I survived childhood trauma/abuse, six years in the military wasn’t a particularly calming experience, and then of course an LTA on top of it all.
I would say it took me FIVE years to get through the horrific sleep deprivation part of it.
I remember thinking I would never sleep again, that I would be haunted the rest of my days by the latest trauma.
I am now sleeping better than I have in decades, but not perfect sleep, because I am getting older and aging has problems too (of course).
I also feel more calm and safe than ever before as well.
For me, I learned I had to get out of my own way.
We feel what we feel, but we have the power to change the channel, change the focus.
I spent most of those first five years of R working hard on myself, but also in a constant state of forgiving myself — and really, until you learn to trust YOU and your own judgments again, no way to start trusting your spouse again.
And yes, my mind was seemingly ahead of my body on healing, but it really wasn’t.
As I have learned, our brains create can continue extra suffering far after the horrific events are over.
I wasn’t great at focus or meditation, and I am still not great at it, but good enough to empower the moment. It took so long, but again, I think my calm started to kick in somewhere in year five, and the last five years have been the best of my life. Peace and calm I didn’t even consider was possible, great relationships with my sons, my family, etc.
Does my brain still hit the panic button?
Yes, I am still human.
I’m just able to talk myself out of the proverbial tree in seconds, instead of hours or days.
So, I think it is POSSIBLE, but I sure had to make it happen myself.
Your brain is still trying to find a path where the bad stuff doesn’t happen or can’t happen — which is impossible. Bad stuff happens, sadly, that’s a big part of life.
We do (after relentless focus) have a choice in how we respond to the trauma.
It took me a long time to realize I was as safe I was going to get, and if bad stuff happens again I KNOW I will survive that too. Knowing I will be okay no matter what is a powerful thought to keep in the front of my brain. Again, it takes a while to not just say it, but believe it.