How Trauma Informed Care Saved My Life

[Music]

today

i’m going to take you on a journey

a journey where dreaming of standing on

a stage and sharing my story

is the reason i’m alive the journey

starts

with the birth of complex ptsd

in 1986 a baby girl came into the world

her family called her addie and they

loved her very much

soon siblings joined daddy

casual spankings for the kids soon turn

into more violent forms of punishment

as shared by the national center for

ptsd

complex ptsd is a term used to describe

a cluster of symptoms

that includes emotional difficulties and

somatization

or the physical presentation of mental

pain

and while complex ptsd often begins in

childhood

it usually doesn’t end there and it

isn’t limited to experiences that happen

in childhood let’s rejoin addie

on her journey and learn a little bit

more about its development

addie soon decided that she would

definitely be leaving home as soon as

possible

the opportunity soon presented itself at

16

she met the 40-something-year-old

neighbor when he brought his puppy into

her backyard

when her parents discovered the

situation they asked the authorities for

help

and a prosecutor told her mom to get

over it

it happens all the time not knowing what

else to do

they had addie adjudicated which is when

you’re arrested as a minor

and she spent 30 days in a juvenile

detention center

the experience was horrifying

that was the final straw for addie and

solidified her decision

to leave her family because she no

longer felt safe with them at all

the day after her 18th birthday she left

home and married that man

and he turned out to be terrifying at 28

weeks pregnant addie went into early

labor

thankfully she and her baby girl made it

full term

when her daughter was two she told addie

daddy hurt me

in spite of begging the courts they

still sent

her daughter back into that unsafe home

and inevitably the nightmare began again

a couple of years later

something happened to addie at that

point and she broke

there was a huge sensation of shattering

in her head

and in her chest and she felt like her

pieces were lying on the ground

all around her addie was never the same

again

she was 25 years old and complex ptsd

had grown up

as you may have gathered by now addie is

the nickname i went by during childhood

in spite of securing my daughter’s

safety through the courts in 2014

my health began to deteriorate quickly

from the point of the shattering i began

to experience insomnia

intense body pain and major irritability

on the outside everything looked fine i

was working full time

successfully in my career i was in

school full time

and i was a homeowner with a fenced-in

backyard i had it all

except for my sanity finally the

extraordinary pain began to overflow

and began to show up as outbursts of

extreme anger at work

and at home i tried to tell people about

it a few times i would say things like

i’m drowning

and the most common response was just

keep going

i went to the doctor once and told him

about all the intense body pain i was

experiencing and

he told me that i was getting old

and to stretch more i was in my mid-20s

i continued to try to hide behind my

supposed success

until one morning

i found myself screaming at my daughter

until i could feel the veins

throbbing in my temples and then i heard

myself tell her

that i didn’t want her anymore

that was the day i decided that in order

to save her future

i would need to end mine i needed to die

and in order to do that i needed a plan

i set up my last will and testament and

one day after my daughter left for

school

i grabbed my car keys and started out

the door to drive my car

over a cliff

when i heard the voice

and it said you promised

i slid to my kitchen floor and sobbed

because i had indeed promised

the second time my daughter had been

hurt i made a vow

that would never stop speaking up to

change the way the systems

had contributed additional pain to our

lives

it was time to stand up and be fearless

i envisioned myself standing on a stage

inspiring others and helping them

through

that was the why that saved my life and

soon i made a phone call

to an integrative health center that was

when i discovered trauma informed care

which is the

howl that saved my life the woman on the

other end of the phone was warm and kind

and she got a practitioner on the line

right away who was amazing

and made an appointment for me the very

next day

they understood that even after abuse

has stopped

survivors often walk around in this

world feeling completely

unsafe and that in order for healing to

even begin

safety has to be established first

trauma-informed care

is a way of treating people that assumes

that they’ve been through trauma from

the beginning

and is actively striving to avoid

re-traumatizing them by creating an

environment of safety and recovery and

healing

trauma-informed care began to help me to

understand how my childhood experiences

related to my adult struggles

the adverse childhood experiences study

or aces for short

tells us that people with a score of 6

or more

out of 10 are likely to die

19 years earlier than the average person

with a score of 10 it’s a good thing

that i’m into proving average is wrong

yet this journey isn’t over for me yet

in the past five years

in spite of intensive trauma-informed

care i’ve lost a job due to having

outbursts at work

and after sharing about complex ptsd

with a manager

i’ve been diagnosed with two autoimmune

conditions

and i still struggle with fear and trust

issues when building interpersonal

relationships

my high a score had predicted all of

these issues

trauma informed care practitioners use

aces

to help survivors understand the

relationship

between their childhoods and their adult

struggles

trauma informed care has taught me to

return to myself

over and over again and bring me back to

the present

to regulate my emotions better

and most of all to feel safe more

frequently in our world

that’s what all those deep breaths and

hugs and the shuffling of my feet

has been about during this talk and what

allowed me to give it to you today

my trauma-informed coach has taught me

about these techniques

he helped so many people like me and yet

you’ve probably never even heard of a

trauma-informed coach

the good news is that i have made it

quite far on this journey

and in 2018 i graduated magna laude

from college

i’ve become an advocate a fierce

advocate for women who’ve been through

what i have been

and best of all i’m a better mom

when i started feeling safe again in

this world i found the courage to become

fearless

i started reaching out to people and

last year

i was able to meet some amazing safe

people who introduced me to the tedx

delton women’s stage

where i was an audience member last year

one of my friends took this picture of

me at that time

feeling safe in the world makes a

difference

and changes everything for survivors

the national center for ptsd tells us

that over 70 percent of adults will

experience at least

one traumatic event in their lives this

means that it is imperative that we

learn to recognize

and respond to trauma in survivors

and all of us

how many suicidal people are walking

around in this world feeling completely

lonely

when trauma-informed care could be the

answer

how many people full of anger are trying

to overcome abusive past and just

don’t know how or where to find the help

how many people in mysterious pain

might find that their childhoods

contributed

and that there is an answer in

trauma-informed care

the adage is true in order to change the

world

we must be the change

take action today and start to

understand what trauma-informed care is

better yet be trauma informed

there are organizations available who

teach individuals

professionals and systems how to behave

in a trauma-informed fashion i

urge you to take action it is so

needed in our world today especially

this year

together let’s demand a trauma-informed

world

for all the moms and the dads and the

systems

who never meant to pass it on let’s

demand trauma-informed care

for all the addies in our lives

thank you

you

[音乐]

今天

我要带你踏上

一段旅程,梦想

站在舞台上分享我的故事

是我活着的原因旅程

始于 1986 年复杂 ptsd 的诞生,

一个女婴进入

她的家人称她为艾迪,他们

非常爱她,

兄弟姐妹们很快加入了爸爸

对孩子们的随意打屁股很快

变成了更暴力的惩罚形式,

正如国家创伤后应激障碍复杂中心所分享的那样,

创伤后

应激障碍是一个用来描述一系列症状的术语

这包括情绪困难和

躯体化

或精神痛苦的身体表现

,虽然复杂的创伤后应激障碍通常从童年开始,

但通常不会到此结束,

它不仅限于童年发生的经历,

让我们重新加入艾迪

的旅程并学习一点

关于它的发展的更多信息

艾迪很快决定她

肯定会尽快离开家

机会很快就出现了

16 岁

她遇到了 40 多岁的人 ng 岁的

邻居把他的小狗带到

她的后院,

当她的父母发现这种

情况时,他们向当局寻求

帮助

,一名检察官告诉她的妈妈要

克服它,

这种情况一直在发生,他们不知道

还能做什么

他们有艾迪 判决是当

你作为未成年人被捕时

,她在少年拘留中心度过了 30 天,

这段经历令人恐惧,这是压死艾迪的最后一根稻草,并

坚定了她

离开家人的决定,因为她根本

不再觉得和他们在一起安全

在她 18 岁生日后的第二天,她离开

家并嫁给了那个男人

,结果他在怀孕 28 周时变得可怕

艾迪早产了,

幸好她和她的女婴

在她女儿两岁的时候就已经足月了,她告诉艾迪

爸爸伤害了我

尽管乞求法庭,他们

仍然把

她的女儿送回那个不安全的家

,几年后噩梦不可避免地再次开始

,艾迪发生了一些事情

一点,她就崩溃

,她的头部

和胸部有一种巨大的破碎感,她觉得她的

碎片散落在地上

,她周围的人再也不会一样

了。

她已经 25 岁了,复杂的 ptsd

已经长大

了 你现在可能已经收集到 addie 是

我童年时的昵称

尽管我

在 2014 年通过法庭确保了我女儿的安全

我的健康

从崩溃的那一刻开始迅速恶化 我

开始经历失眠

剧烈的身体疼痛和严重的烦躁

在外面一切看起来都很好我

在我的职业生涯中成功地全职工作我在

学校全职上学

,我是一个有围栏后院的房主

我什么都有,

除了我的理智最后

异常的痛苦开始溢出

并开始

在工作和家里表现为极度愤怒的爆发

我试图告诉

别人几次我会说我

溺水了,最常见的反应是

我没有继续下去,我去看了一次医生,告诉他

我正在经历的所有剧烈的身体疼痛

他告诉我我变老了

,要多伸展一下,我已经 20 多岁了,

我继续试图躲在我

所谓的 成功,

直到有一天早上,

我发现自己对我的女儿尖叫,

直到我能感觉到太阳穴里的血管

在跳动,然后我听到

自己告诉

她我不再想要她了

,那天我决定

为了拯救她的未来,

我 需要结束我的我需要死

,为此我需要一个计划

越过悬崖,

当我听到那个声音

,它说你答应

我滑到厨房地板上哭泣,

因为我确实承诺

过我女儿第二次

受伤时,我

发誓永远不会停止发声以

改变系统的方式

贡献了additio 我们

生活的

最终痛苦是时候站起来无所畏惧了

我想象自己站在舞台上

激励他人并帮助他们

度过难关

,这就是挽救我生命的原因,

很快我

就给一家综合健康中心

打了电话 我发现了创伤知情护理

,这

是拯救我生命的嚎叫

电话另一端的女人温暖而善良

,她立即让一位医生

在线,她很棒,

并在第二天为我预约了

他们 了解即使在

虐待停止之后,

幸存者也经常在这个世界上四处走动,

感到完全

不安全,并且为了治愈

甚至开始

安全必须建立首先的

创伤知情护理

是一种治疗人们的方式,

假设他们已经经历过

从一开始就

受到创伤,并且正在积极努力

通过创造一个

安全和康复的环境

来避免对他们造成再次创伤。

了解我的童年经历如何

与我的成人斗争

有关 不良童年经历研究

或简称 ace

告诉我们,得分为 6 分

或以上(

满分 10 分)的人可能

比得分为 10 分的普通人早 19 年死亡

一件好事

,我要证明平均水平是错误的

,但在过去的五年里,这段旅程对我来说还没有结束

,尽管我接受了密集的创伤知情护理,但

由于工作和分享后的爆发,我失去了一份工作

关于

与经理的复杂 ptsd

我被诊断出患有两种自身免疫性

疾病

,但在建立人际关系时我仍然在与恐惧和信任

问题作斗争

在他们的童年和成年

挣扎之间,

创伤知情护理教会我一次又一次地

回归自我

,让我

回到现在

为了更好地调节我的情绪

,最重要的是在我们的世界里更频繁地感到安全

,这就是我在这次谈话中所有那些深呼吸和拥抱以及我的脚步的拖拉,也是

让我今天把它给你

我的创伤的原因—— 有见识的教练教过

我这些技巧,

他帮助了很多像我这样的人,但

你可能从未听说过有

创伤知识的

教练,好消息是我

在这段旅程中取得了很大进展

,2018 年我毕业于麦格纳 以优异的成绩

从大学毕业

我已经成为一名倡导者

为那些经历过我所经历的女性提供

强烈的倡导者

我开始接触人们,

去年

我遇到了一些非常安全的

人,他们把我介绍到了 tedx

delton 女子舞台

,去年我是一名观众

,我的一个朋友当时给我拍了这张照片

世界上的安全

会对幸存者产生影响并改变一切

国家创伤后应激障碍中心告诉我们

,超过 70% 的成年人

在他们的生活中至少会经历一次创伤事件,这

意味着我们必须

学会识别

和应对 幸存者

和我们所有人的创伤 有

多少自杀的人

在这个世界上四处走动

当创伤知情护理可能是

答案

时感到完全孤独

为了寻求帮助

,有多少处于神秘痛苦中的人

可能会发现他们的童年

做出了贡献

,并且在

创伤知情

护理中找到了答案 为了改变

世界,

我们必须成为改变者,

今天就采取行动,开始

了解什么 创伤知情护理

更好,但创伤知情

有一些组织可以

教个人

专业人员和系统如何

在创伤中表现 了解 uma 的时尚我

敦促您采取行动,这是

我们今天的世界非常需要的,尤其是

今年

,让我们一起

为所有的妈妈和爸爸以及

从未打算将其传递下去的系统要求一个了解创伤的世界,让我们

要求创伤-

为我们生活中的所有病人提供知情的照顾

谢谢你