Your, my, our traumatic life

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(I am not, of course, suggesting she agrees with my racial and political views.) Kelly, of obvious Irish heritage, has a medical degree from Cornell, an Ivy League university in upstate New York.
She also has a Bachelor of Science degree (as do I). Hers is from MIT, one of the top universities in the world. Unlike Harvard, across the street, MIT will not admit you because your daddy is rich, powerful, is an alumnus, and donates to the college.  You have to be absolutely brilliant, stable, solid, and extremely hard-working!
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I know; I tutored many foreign MIT students in American accent between 1996-2003.
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Brogan is a psychiatrist (which is an MD) but is against Big Pharma, most psych-meds, and Covidiocy, so of course she is DEMONIZED as a quack by Wikijudia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelly_Brogan
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I get and like her medical emails. Below was this one.

Sending a Signal of Safety

This blog post contains excerpts from my book, Own Your Self, now available for order.

Ever look around and feel like we are all either shut-down and depressed, or wired and on edge? Or both? We humans are having a particularly hard time, and despite the projection of our inner chaos all over this planet, we are primarily struggling to just be comfortable in our own skin. To simply be.

We don’t know how to be, however, and so we are forever arranging the furniture on the deck of the proverbial Titanic, neglecting the gaping hole down below. Because of this foundational instability, a single email or text message can send us into a tailspin, and we feel that our deepest desires and entitlements are constantly receding into the future, never to be secured, while we consume ourselves with busyness and distractions.

Maybe in your struggles, you were captured by the medical system, labeled, told you have a brain chemical imbalance, and medicated. And just now, you’re beginning to wonder where the you is in this form of treatment. Isn’t there a reason, related to your human experience, that you have experienced agitation, persistent worry, panic, insomnia, disconnection from your body or even reality? Could it really just be random misfiring of the brain?

Your trauma, my trauma, our trauma

In my private practice, nearly 100% of the women I have worked with identify as having experienced childhood trauma—physical and sexual abuse, and/or domestic violence.

***

Gabby Petito, of Italian and German ancestry. and her bf, Brian Laundrie, now being sought for questioning in her murder.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Gabby_Petito

Laundrie himself is just the latest example of a de-nordicized America. Everyone on tv under 40 these days seems to have jet-black hair and dark eyes now……

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RIP, Gabbi

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The perceived [psychic] injuries range from a mother’s critical reaction to a math test score in first grade all the way to heinous and ongoing sexual violation. Trauma expert and author of the important book, The Body Keeps the Score, Dr. Bessel van der Kolk writes,

“Trauma causes people to remain stuck in interpreting the present in light of an unchanging past.”

Thus repeated patterns of perceived victimization arise, perhaps to show us like a persistent tap on the door of our soul, that this pain requires healing. Our response to these patterns is often referred to as reactivity, as in re-act or acting again from a past imprint rather than to the context of the present life experience, and defines the places, people, and things that hold the power we need to reclaim in order to heal.

*** This is along the same lines as Eckhart Tolle and his bestseller The Power of Now.

There is no reason whatsoever for some horrible event from 5, 10, 20, or 50 years ago to continue ruining your life! This is NOW!

I have been through the worst things imaginable, and am fine today. Spirituality means MUCH less mental suffering for you, even on a very tragic planet.

….a planet you yourself chose to reincarnate on.

Because of habit….

….because your friends are reincarnating here once again, and you want to be with them,

…or because you love your country and want to se it and help it again.

There are souls who have spent many lives in England and they love England.

 

I know many Frenchmen who are in love with la belle France.

Mont Saint-Michel

Russkies love Mother Russia, AND WOULD DIE FOR HER.

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This is also why national character is so stable. For life after life, people usually reincarnate back in their own gender, their own ethnic group and race.

Not me — I am pan-Aryan. 🙂

1777-1862 Irish, then Austrian

My beautiful Italian wife then, Giovanna Riario Sforza

Then Austro-German 1889-1945….and the Most Evil Tyrant Ever (quite a distinction!) 😉

And now American, 1954-2054 😉

Same weird forehead 😉

Remember, we chose to come back here.

To this time period of tragedy and hope.

To this time of heroes!

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*** back to Kelly Brogan

In fact, anything that gets you hot under the collar is probably tripping a trauma wire, firing off programs of felt abandonment, betrayal, inadequacy, and shame…programs that have stories attached to them, that keep us feeling a surrogate sense of control because at least we are right about being wronged.

How do you know when you’re acting from your childself? You need to feel right about being wronged. No, heal your victim mentality — come into your adult power.
—Kelly Brogan, MD

What went wrong?

While I am a firm believer in triage—in starting with the low-hanging fruit of self-healing in the form of lifestyle change—I hold the perspective that personal meaningis at the root of everything that happens seemingly “to us” in our lives.

It is from this perspective that my glutensugartoxicant, and stress-induced Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, also served as an invitation to begin to awaken spiritually and to heal neglected emotional wounds and trauma, the compensation for which were driving my personality, my relationships, and my life experience in a way that left me feeling unfulfilled and out of control.

For most of us, the experience of conditional love from our primary caretakers left us with what is referred to by Dr. Alfie Kohn as “contingent self esteem”—as in, feeling fleeting self-worth only when we secure the approval of others.

In his book, Unconditional Parenting (required reading for all humans, not just parents), he uses published research to build an irrefutable case for the damaging impact of love withdrawal (think time-outs at best, violence at worst) and of rewards and praise as setting up a sense of self that is guided by the approval of a parent rather than an inner sense of lovability and adequacy.

*** This is so important…. and when Christians taught that God loves you, even as a sinner, this was very healing as well as true!

Jesus spoke with Roman soldiers and officers, and never preached pacifism. War may be necessary. But many combat veterans have great sorrow over killing other human beings, and seeing their buddies suffer and die in pain. 

The Roman Empire was NOT brought down by Christianity, but by the jews! This jew, historian Norman Cantor, admits and boasts of it!

***

So we find ourselves, in our 30s and 40s, confronting the programs of productivity, success, and unboundaried relationships as increasingly bankrupt methods of controlling the lack of self-acceptance and love that is festering beneath.

We carry our Victim Stories because, from our childhood patterning, we were potentially victimized and we continue to look for confirmation of that experienced reality in an effort to resolve this worldview and graduate to adult responsibility.

If we have been living without a sense of safety, and perhaps worse, and with the reverberation of trauma, for the greater part of our adult life, what does this do to our nervous system?

Fight, flight…or freeze

One day, while walking from his office toward the subway in Manhattan, my mentor, Dr. Nicholas Gonzalez turned to me and said, “You know what the top five most important contributors to health are?” I dug deep, listing off inflammation, the microbiome, the role of nutrients….until I realized that this was a question my previous training in functional medicine likely hadn’t prepared me to answer.

He said, “The autonomic nervous system, the autonomic nervous system, the autonomic nervous system, the autonomic nervous system, and the autonomic nervous system.”

He literally said it five times, counting out on his fingers.

He was referring to the nervous system that controls our glandular secretions, our heart rate, and everything “automatic” about our being that also assesses and orchestrates responses to the state of alarm in the body.

At the intersection of neuroscience, evolutionary biology, and psychology, research scientist, Dr. Stephen Porges contributed the polyvagal theory1 which adds important nuance to our understanding of the autonomic nervous system. Beyond rest/digest and fight/flight, he describes how the vagus nerve, often conceived of as simply a parasympathetic, rest and digest conduit between visceral organs and the brain, has evolved many different hierarchical roles.

Porges describes the vagus as having two branches—a more ancient unmyelinated branch below the diaphragm responsible for reptilian-like freeze (and defecate) responses called the dorsal vagal complex, and a relatively newer branch above the diaphragm that lowers heart rate, controls facial expressions, and vocal tone called the ventral vagal complex or the “social nervous system.”

In times of safety, this vagal system supports rest, digestion, and regeneration, however, in times of perceived danger, this system mounts the more ancient defenses of dissociation or fainting, including dizziness, nausea, and intense fatigue.

*** The MK-ULTRA and Manchurian Candidate programs use this fainting reflex.

Fainting can be the autonomic nervous system protecting you from the severe damage of seeing something too horrible to bear.

My father saw a crucified, live Marine lieutenant in Korea, naked, on a cross, with his eyes and testicles mutilated by the North Koreans. He had nightmares for six months after Korea and had to see a Navy psychiatrist for severe insomnia. In war you cannot allow ourself to faint, of course, but fainting would have spared him severe mental trauma.

I have fainted at least five times as an adult, and to my surprise, seeing a video about a chicken macerator recently triggered incipient feelings of fainting.

In MK-ULTRA, fainted children get cold water thrown on them to awaken them for more torture.

It’s real. Each fainting creates a stronger black box, a memory area that stores horrors. The goal is for your own memories to terrorize you and make you obey if given specific, rehearsed, triggering commands. By me running away at ten, the program was never completed. Instead, I developed an ireconcilable hatred for psychopaths.

***

The social nervous system allows us to recruit a sense of safety from others and the environment and to pair sympathetic activity with play (think lively dancing) or immobility with peace (think deep meditation). What Porges calls neuroception, or how our nervous system assesses the safety of settings and people, can be influenced by trauma and conditioned responses and beliefs.

For example, if you were assaulted by someone in a red jacket, the sight of a red jacket in your periphery can set off a sympathetic fight or flight or even a parasympathetic freeze in the setting of sufficient danger perception.

*** This red flag, for a brainwashed person, also is a trigger after hundreds of propaganda movies, tv shows, and magazine articles about “Nazis” as being wild psychopaths.

***

If we are able to establish that the environment is safe, however, and to glean from cues like facial expression and voice prosody, that an individual means us well, then this higher functioning social network role of the vagus nerve suppresses our more primitive fight/flight and freeze response.

This state of vagal tone also allows us to remain calm and present when faced with another’s suffering, enabling experiences of compassion or bearing caring witness as a means of activating sending safety signals between us.

Ever feel more anxious when you tried meditating?

In those with trauma histories, engaging in exercises designed to induce calm (breathwork, etc.) without a sufficient sense of safety in the setting can induce vulnerability as, for these people,

calm can be associated with a lack of vigilance and subsequent danger.

*** At the Himalayan Institute, an ashram in Pennsylvania, I studied meditation and met the esteemed guru Swami Rama….a brahmin, about six feet tall, who looked like an Italian movie star. 😉

But at the 6 am meditation sessions — real meditation with repeating a mantra and sitting still — my mind gyrated wildly, as if some terrible thing wanted to get out, but the rest of my mind would not let it.

My mind was like an abused dog that you might want to rescue and take home. If you offer him your hand, and try to pet him, his tail may wag Yes, but his teeth will bare part of a fang, and he will tremble as you get close to touching him.

Not very related, but on a totally opposite note, this filthy jew, lawyer Ivan Devoren, was sexually abusing his own dog, which was crying. The neighbors heard it, became outraged, recorded the noises, and called the police. I know this shelter seen at 1:24. His jew buddies got him off with four years probation! https://triblive.com/local/pittsburgh-allegheny/da-drops-charges-alleging-pittsburgh-lawyer-had-sex-with-dog/

 

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For these individuals and others, the parasympathetic system can be supported and toned, and body awareness enhanced to allow for more conscious engagement with the environment and life experiences. Toning of the parasympathetic through breathing (including lengthened exhales [ = doing a long breath-out]), chanting, and bowing postures can allow our vagus to remain active and able to buffer defensive response.

This vagal tone also facilitates compassion, so that we can can support another in their moment of struggle without getting sucked into a vortex of pain.

8 ways to send a signal of safety

Trauma may be responsible for so many aspects of your personality and life experience that you could wonder what would be left if you were to finally transform this fear, worry, pain, and rage. If you are at the point of readiness, and want to explore what a healed and balanced nervous system feels like, here are 8 methods to send a signal of safety:

1. SAFE AND SOUND PROTOCOL

Porges’s research supports the use of filtered human vocal sounds to stimulate signals of safety in the middle ear of the listener, allowing for improved vagal tone and neurological repair, loosening the reflexive fear response and disconnection that can pervade the lives of those with autonomic instability.

*** A woman’s voice especially can be very therapeutic.

When in 2002 I finally, finally stopped being in denial and called a hotline for adults who had been abused as kids, it was a woman who answered the phone (at the United Way of Providence Adult Sexual Abuse hotline). She was clearly very well trained, but what I remember most was how compassionate she sounded. A good woman’s voice can be themost soothing thing in the world.

After seeing the 2002 movie “One Hour Photo,” and this scene, where I of course felt some identification with the blond, blue-eyed person played by Robin Williams, my nightmares actually increased to twice a week. It was time, I guess an angel decided, for me to face the truth, for it to come out — and thus be processed, overcome, and relegated to a past that was past.

 

***

2. BINAURAL BEATS

A soundwave therapy that sends two different frequencies to each ear, inducing brainwave states consistent with relaxation, relieving insomnia and anxiety associated with hyperarousal of the nervous system. 2

3. TAPPING

Also called Emotional Freedom Technique, this self-directed methodology reprograms your thoughts through acupressure point stimulation and affirmations, and allows the body to let go of traumatic life experiences by calming the nervous system. Check out my friend’s new (free) guided app!

4. KUNDALINI YOGA

Ancient technology that seemed to anticipate our modern struggles, kundalini yoga and meditation focuses specifically on the vagus nerve and stimulation of its complexes for greater internal regulation. Here is a practice that can shift your felt experience within a few minutes.

5. BIOFEEDBACK

My recommended home system is called Inner Balance developed by the HeartMath Institute which trains the user to generate a coherent state between the lungs, brain, and heart using the emotion of gratitude and a slow breathing pattern while a small device monitors heart rate variability. With hundreds of studies supporting this research, daily practice is a no brainer. 😉

*** Gratitude for some sudden stroke of “luck,” however, implies the existence of a loving God and Father, or at least of angels and loved ones on the other side who are helping us, maybe pulling some strings for us.

Signs your baby may be seeing loved ones….or even a troubled spirit:

  1. Your baby stares off blankly, seemingly at nothing, while cooing and babbling away.
  2. You notice your child “playing” with something or someone you can’t see.
  3. Your child talks to himself often.
  4. ​You often need to pour a glass of juice or prepare an extra sandwich for an imaginary friend.
  5. ​Your child speaks about meeting or talking to people you haven’t met.
  6. ​You are frequently asked to check for monsters under the bed or the bogeyman in the cupboard.
  7. Your child refuses to go into a room or space for no apparent reason.
  8. Your baby suddenly picks up a different accent.
  9. ​Your child refers to events or experiences you know nothing about.
  10. You hear your child passes on messages from loved ones that have passed.

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6. EMDR

A well-researched3 trauma processing modality, EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) involves therapist-assisted exploration of destabilizing memories while invoking an external focus on a bilateral stimulus.

7. GROUNDING

In an age of 5G networks, cell towers, and ubiquitous electromagnetic pollution, it has never been more important to ground and get your feet onto the earth to literally calibrate your energy field in the way only the earth can. In fact, the clinical significance of direct contact with the earth’s surface has been reviewed and researched by enlightened clinicians like Dr. Stephen Sinatra who recommends 15 minutes a day of grounding as a wellness practice. 4

In the warm half of the year up here, I walk barefoot on the grass and visualize inhaling upward the energies of the earth. 

8. WEIGHTED BLANKET

In preliminary states of research5, weighted blankets offer an experience of being contained and held while meditating or sleeping. Here’s an example of one.

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While I have used and recommended all of these tools, I believe that first things should come first. If you can send a concerted signal of safety to your mind, body, and spirit through basic lifestyle change, why not start there?

This is why I advocate for a one month Reset for every single adult on this planet. In addition to quieting the white noise of physical imbalances related to blood sugar and food intolerances, a Reset invokes daily meditation (3 minutes!) which begins to send that higher-level message that everything is actually ok.

Perhaps the reason why this approach has been so powerful for so many with histories of trauma is because it defies the programmed belief that we are powerless victims, broken patients, and hopeless cases.

Committing to a high level of self-care is an act of personal empowerment, and when we take our power back from the places we have given it, we become whole once again.

Interested in more insights and tools to help you Own Your Self?

My book, Own Your Self, helps you discover the meaning behind your symptoms and your struggle as a way to reclaim your health and your Self. Click below to claim your copy!

 

 

 

Sending a Signal of Safety

War with the Self Interview

The Greater Reset

About Dr. Kelly Brogan

KELLY BROGAN, MD, is a holistic psychiatrist, author of the New York Times Bestselling book, A Mind of Your OwnOwn Your Self, the children’s book, A Time For Rain, and co-editor of the landmark textbook Integrative Therapies for Depression. She is the founder of the online healing program Vital Mind Reset, and the membership community, Vital Life Project. She completed her psychiatric training and fellowship at NYU Medical Center after graduating from Cornell University Medical College, and has a B.S. from M.I.T. in Systems Neuroscience. She is specialized in a root-cause resolution approach to psychiatric syndromes and symptoms. Learn More

 

22 Comments

  1. Una domanda:
    “Hai messo i tuoi “piedini” nella Foto?”
    LOL
    Mi sembrano famigliari 😉
    Se è così,Mario 🙂
    https://photos.app.goo.gl/phBULnDNSTHKKyaA9
    Una bella famiglia distrutta 🙁 🙁
    Non credevo che questo cognome fosse arrivato in America 🙂 🙂
    Napoli è ricca di questo cognome 🙂
    Non riesco a risalire alla sua origine…ho trovato soltanto qualcosa sul Piemonte.
    https://www.heraldrysinstitute.com/lang/it/cognomi/Petito/Italy/idc/853644/
    Hai ragione,nel profilo del suo ragazzo ci sono cose inquietanti 🙁
    “Ricercato come Bin Laden”.
    Sono stanca di questa Cabala.
    Pensando alla data di nascita di Gesù(11 Settembre)al segno della Vergine e a quello dei Gemelli(Torri Gemelle)..tutto si conferma.
    Anche il mio Disprezzo,il mio Odio.

  2. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parco_nazionale_del_Grand_Teton
    La prima presenza umana nella regione ebbe inizio nel cosiddetto «periodo arcaico», 11.000 anni fa, per finire intorno al 500 d.C.[3] I primi nativi americani della zona furono cacciatori-raccoglitori e pescatori. A seconda della stagione si spostavano, come dimostrano antichi utensili rinvenuti dagli archeologi, ad altitudini differenti alla ricerca di piante commestibili, frutti e bulbi. Durante l’inverno lasciavano queste regioni per dirigersi verso ovest, dove il clima era più mite, ma le migrazioni erano dettate anche dai grandi movimenti delle mandrie di bisonti.
    Per la caccia, i nativi utilizzavano delle lance simili a quelle utilizzate per gli stessi scopi dalla cultura Clovis: gli utensili da taglio e le punte di lancia erano costruite con l’ossidiana, una pietra di natura vulcanica molto abbondante nel territorio del Teton Range.[4] Nei secoli, il progredire delle abilità manuali andò di pari passo con l’aumentare della popolazione che riuscì quindi a migliorare gli strumenti della vita quotidiana e a realizzare anche dei tepee trasportabili.

    PS:Questa è la zona dove lei è stata trovata.
    Non ho parole.
    Vuol dire che gli Italiani di sangue misto(con quello tedesco)hanno qualcosa in comune con questa zona e con questa storia?

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