly. Sending love your way
Nada
Oh no Nada! I am sorry to hear it did not post! I am happy I came back here and looked and then asked! I had posted that I am SO sorry to hear you had it so tough as a child and in relationships later due to the trauma you experienced in your upbringing—this is so unfortunate and seems to be the fate of many who had trauma, chaos and abuse as a youngster. I am VERY proud of you for never giving up and for keeping to your meditation, yoga, Reiki, and massage. I hope you can find a therapist you ultimately feel comfortable with and who has a background specifically in trauma. It would help if they know some things about personality disorders because there could always be that along the way, you had relationships with or have family members with personality disorders. In the meantime, is there a PTSD or C-PTSD support group near you? I wonder if this would make you feel seen, witnessed, heard, supported, understood and not alone. There are also support groups on Facebook, too—maybe that might bring you comfort. I am sad you’re still experiencing 85% of your symptoms—let’s get those symptoms minimized and bring you more peace. You deserve that. I hope you can also reframe your PTSD as the fact that you’re a warrior, a thriver, a survivor—you’re super resilient and so strong even though you don’t feel you are. The proof is you’re still here despite the challenges and what’s been thrown your way! This take courage, guts, and bravery. Also, please find some comfort in the other comments from the other women here, We’re with you. I’m with you. Also, have you heard of EFT (Emotional Freedom Technique, aka “tapping?”). Lastly, I’m not a doctor but there’s another modality called, EMDR, which I also underwent and most people experience EMDR who have PTSD. My recommendation is to have some Cognitive Therapy first and then move to EMDR after you feel a bit stronger and truly ready. Will you keep in touch and let me know how you’re going? Sending you warm hugs and much love on the next leg of your healing journey. I wish you much inner peace and calm. Love, Laurie <3
Laurie! This was very heart warming, thank you for spending the time to respond. I journal restlessly and credit my stability to it! Yoga helps but it can be hard for me to find habits that stick because of my childhood. Still working on it, thank you for the instagram, for your support and again, for being a writer. It’s so inspiring, I saw myself realizing the beauty of my childhood by understanding the things that cause “irrational” pain. Suddenly I feel more whole and have a wider perspective of other people’s defense mechanisms.
Love, Ari
This was my life all over. For many years I struggled to make sense of the traumatising experiences I was forced to suffer alone (apart from my 6 siblings, who also suffered through it). None of us understood the “normalisation” of such horrific goings on.
I am happy to say that I have conquered this on my own (never sought professional help). But have developed many techniques to help others through it as well. One of the most significant is SERT (Subconscious Emotional Release Technique) whereas, we delve into the “what” without the associated emotion at first. We then find the attached emotions and cut the cord. This has been super successful with many of my clients, so I’m now writing an online program to help many more, hopefully it will be released in the next month. We do a lot of gentle work building up to that though and only do the deep dive when the client is ready.
Thank you for writing about your story .. many blessings
Thanks for writing, Elaine, and I’m sad you also had to go through such experiences yet am very happy you’ve found your way through it and are also helping many others navigate through their healing journey with love, too. For many of us healers, it is clear we had to go through such experiences in order to be able to truly empathize and to be able to hold the “weight” of such heavy experiences for others when they come to us for treatment and care. So, there is a “payoff” I suppose, which sounds a bit odd, but I have to come to learn that despite the fact that hurt people hurt people, healed people heal others. <3 Be well and much love, Laurie
This was so helpful — thank you for sharing your story.
Thank you for reading, Carrie. I’m so happy to know it was helpful for you. ❤️
I wish you’d have included medication because many people with PTSD have a LOT of success with anti-psychotic medication. My son, for instance, was therapied half to death before a psychiatrist tried him on olanzapine and now most of the hallucinations and voices are gone and he’s actually able to function again. There is literally no evidence backing the claim that binaural beats or reiki or acupuncture do anything for a person with PTSD and plenty that show medication can help. I feel like someone with your education and experience should understand what severe PTSD is like. My son has visual and auditory hallucinations, can’t remember from one minute to the next, can’t communicate with others outside our family, can’t do his school work because the words have no meaning to him, he has 8 distinct personalities in his head, and doesn’t even trust the two people who love and care for him because his trauma was so horrific. You can’t think happy thoughts that kind of pain away. You can’t hug a kitty and stop seeing the monster who destroyed your innocence. I feel like this article is worse than the usual hippy dippy mindfulness crap. Have you EVER actually met someone with real PTSD or are your clients people who just had hectic childhoods?
I’m literally shaking here reading this crap.