Do we choose the experience our trauma teaches us

my trauma

is bigger than yours

according to the english dictionary

trauma is defined as a distressing

or disturbing experience that happens to

an

individual or a community

with that definition it’s reasonable to

assume

that most if not all of us

will experience trauma at some point

in our lives yet

it remains the biggest elephant in the

room

in our homes and in our communities

most of us are roaming this earth with

unresolved trauma resembling scenes from

the hit series

the walk-in dead

during my awakening which really means i

was going through a crisis

i attended a number of personal

development workshops and seminars

as you do i attended this one seminar

where a number of people

took to the stage to share their life

experiences

this one gentleman who appeared to look

in his 40s took to the stage

initially he appeared timid and

vulnerable

i was in awe of his courage

to share an incident that happened to

him in kindergarten

it was take your pet to school day and

he had decided to take his goldfish

that was happily swimming in a glass

bowl

he was so excited to talk about it to

his classmates

as he stood in line ready to go into the

classroom

the school bully walked up

looked at him and smacked the ball

out of his hand causing it to fall to

the ground

crash and sadly his fish died

on that day unable to save his pet

that little boy decided that

he was not enough

as i listened to his story i found

myself getting emotional

and i rarely do i was so sad that that

little boy at

age five or six years old made the

decision

that he wasn’t enough

as the man sobbed on the stage he

explained that as a result of that

incident he had become closed off in

most of his relationships

so much so his marriage was suffering

and was on the brink of divorce i

remember thinking

wow and i thought that my trauma

was bigger than everyone else’s

the father of semantic therapy peter

levine says

that trauma resides in the body more

than anywhere else

regardless of our traumatic incidences

most of us are operating from a fight

flight or freeze response meaning

we are not living in the now the time

that truly counts one person’s trauma

does not outweigh the other it is how we

choose to respond to it

that truly counts

according to the national council for

behavioral health

70 of adults have experienced

at least one traumatic event in their

life

70 percent of adults

why don’t we talk about this do we fear

that in speaking up

we will be shamed or ignored when in

reality

all we want is the space for us to be

heard

and to heal

my auntie would often giggle

when she said the words uncle’s favorite

girl

these words would make me freeze dead

in my tracks whilst playing with my

siblings in sunny hut nigeria

for these words meant that my uncle was

in town

he lived in a different state and when

he was over he would stay with us

and typically sleep in the spare room

i was around seven or eight years old

when uncle would call me into his room

here he would abuse his power

his sexual power over me

causing me to lose mine

that event took away my voice

i literally couldn’t speak

and when i tried to at that age

i just wasn’t heard

fast forward to 2012

i’m now in london england and i hear my

uncle is around i’m now in my

30s i am more confident in who i

am yet the thoughts of him and i being

on the same

continent made my body tense

i later find out that uncle is looking

after a young girl

in the family i froze

and i heard a voice my higher self

say this is why you speak this is why

you use your voice

because in doing so you get to free

others

we all have a story and based on the

stats

most of us will experience a distressing

or disturbing event

for some it might be a one-time event

known as shock trauma

for others it might be more complex

trauma that

sees itself play on repeats in our lives

most of us are trying to avoid the

disturbing conversation around trauma

and that’s because it forces us to get

comfortable

with being uncomfortable

i want us to explore an idea

what if we have a choice

in how we respond to our traumatic

events

what if we make the choice to transform

our trauma as opposed to transfer it

especially to future generations

when i reflect on my traumatic event

i make the conscious choice to ask

self-empowering questions

as opposed to self-blame

we can no longer thrive with a victim

mentality

but we can collectively transmute

our pain to power and be the catalyst

for change that the world so

desperately needs

what if we could take our power back

just by acknowledging what we went

through

with the view that it could serve

humanity

could we view the world differently then

could we be kinder

to ourselves and each other

having our trauma serve us and others is

not a new

or novel idea there are people who have

come before

us and some still with us today who made

the choice to transform

their trauma and as a result of their

transformation

they have contributed to the world in

tremendous ways

ways in which we need more of us to do

today

nelson mandela without his decades of

confinement he wouldn’t have crafted

those words he’s so

eloquently shared with the world rosa

parks

without her audacity of hope

and use of her voice i may still have to

sit at the back of the bus

george floyd without the sad loss of his

life

the world may not have been triggered to

open its eyes

and use its collective voice for change

that little boy who lost his goldfish

his trauma is no smaller

or bigger than mine for the body keeps

the score and our priority must be to

resolve

our trauma so we can unearth the gifts

we have to give to the world

here are three steps for transmuting

pain to power

first acknowledge your trauma

and use your voice to release the power

it holds over you

and others second

awaken to the possibilities

on different perspectives for healing

third transform by asking yourself the

question

what lesson can i learn from this

experience

then go out there and be the change you

wish to see in the world

what if resolving our

greatest tragedy our deepest

suffering ends up being the greatest

gift to humanity

and what if we did it with compassion

can we face our trauma then in a new way

we may not be responsible for our trauma

but let’s empower ourselves to be

responsible

for the healing of it

you

根据英语词典,我

的创伤

比你

的大 它仍然活着,但

它仍然是

我们家和社区中房间里最大的大象 我们

大多数人都带着

未解决的创伤

在地球上漫游

我和你一样参加了许多个人

发展研讨会和

研讨会 我参加了这一场研讨会

,许多人

上台分享他们的生活

经历

这位

看起来 40 多岁的绅士上台

最初他显得很胆小 和

脆弱的

我敬畏他的

勇气分享他在幼儿园发生的一件事,

那就是带你的宠物去学校 昨天,

他决定

把正在快乐游泳的金鱼放在一个玻璃

碗里,

他很兴奋地和同学们谈论这件事,

当他排队准备

进教室时

,学校的恶霸走上来

看着他并打了他一巴掌 球

从他手中滑落,摔

地上,不幸的是,他的鱼

在那天死了 无法救他的宠物

那个小男孩认为

他还不够,

因为我听了他的故事,我发现

自己变得情绪激动

,我很少 我是不是很伤心,那个

五六岁的小男孩

决定他还不够

,当那个男人在舞台上抽泣时,他

解释说,由于那

件事,他大部分时间都变得封闭

了 关系

如此之多,以至于他的婚姻遭受了痛苦

濒临离婚 e

无论我们的创伤发生率如何,我们中的

大多数人都在进行战斗

飞行或冻结反应,这意味着

我们不是生活在

现在真正重视一个人的创伤

并不会超过另一个人的时间,这是我们

选择应对的方式

根据全国行为健康委员会的说法,它真正重要

70 名成年人

在他们的生活中至少经历过一次创伤性事件

70% 的成年人

我们为什么不谈论这个 我们是否

担心在说出来时

我们会感到羞耻或被忽视

实际上,

我们想要的只是让我们听到和治愈我们的空间,

当她说叔叔最喜欢的

女孩

这些话

时,我的阿姨经常会

咯咯

地笑 这些话意味着我叔叔

在城里,

他住在不同的州,当

他结束时,他会和我们住在一起

,通常睡在空余的房间里,

我大约七八岁 t

岁时,叔叔会把我叫到他的房间

里,他会滥用他的权力

他对我的性权力

使我失去了我的

那件事夺走了我的声音

快进到 2012 年,

我现在在伦敦,听说

我叔叔在身边

身体紧张

我后来发现叔叔正在

照顾家里的一个年轻

女孩 每个人都有一个故事,根据

统计数据

,我们大多数人都会经历一件令人痛苦

或令人不安的事件

,对于其他人来说,这可能是一次

被称为休克创伤的事件

,它可能是更复杂的

创伤,

在我们的生活中反复出现

我们大多数人都试图避免

令人不安的谈话 围绕创伤的离子

,那是因为它迫使我们对

不舒服感到舒服

尤其是对后代而言,

当我反思我的创伤事件时,

我有意识地选择提出

自我授权的问题

,而不是自责

我们不能再以受害者的心态茁壮成长,

但我们可以集体将

我们的痛苦转化为力量

世界如此迫切需要改变的催化剂

如果我们能够通过承认我们所经历的事情来收回我们的权力会怎样,因为我们

认为它可以为人类服务

创伤为我们和他人服务

并不是一个新的

或新颖的想法,有些人比

我们更早,有些人今天仍然和我们在一起,

他们选择了转型 rm

他们的创伤,由于他们的

转变,

他们以巨大的方式为世界做出了贡献

,我们今天需要我们更多的人这样做

世界罗莎

公园

没有她大胆的希望

和使用她的声音我可能仍然不得不

坐在公共汽车的后面

乔治弗洛伊德没有他生命的悲痛

可能没有被触发

睁开眼睛

并使用它的集体 改变的声音

那个失去金鱼的小男孩

他的创伤

不比我的小或大,因为身体保持

着得分,我们的首要任务必须是

解决

我们的创伤,这样我们才能挖掘出

我们必须给予世界的礼物

这里是三个 将

痛苦转化为力量的步骤

首先承认你的创伤

并用你的声音释放

它对你

和他人的力量其次

唤醒

不同观点的可能性

通过问自己一个

问题

,我可以从这次经历中学到什么教训,

然后走出去,成为你

希望在世界上看到的改变

如果我们怀着同情心去做,

我们能不能以一种新的方式面对我们的创伤,那么

我们可能不对我们的创伤负责,

但让我们赋予自己权力,

为治愈它负责