From Trauma to Transformation
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In this post 9/11 world therapists need to expand their toolboxes to deal with trauma and its effects. This book provides a new way of dealing with the devastating emotional residue of a traumatic event. It centers on the innovative application of hypnotherapy to help trauma victims "self-actualize", regain their lives, and move forward again.
Dr. Muriel Prince Warren DSW ACSW
Dr. Muriel P. Warren, DSW, ACSW is a psychotherapist, hypnotherapist, author and educator engaged in private practice in Rockland County, New York, where she is the former Executive Director of the Psychoanalytic Center for Communicative Education and Past President of the International Society for Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. She holds degrees from Fordham, Columbia and Ade1phi Universities in Psychology and Social Work, as well as a Certificate in Psychoanalysis from Lenox Hill Hospital in New York. She is a Diplomate at the American Academy of Experts in Traumatic Stress and Executive Director and President of the Warren Trauma Center established in May 2004.
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From Trauma to Transformation - Dr. Muriel Prince Warren DSW ACSW
From Trauma To Transformation
Copyright © 2021 by Dr. Muriel Prince Warren, DSW, ACSW
Published in the United States of America
ISBN Paperback: 978-1-953616-86-9
ISBN eBook: 978-1-953616-87-6
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any way by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the author except as provided by USA copyright law.
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Contents
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Introduction
1. Change and the Process of Healing
Change And Anxiety
Trauma and Immobility
Trauma in Childhood
Fixed Beliefs and Life Pattern Theory
Definition of Fixed Beliefs and Life Patterns
Consequences of Fixed Beliefs/Life Patterns
The Process
The Genesis of Fixed Beliefs
Mass Consciousness (Childhood and Preadolescence)
Individual Consciousness (Adolescence)
Group Consciousness (Interdependent Consciousness and Synergy)
Parallels to Other Contemporary Theories
References
The Mind of a Terrorist
Through the Eyes of a Bystander
Two Types of Trauma
Children’s Responses to Death and Trauma
The Atom Bomb Story
After the Crash
Escaping the Double-Bind
Second Disaster
2. Dealing with Trauma in an Age of Chronic Stress
The National Trauma Syndrome
Use of the Telephone
Demobilization, Defusing, and Debriefing
Demobilization
Defusing
Debriefing
Transformation
Postscript to 9/11
Developmental Models of Growth
Talking to the Amygdala: Expanding the Science of Hypnosis
The Amygdala
Other Research
Three Cases
Method
Summary
3. Major Disorders Related to Trauma
Compassion Fatigue
Critical Incident Stress Disorder
Acute Stress Disorder
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Bereavement
4. Existing Disorders Affected by Trauma
Anxiety Disorders
Panic Disorder
Specific Phobia
Social Phobia
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Depression
Major Depressive Disorder
Dysthymic Disorder
Dissociative Disorders
5. Eating Disorders and Substance Abuse
Trauma and Weight
by Martin Tesher, MD, CCFP, ABFP, Family Physician
6. Behavioral Techniques
Belly Breathing
Learning the Technique
Change
Family Sculpturing
Hypnosis
Climbing Magic Mountain
Trauma Release Technique
Hypnotic Induction
Dissociation and Hypnosis
Hypnosis Scripts
Stressless Mountain
Library of Personal Power
Hypnosis with Children
Mindfulness
Neuro Emotional Technique (Net)
Case History 1
Case History 2
Practical Steps for Dealing with Terror
Personal Power Scale
The Relationship Between Heart Attack and Stress
A Short Discussion of Stress and Depression Following a Heart Attack
Depression After a Heart Attack
Treatment
Conclusion
References
7. Therapeutic Games
Anger
Behavior
Communication
Loss
Feelings
Motivation
Resiliency
Self-Control
Self-Confidence
Self-Esteem
8. Resources
Books
Anger
Anxiety
Bipolar Disorder
Communication
Coping Skills
Critical Incident Stress Management
Death and Bereavement
Depression
Dissociative Disorders
Eating Disorders
Guilt/Shame
Hypnosis, Relaxation, Visualization
Life Management Skills
Medical Issues
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Phobias
Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
Relational Problems (Parent/Child/Partner)
Self-Esteem
Self-Help
Sleep Disorders
Stress and Trauma
Substance Abuse
Suicide
Therapy
Vocational Choice
Catalogs
Videotapes and DVDs
References
Related Websites
To the Warren Trauma Institute:
Together We Can Achieve the Extraordinary.
Special thanks to:
Daniel Araoz
Harris Berger
David Bowman
Karen Bowman
Attillo Capponi
Anna Cicalo
Joanne Jozefowski
Rita Ghiraldini
Neal Levy
Bill O’Hanlon
Stefanie O’Hanlon
Michael Innerfield
Shawna Kristensen
Rivka Bertisch
Meir Michael Meir
Capt. Louis Siriotis
Kristina Siriotis
Mark Tracten
Joel Warren
And a very special thanks to Howard Matus for all his hard work in making this book possible.
When one door of happiness closes,
another opens; but often we look so long
at the closed door that we do not see the
one which has opened for us.
— Helen Keller
Acknowledgments
Iwish to thank the many people who have encouraged and supported me during this project. Special thanks go to my husband, Howard Matus, for his research and editorial skills, and to Dr. Daniel Araoz for writing the Foreword to this book. I would also like to acknowledge Norma Pomerantz for her meticulous editorial work and to Roberta Riviere for helping us put together the Warren Trauma Conference.
Since 9/11, all of our lives have changed. It is said that you can never walk through the same river twice. On May 15 and 16, 2004, I presented a conference on Trauma: Treatment and Transformation in New York City. Based on what emerged at the conference, I formed the Warren Trauma Institute in Orangeburg, New York. Within two short weeks, the center spread worldwide with the help of some very special people. They include Dr. Daniel Araoz, Dr. Attilio Capponi, Mark Tracten, Rev. Dr. James Law, Dr. Martin Tesher, Dr. Eleanor Laser, Dr. Harris Berger, Dr. Michael Innerfield, Anna Cicalo, Dr. Joanne Jozefowski, Pamela Roth, Carol Hadjinak, Karyn Korneich, Neal Levy, Carol Chetrick and Joel Warren. There is no way this book could have emerged from Trauma: Treatment and Transformation nor the Warren Institute grow world-wide the speed it did without their help and support.
To join the Warren Institute you can contact me at:
Dr. Muriel Prince Warren
Prel Plaza S. #15
60 Dutch Hill Road
Orangeburg, NY 10962
845-365-0801
Email: MPW0801@aol.com
Website: www.drmurielprincewarren.com
Some proceeds from this book will be donated to the Warren Institute.
Foreword
It is rare that anyone goes to a lecture to hear the lecturer being introduced. In books, the foreword is that introduction. Get it out of the way quickly because what comes after is a real treat. Abe Lincoln is supposed to have stated, Most folks are about as happy as they choose to be.
Dr. Warren gives us a comprehensive treatise on trauma in its many manifestations, focusing lovingly on the tragedy suffered by our country on 9/11.
One of the main points she emphasizes throughout the book is that we — yes, all of us — can learn to choose the thoughts that will free us from the trauma we have suffered. The effects of a horrible tragedy like that suffered by our country in 2001 do not have to victimize us forever. With care and compassion, especially for those who, in helping, suffer secondary stress disorders,
she proposes many methods to free us from the remnants of trauma after the painful event that affected our memories, feelings, and behaviors, often for a long time after the tragedy.
This is a book of liberation — transformation
— in Warren’s positive language. She uses the Phoenix metaphor to encourage us — clinicians and patients alike — to look at trauma in a less negative way. Trauma comes from a horrible experience we have suffered, but we can trans-form
ourselves for the better because of it. To prove her point, Warren brings up many heroic examples of people who went through the excruciating suffering of 9/11 at close range, either physically or emotionally.
This book offers a unique benefit. Warren’s innovative charts of behavioral goals for trauma therapy with children, adolescents, adults and families, are similar to the ones she gave us in 1999 in her Behavior Management Guide. Besides these practical aids for the clinician, Warren has spent much time in designing treatment plans, like the one for acute stress disorder (ASD). I consider these charts a creative contribution that will benefit all of us who deal with people in a clinical setting.
The ultimate goal of Warren’s efforts is the person’s reintegration, as she explains in the lucid section on hypnosis. She depowers
trauma and empowers the individual who has gone through the trauma in order for him or her to reconnect with life. She leads the reader to a new space of optimism and happiness. It is as if she is saying that nothing, not even the most horrible experience of destruction and death, has the power to diminish us unless we consent to it.
Trauma: Treatment and Transformation is a very useful tome for clinicians in this country where we are living with chronic stress,’
Warren says, and where every psychotherapist will encounter patient suffering from traumatic events. But it is equally beneficial for people general. Dr. Warren’s style is uncomplicated, clear, and to the point. Unlike others who want to sound scientific, she writes to be understood she offers practical, useful, techniques and methods to enjoy life trauma. She gives enough help for both the emergency situations cause unbearable stress and for a lifestyle without stress — with emphasis on mindfulness — in spite of any and all the negative surprises that life gives us.
We are lucky that the English language provides us with the solution to STRESS in the very word, summarizing what this great teaches: S—T—R is a reminder to STOP, THINK, and RELAX in emergency stress situations; E—S—S encourages us to ESTABLISH SELF SECURITY, which is a matter of attitude and inner strength, the ultimate goal of mindfulness as taught by Dr. Warren.
Now that you’ve read the foreword don’t forget Lincolns statement and rush to assimilate the contents of the book in order to find out how to be happy in spite of life’s tragedies.
Daniel Araoz, EdD, ABPP, ABPH
Professor, C. W. Post Camp
Long Island University, New York
Introduction
America may never be the same. Before 9/11, wars had always been fought foreign soil never here at home. But all that changed with the collapse the World Trade Center September 11 2001. We are at war against terrorism by fanatics within our borders as well as throughout the world. It is virtually impossible to predict and prevent every possible terrorist attack, even in our own backyard. As a result, we must learn live under the constant threat disaster.
That threat can give rise to emotions ranging from mild anxiety to sheer terror. Most people (Bracken, 2002) manage to push it aside to get ready for the hustle and bustle our everyday lives
, (pp. 1-2). However, some people just can’t shed the anxiety and must live out their lives with a constant dread. Their lives are not shaped by taken-for-granted order, but are endlessly threatened the quicksand of meaninglessness.
No one escapes a disaster without some degree of impairment that flows like a wave over the family, work group, and the community. In its wake, it leaves the seeds of severe and debilitating physical and psychological disorders. In reaction to the emotional shock wave that spread from Ground Zero many people slipped into altered states of consciousness. Hospital emergency moms were jammed with frightened people suffering from a variety of somatic reactions. My physician tells me that later, after the first signs of the biochemical attack, patients were begging him for antibiotics in case of anthrax exposure. A male patient I treated for depression and suicidal ideations is still this day, hoarding medication to combat anthrax.
One of the most difficult problems of disaster is dealing with the death a loved one. Jozefowski (1999), outlines the stages coping with death in her book, The Phoenix Phenomenon. The death of a loved one she explains forever changes the normal flow and rhythm of life, dividing it into before and after
(p. 15). In this sense, 9/11 has changed the normal flow of life in the world.
America is now on high alert. President Bush warned that we must quickly return to normalcy or become our own worst enemies. He tells us to be on high alert, but to remain calm. How is that possible Incongruent messages such as these double-bind people, create innumerable psychological and physical problems, and generally drive American public crazy. Kalb (2003, pp. 42-53) explains that living with fear will affect both the mind and the body.
As of this writing, one wonders how our troops will return from I and what pathological consequences their psyches will suffer. There will definitely be a tremendous need for therapists who are trained to deal with trauma and its residues.
This book deals with trauma, its psychological and biological effects on mind and body, the psychology of terrorism, and treatment plans that deal with the resulting problems and transform them into growth.
1
Change and the Process of Healing
Change And Anxiety
Change is being forced on us, and the human psyche’s protective response is to fight to avoid the anxiety that always accompanies change. Paraphrasing Kierkegaard, Becker (1974) points out that:
Man [is] lulled by the daily routines of his society, content with the satisfactions that it [life] offers him. In today’s world, the car, the shopping center, the two-week summer vacation. Man is protected by the secure and limited alternatives his society offers him, and if he does not look up from his path, he can live out his life in a certain dull security (p. 74).
For Kierkegaard, there were three kinds of people: Normal
man (or woman), who lives a life of quiet desperation to avoid or deny death anxiety; Schizophrenic
man, who is crazy; and Creative
man, who lives in a garden of anxiety. Becker explains, As long as man is an ambiguous creature, he can never banish anxiety. What he can do instead is to use anxiety as an internal spring for growth into new dimensions of thought and trust
(p. 92).
The years since the 2001 terrorist attacks have presented us with new challenges. Man can no longer be lulled into a life of quiet desperation while terrorists confront us daily. We must learn to live with death anxiety. In this way, catastrophe can be used as a garden for growth. Recently, I asked myself how I have changed since 9/11. I found myself working exhaustingly long hours trying to help my patients work through their individual traumatic reactions to the terrorism. I felt like I was really doing something to help others, and found the effort healing, not only for my patients, but also for myself. Many weeks later I also found that I had neglected certain parts of my practice that, in comparison, I considered less important under the circumstances. These include chart notes, a task required to meet the standards of the National Committee of Quality Assurance (NCQA).
I was trained as a psychoanalyst in the 1970s. In those days, therapists were taught not to keep chart notes because they would color the next session. A good psychoanalyst was advised to keep everything that was important in his or her head or else find another profession. When the NCQA was formed, chart notes became a must.
Trauma in any form (terrorism, the Twin Towers attack, auto accidents, sexual or emotional abuse, etc.) changes us biologically forever. It evokes a response that is both psychological and biological. If the response remains maladaptive and stuck, it can turn into dis-ease. As Peter Levine (1997) warns, Psychology now becomes biology
(p. 99). It can feel like a mild anxiety attack or it can debilitate us. If a person’s energies remain trapped in the trauma, it will become chronic, and over time the energy to heal and restore a person’s equilibrium will dissipate. Drugs can be helpful for short periods of time, but basically we need to find new, creative ways to deal with our anxieties.
Trauma and Immobility
Today, our survival depends on our ability to face our problems artfully rather than use our prehistoric defense resources: fight, flight, or freeze. Symptoms form in a spiraling response to the trauma. The human defense mechanism summons a response from the prehistoric part of our brain. The last option is freezing where the brain constricts the energy that would be discharged by either of the other options, fight (rage) or flight (helplessness). At this point psychology can turn freeze (immobility) into biology and people begin to go numb or lapse into altered states of being, (i.e., acute stress symptoms, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), or depersonalization). The immobility is not easily resolved because what the brain gets used to it repeats over and over. A good example is the body’s response to cold. When you go swimming in a cold ocean or lake, the water feels freezing at first but then slowly becomes comfortable as your body adjusts to the temperature. The brain works in much the same way.
Trauma victims are trapped in their own fear and cling to the frozen part of themselves. That old defense saves them. If they feel any activation toward thawing the numbness, they also feel the potential for violence again. They remain in a vicious cycle of immobility, terror, or rage. These reactions are not confined to physical disasters. One patient who was sexually abused as a child became numb. Her father was a war veteran who medicated himself with alcohol to escape the horrors he experienced during World War II. When he was drunk he abused her. Although my patient is not an alcoholic like her father, she is terrified to get involved with a healthy man because (a) it is unfamiliar, and (b) she fears she will again feel the hurt she felt as a child. Thus, she remains inhibited by her fears. Meanwhile, the immobility often feels to her like a living death. Unconsciously, it becomes safer to remain in a cocoon guarded by her defenses than to face life.
The immobility of the freeze response often feels like death, and human beings will do just about anything to deny death. One of the ways to move through the immobility response is to gradually experience life in a safe environment (i.e., a therapist’s office). If the freeze response is not treated, it becomes stronger, and with each freezing and refreezing the symptoms proliferate and become cumulative.
Some of the possible maladaptive patterns are: parasomnias, dyssomnias, sexual problems, eating disorders, substance abuse, acute stress disorder (ASD), depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), depersonalization, behavior problems, and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
The physical reactions to trauma include rapid heartbeat, perspiration, sensitivity to light and/or sound, muscle tension, chronic fatigue, hyperactivity, reduced immune function, breathing and digestive problems, and blood pressure and blood vessel constriction. Mental reactions include racing thoughts, increased paranoia and worry, obsessions, compulsions, mood swings, numbness, hypervigilance, guilt, and dissociation. These reactions are often combined. Dissociation is the psyche’s way of protecting itself from the attack. Mild dissociation produces a general spaciness, while intense dissociation can generate multiple personality disorder (MPD), distortions in time and/or perception, and out-of-body experiences (see Table 1).
Another patient explains that he is here, but not here.
He lives in constant fear that he will faint, leave his body, and never return. This patient was emotionally abused as a child by his mother, and subsequently sent to live with his grandmother, who was extremely superstitious. The grandmother taught the child to always exit a room by the same door that he entered or else some catastrophe would certainly occur. She also taught him that stepping on a sidewalk crack would break his mother’s back.
To this day, my patient always exits a room through the door by which he entered and carefully avoids stepping on sidewalk cracks, despite the fact that his mother died many years ago. Although he has only screen memories of the abuse, the dissociation interrupts the hyperarousal state and prevents him from effectively reacting to his symptoms. For instance, he blames himself for the World Trade Center disaster. The patient actually feels it might not have happened if he had said all of his prayers that morning. Consciously, he realizes that he is not really responsible for the destruction. Unconsciously, he suffers from unrelenting guilt. He cannot stop worrying, nor can he find a safe place for himself. He also experiences night terrors and sleeps with all the lights and the TV on. To make matters even worse, this patient is afraid to travel far from home. He found menial employment within a mile of his house and is resigned to the fact that he will never lead a normal, healthy, or productive life.
Table 1: Response to Trauma
*In response to trauma, the limbic part of the brain kicks into one of three responses: fight, flight, or freeze. In our culture, men are commonly taught to fight (e.g., the military, police, firefighters, etc.), while women are expected to freeze, or stoically endure stressful situations. Although there are signs that this may be changing, the pattern dates back to the time when men went out to hunt food, while women stayed home to raise children and clean the house.
Many patients experience feelings of rage and self-doubt generated by the initial trauma, and lose faith in the possibility of having a meaningful relationship with anyone. They isolate themselves from the rest of the world, and their lives are dominated by conscious and unconscious memories of the trauma.
Figure 1: Lord Protector Mask
Trauma in Childhood
Perpetuation Across Generations and How to Overcome Its Effects
by Rivka Bertisch Meir, PhD, MPH
Trauma
in everyday language means a highly stressful event. It refers to extreme stress that overwhelms a person’s ability to function effectively. It is important to keep in mind that stress reactions are both psychological as well as physiological. Trauma overwhelms the individual’s ability to cope, and leaves that person fearing death, annihilation, mutilation, or psychosis. The individual feels emotionally, cognitively, and night physically overwhelmed.
Traumatic incidents include powerful one-time occurrences such as found accidents, natural disasters, crimes, surgeries, deaths, and other violent events. Traumatic events also include responses to chronic or repetitive experiences such as child abuse, neglect, combat, urban violence, confinement in concentration camps, battering relationships, and enduring deprivation.
An individual’s subjective experience determines whether or not an event is perceived to be traumatic. Survivors of repetitive trauma in childhood are likely to instinctively continue to use the same self-protective coping strategies that they employed to shield themselves from psychic harm at the time of the traumatic experience. Hypervigilance, dissociation, avoidance, and numbing are examples of coping strategies that may have been effective at some time, but later interfere with the person’s ability to live the life she/he wants. Symptoms and/or repetitive patterns of behavior represent the person’s attempt to cope the best way he or she can with overwhelming feelings.
Neurological research suggests that childhood trauma negatively affects development by interrupting biological and hormonal processes, which has long-term effects on physical, psychological processes, and behavior as well.
For some time, psychologists have been aware that children who