Showing posts with label connection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label connection. Show all posts

Monday, 1 February 2016

More on trauma, attunement and attachment

Trauma changes the way we are wired. And its effects can be lifelong.  Particularly attachment trauma from our earliest experience of attachment to our parents.
 
As recent research has discovered, the brain is “hard-wired to connect to other minds, to create
images of others’ intentional states, affective (emotional) expressions, and bodily states of
arousal” via a set of specialised neurons in the brain called mirror neurons. They are the basis of empathy and emotional resonance with others. These neurons allow us to interpret the world
around us by anticipating the actions of others by studying their facial expressions and bodily
movement. Young children will instinctively make eye contact with their mother to communicate,
well before they have verbal language. The mother’s attunement to this mutual dance of eye and
facial expression is absolutely vital in landscaping the infant brain to regulate arousal (i.e. calming
the child in the face of distressing stimuli) and thus ensuring empathy between them. If a child is not
soothed, and therefore doesn’t learn to self-sooth in the childhood years, they are likely to switch
between states of hyper- and hypo-arousal at the least stimulus without warning.
 
Imagine then if the mother is distracted, conflicted, in pain, or depressed. This fine-tuning, which
directly drives the neural development of her infant’s brain is distorted, fractured and sometimes
destroyed. In fact, as infant brain maturation is based on this “emotional interaction between mother and child, a negative maternal response will elicit a state of shame/withdrawal, characterized by a shift from sympathetic to parasympathetic arousal” producing a typical dissociation or freeze response which many never be recovered. This pattern of shame will result in inadequate development of coping strategies by the child, and contribute to problems with character expression and brain development. Normal development may actually be inhibited by excessive elicitation of shame, rendering these infants more vulnerable” to further trauma by relatively innocuous events.
Shame becomes the default position for children with this experience.
 
The future implications for that child, especially if not remediated by the mother or another
caregiver later, are lifelong. The child is sensitised to emotional stimuli, finds it difficult to find
emotional resonance with others and may withdraw or act out its distress in ways that the parents
find hard to deal with. As the child then grows and interacts with other children and adults their
inability to self-soothe will create more trauma as their actions are misinterpreted by others and they
become further subject to painful experiences of rejection. Many of my clients describe this process
of having been misunderstood at home and then bullied at school – a double whammy of emotional
pain which keeps them locked into a stress response, their brain failing to break its cycle of fight,
flight and freeze.
 

It’s not that most parents are deliberately abusive (although some are); it is often more a
systematic failure to connect with their child and create a harmonious living situation (as my
experience clearly demonstrates). The child grows up knowing this, but it is a wordless knowing,
doubly baffling as no-one talks about it, and in some cases you are given the opposite message
‘you don’t know how lucky you are’, etc. Unbelievably, some very cruel parents do
tell their children of their disappointment ‘I wish I’d never had you’, ‘you ruined my life’, etc but in the main it is an unspoken message of failure. A child is unable to make sense of this duality, and, being a magical thinker, believes they are the cause.
The child then develops strategies to overcome this by desperately trying to please the parent,
such as being the ‘good one’, burying their feelings and sometimes even becoming the parent
themselves. They develop certain habitual behavioural patterns that become fixed responses to
emotionally charged situations. Thus, if, as an adult they are similarly threatened (e.g. by a bully at
work for example), their responses are conditioned by this early experience to those of a child. They
will have no idea of this of course, because their thinking brain has constructed a very reasonable,
logical argument for why they feel the way they do (rationalisation) that does not see the response as a conditioned memory - it feels like the current situation that is the problem.. For example, the boss is just ‘a monster’ or the partner in the relationship is ‘impossible’ - 'they made me feel that way'. It’s the other person’s fault because you cannot conceive that you are triggering automatic conditioned responses to similar experiences in your past.
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Thus, without your conscious awareness, you have contributed to the situation, as you have acted
in ways that conform to your map of the world governed by your emotional landscape and it is
difficult to perceive otherwise. In subtle ways even your choice of partner may even be dictated by
this; often you are attracted to people who have the same experience of trauma but the opposite
coping strategy6. For instance a couple I worked with both had difficult relationships with their
mothers which left them feeling worthless, but for the man this made him angry and volatile when
confronted, and for his partner her approach was to be the ‘good one’ and acquiesce her needs to
please others. They often struggled to be understood within the relationship as each would trigger
the other into these stereotyped behaviours. By being able to witness these behaviours rather than
get caught up in them, they had a chance to break the old habits and reveal their true selves to
each other.
 
This is an extract from my book The Scar the Won't Heal - available now on amazon. In the next instalment I will look at how this results in different attachment strategies in the child and later the adult..


 
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Wednesday, 6 January 2016

Connection and the Heart - the science

We have long known that the heart is an intuitive organ – we understand that things are ‘heartfelt’, and a broken heart is what we feel if we are very sad. These colloquial terms are not just random, they express what we have always known, that the heart with its has a central importance to health and wellbeing, and often senses things before the brain (McCraty, 2004)[i]. Indeed, “the heart has its own intrinsic nervous system that operates and processes information independently of the brain or nervous system”[ii]. This is what enables a heart transplant to work before the vagus nerve is fully functional. It is also an endocrine organ producing oxytocin, the bonding hormone with others. Its electromagnetic field is huge and is largely responsible for allowing us to attune to other people (or not!).
It is an organ of coherence; when its electromagnetic rhythm is in harmony with others we feel at ease and at peace with the world. This is the desired outcome of all meditative endeavours and is an essential pre-requisite to fully achieve health and wellbeing. The origin of coherence is in the heart and its connection with the brain however; specifically the amygdala which it innervates via its afferent (towards the brain) nerves. When these two are in harmony you feel at ease with yourself, motivated and authentic in thought and deed. You can see therefore another instance of the mind-body connection in operation that we are only now beginning to ascertain.

Did you know there is an easy way to measure your heart coherence? It's called HRV (heart Rate Variability) and it used to be something you could only measure when hooked up to a specialised electrocardiogram (ECG) machine but happily this is now made a lot easier by simple free ‘apps’ that you can download onto your smartphone or tablet. They work by reading the blood flow in your finger through holding it against the camera light. I have used the most readily available free one, HeartMonitor and, although I cannot vouch for its accuracy compared to a professional machine, as a relative tool for marking your stress levels it is brilliant as you can take different measurements at different times in your life. For instance, I measured mine after a stressful day at work (where my day is not my own but I am subject to the deadlines and priorities of others) compared to a day at my clinic with my clients. The differences were startling – a 50% difference. HRV is a powerful, objective and non-invasive tool to measure your body’s finely tuned hormonal, behavioural responses to the day to day stresses. I urge many of my clients to begin noticing theirs and seeing if, by consciously focusing on the screen output, to alter it.  This is a useful biofeedback tool which sets the stage for tuning in to the body’s response; you alter the output by ‘focusing’ on trying to make the waves increase in amplitude (height) and become more regular. This is biofeedback in action.

This is an extract from my book Stress and the Mindbody connection available now on Amazon See here to purchase copies (digital or paperback) . I am a practicing therapist who offers mindbody therapy and trauma transformation here; www.alchemytherapies.co.uk



[i] McCraty, et al (2004). Electrophysiological evidence of intuition: part 1. The surprising role of the heartJ. Altern Complement Med. Feb;10(1):133-43.
[ii]Salem Mohammed Omar, Prof. The Heart, Mind and Spiritaccessed at https://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/pdf/Heart,%20Mind%20and%20Spirit%20%20Mohamed%20Salem.pdf