Blog

Resilience When Engulfed By A Sneaker Wave of Grief

kellywilsonwrites

I am currently experiencing these sneaker waves of grief. My youngest is graduating from high school, and we have started the “lasts” of his senior year – recently, it was the last musical of his high school career. Soon, it will be the last band concert…and more.

The thing about grief is that it kicks up old grief and trauma wounds. As I’ve worked down the layers of grief and trauma wounds, I’ve noticed that while I’m grieving my youngest leaving high school, I’m also working through pandemic stuff (my oldest graduated in 2020), empty nest emotions and feelings, divorce wounds, and attachment wounds. It’s a lot.

I wrote this in March 2019, as my divorce was finalized. The specific grief is different now, but the experiences are similar.

**********

Waves of grief and resilience.

I stood in Goodwill the other night, flipping through the blouses. The hangers clacked together as I sorted through the rainbow of fabric, occasionally freeing a blouse for a closer look. It was a rare “wandering night,” a free evening during which I could do what I wanted, and I wanted to haunt thrift stores, just for fun.

I studied an olive green shirt and put it back on the rack, and was overtaken by a wave of sadness. I couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t think. It felt like the emotional equivalent of violent nausea with a tinge of panic, where you know your body is going to expel whatever is floating around in your gut. Fast.

I texted a friend of mine, standing in that aisle under the fluorescent lights: “At the risk of sounding overdramatic, I feel engulfed by grief.”

I didn’t know what else to say, so I put my phone away and considered putting all of the clothes on a random rack and just getting the eff out of there. I felt dizzy and confused.

Exhausted. Soul tired.

A Sneaker Wave of Grief

Later, I sat in the parking lot, not knowing where to go or what to do. The wave of sadness crashed and I fought to sort through it.

What was this? Was it PTSD? There had been no trigger; it didn’t even feel like a trigger. Garden variety grief? Depression? I didn’t know. That’s the trick, isn’t it? The keeping my head above water in these critical moments, triage in the waves.

Two small hands doing a pinky swear.

The only thing I did know was that I didn’t want to be alone. I searched my brain for people who were closest in proximity to where I sat in the Goodwill parking lot. I called the closest person, they didn’t pick up. I went to the next closest.

That person picked up. We met at a restaurant. We talked. I cried. She called it a Sneaker Wave. That’s exactly what it felt like – I had turned my back for a moment and a wave appeared out of nowhere and engulfed me. Like a real wave of nausea or from the ocean, it was alarming and panicky and scary and I didn’t know what was happening.

What Does Resilience Look Like?

Resilience is asking for help. I felt panicky and alone and confused, and I asked for help, even through the voices that said, “You are needy. You are weak. You are pathetic.” I said out loud, “Stop. I am not any of those things.”

Resilience is telling the truth when your friend meets you at a restaurant and asks if you’ve had dinner and you haven’t, and she buys you fajitas. Resilience is holding hands on the table while you cry, accepting that you are really not alone or needy or weak or pathetic. Resilience is acknowledging that you are a deeply feeling person in the middle of enormous stress and transition, and that maybe you are a fucking rock star.

The waves crashed over me and inside and welled up and spilled out and I did not drown.

I did not drown.

Try Trauma Recovery & Grief Recovery Coaching

Four Truths About Thriving in Trauma Recovery | Map Your Healing Journey

Sign up here to get a free copy of Five Things Every Trauma Survivor Needs to Know AND

61 Tips About the Grief Experience.

Find out more about Trauma and Grief Recovery Coaching

I offer one-on-one sessions, groups, PTSD Remediation, and classes. Appointments are offered in-person and online.

Try Trauma Recovery and Grief Recovery Coaching for Free! Book a free 30-minute discovery call and find out more!

A Corrective Emotional Experience Helps Heal My Inner Child

kellywilsonwrites

I’ve had a few Corrective Emotional Experiences in my trauma recovery journey. This one is from February, 2019. I like to post stuff like this on my social media pages (along with other, lighter, more fun things) because they get organized into memories that remind me how far how I’ve come in this journey.

***********

I’ve been thinking a lot about corrective emotional experiences. That sounds really fancy, but it is not. This is basically when triggers happen and are used to help heal the trauma memories in your brain. A cleaner, more purposeful version of PTSD triggers.

I haven’t written a whole lot because I’m in the middle of many transitions – the divorce is almost final, I started a new job, I’m considering moving soon, my kids are (amazing) teenagers, I’ve been traveling a lot and having new and fun experiences. For the last year and a half, there hasn’t been a “normal” – and by “normal,” I mean a routine that I can point to and say, “This is what I do on this day or at this time of year.”

You may be thinking, “What’s normal anyway?” or “Normal is overrated” or “Why do you want things to be normal?” And I get that. There is an adventurous comfort and a sense of invigorating hope to my life being uprooted completely. Every day is New Year’s Day, full of potential and opportunities and clean slates.

Also, this is exhausting. The last year and a half – and especially the last 8 months – has kicked my Post Traumatic Stress Disorder into high gear. I used to know exactly where my life was headed, for decades into the future. Supreme security. Also complete pretending and debilitating depression and apathy. Repression of PTSD triggers, which means stagnation and repeated patterns and no healing and very little growth. Just a hamster wheel of depression and anxiety and repetitive triggers.

The uprooting has taken care of that. But PTSD triggers abound. I’ve been averaging two to three a week. Some minor, a few major. Tack on top of that the fact that I’m not good at identifying triggers as they happen, much less being able to verbalize what it going on, also much less knowing what I need in that moment.

I have been feeling lost. Profoundly tired, to my core. Powerless, which I try to remember is the center of my power. Rumbling and rocky, like I am living on the side of a volcano that hasn’t popped its top for years, but I feel the vibrations under my feet, even as I am grounded; the reminder that this volcano can become active at any moment.

On the last day of my Boston trip – a week ago today – I had a huge trigger. It doesn’t matter what it was about – some triggers are surprising in their lack of ability to connect with any of my conscious experiences. The trigger hit. It was massive, but the kind of volcanic explosion where the lava leaks out and runs down the sides of the mountain. Fast and slow and quiet and white hot.

I talked about it with the people I was with. I even felt better. Then I went to bed.

I was up all night. My brain and body on high alert but in no danger. Adrenaline pumping. Heart racing. Palms sweaty. Exhausted but staring into the darkness. Emotions numb. Thoughts in my brain churned in cotton and then bounced away before I could catch them.

I must have dozed off around 5 a.m., and I woke up a few hours later in order to check out of the room and head to the airport. The people I was with were (understandably) confused about my insomnia. I mean, I had talked it through, right? Nobody was more confused than me.

As I walked to the bus, I started to cry. Intermittently, as I also still felt numb and enraged and confused and exhausted. What the hell was happening to me?

I sat on the bus and leaned my head against the suitcase propped on the seat next to me. The trigger from the night before hit again and I sobbed. One of my friends handed me a microfiber towel, which was soaked by the end of the bus ride (I was impressed by my ability to soak a towel that was so strong, lol).

I sobbed and clutched my backpack to my chest. I grounded myself to that bus seat – I felt every bump and curve and turn and teeth-clattering stop. The seats were royal blue hard plastic with jewel-toned upholstery – flecked with yellow and red and green – on the backs and seats. My feet didn’t quite touch the ground, and I balanced the toes of my hiking shoes onto the grated silver floor.

I clutched my backpack, feeling the stiff canvas under my fingers, the color of the fabric that matched the hard plastic seats. I had a vision – for lack of a better word – of the 10-year-old girl I was so long ago.

The 10-year-old girl who had experienced so much trauma around this one thing that was the root of the trigger I had been trying to process for about 18 hours.

At 10, she had had no voice. No power. No way out.

At 44, I had a strong, sure voice. Power in my powerlessness. Many choices of where to go and with whom to be and the determination to remain safe.

The numbness, the strength and subject of the trigger, the sleeplessness. It all made sense. This trigger was a corrective emotional experience. An opportunity to heal.

I grabbed onto it. With everything I had. I could keep going if there was healing. I felt it, the stitching up of that wound. The pain and the itching that accompanies healing.

I hugged that girl. That’s the only way I can describe it. I hugged her and I sobbed and I said to her, “I’ve got you.” I felt her melt into me and I kept repeating, “I’ve got you.” Over and over again, clutching that backpack to my chest, I hugged her and wiped tears from her face and brushed her hair out of her eyes.

I was her. She was me. Ages 10 and 44.

Healing together.

Try Trauma Recovery & Grief Recovery Coaching

Four Truths About Thriving in Trauma Recovery | Map Your Healing Journey

Sign up here to get a free copy of Five Things Every Trauma Survivor Needs to Know AND

61 Tips About the Grief Experience.

Find out more about Trauma and Grief Recovery Coaching

I offer one-on-one sessions, groups, PTSD Remediation, and classes. Appointments are offered in-person and online.

Try Trauma Recovery and Grief Recovery Coaching for Free! Book a free 30-minute discovery call and find out more!

Why Do You Need to Care About Vagal Tone?

kellywilsonwrites

Trauma and grief recovery is more about planting flowers, not pulling weeds. One way to help your body and brain while pursuing trauma and grief recovery work is to strengthen your vagal tone.

What is Vagal Tone?

Vagal tone is self-care with a purpose.

Flowers on a highway! Perfect!

Imagine that there is a highway that goes directly between New York City and Los Angeles. When that highway is well maintained and cared for, people and goods can travel SUPER fast between these two places. When that highway is *not* well cared for, there are potholes and dangerous drop offs and people and goods get stuck and traffic is slow and everyone is *stressed out.*

Vagal tone is that highway. NYC is your brain, and LA is your gut.

Isn’t the human body amazing?

Part of trauma recovery is keeping that highway in good shape, so that the vagus nerve can send signals smoothly between the brain and the gut. When we have strong vagal tone, stress is much easier to bear and recover from.

Vagal Tone is About the Vagus Nerve

Nervous System with Vagus Nerve from Bodyworlds exhibit at OMSI in Portland, Oregon
The nervous system with the vagus nerve from Bodyworlds exhibit at OMSI in Portland, Oregon

Seriously, the vagus nerve is the human body’s SUPERHERO. I will NEVER LOVE ANYTHING MORE THAN I LOVE THE VAGUS NERVE, NOT EVEN CHOCOLATE. YES, I JUST SAID THAT. I have good reason, as the vagus nerve is central to eradicating PTSD symptoms.

The vagus nerve is the main part of that highway between your gut and brain. It is also known as the “wandering nerve” because it is present throughout the body. This nerve originates in the brain stem and through the face, neck, lungs, heart, diaphragm, and abdomen, including the stomach, spleen, intestines, colon, liver, and kidneys. This system stimulates the “rest and digest” part of the nervous system (the parasympathetic branch) and is involved in nearly every physiological action in the human body.

When we go through trauma – especially longterm trauma and grief – this part of our vagus nerve gets turned “on,” and it is not meant to be “on” all the time. In fact, the default is for it to be off, only switching on when our bodies sense danger. When it is on, that’s when we are in Fight, Flight, Freeze, or Fawn, or some combination.

Why Do You Need to Care About It?

The strength of your vagal tone affects every system in your body.

I’m going to say that again, because it is SO IMPORTANT.

The strength of your vagal tone affects every system in your body.

A low (or weak) vagal tone results in brain fog, depression, fatigue, bloating, constipation and other gastrointestinal disorders, and a series of inflammatory conditions, like type 2 diabetes, stroke, and cardiovascular disease.

Strengthening your vagal tone helps every system in your body, and ESPECIALLY helps going through trauma and grief recovery.

What To Do To Improve Vagal Tone

Blond woman in a Vagus Nerd bright pink tank top
I’m a vagus nerd!

Improving vagal tone is planting flowers instead of pulling weeds. Or, to mix metaphors like I did earlier in this post, it’s taking regular care of that super highway between the gut and brain.

My biggest piece of advice is to incorporate things that you already do, like to do, or really want to do. Plant the flowers that you like the most.

Here’s what I do as basic vagal tone strengtheners:

Practice REGULATING YOUR NERVOUS SYSTEM. The easiest way to incorporate this is to start intentional deep breathing. This tactical and box breathing video by Mark Divine is a very good tutorial.

Drink a lot of water. Cold water can activate the vagus nerve for higher vagal tone.

Eat regularly. Once a day, incorporate a bagged salad OR a smoothie with avocado (or other healthy fats), spinach, chia seeds, flax meal, and whatever else you want. I started doing this two years ago and it has made a HUGE difference.

Move your body. This could be walking, stretching, yoga, weight lifting, whatever.

Check out these exercises you can do to reset your ventral vagus nerve. They include The Basic Exercise, The Half Salamander Exercise and The Full Salamander Exercise.

Here are a couple of graphics that you can download to your phone or computer as a reminder of things you can do to strengthen that vagal tone.

Try Trauma Recovery & Grief Recovery Coaching

Four Truths About Thriving in Trauma Recovery | Map Your Healing Journey

Sign up here to get a free copy of Five Things Every Trauma Survivor Needs to Know AND

61 Tips About the Grief Experience.

Find out more about Trauma and Grief Recovery Coaching

I offer one-on-one sessions, groups, PTSD Remediation, and classes. Appointments are offered in-person and online.

Try Trauma Recovery and Grief Recovery Coaching for Free! Book a free 3

The Very Cool Resources Page is UP!

kellywilsonwrites

Free and low-cost mental health resources are PRICELESS. All of this information gathered on one web page is SANITY.

I love stuff that is free and low-cost, but what stops me is researching. Sometimes you just need a pro who knows the people, the jargon, the websites, and the information to tell you where to find good stuff.

This is THAT page.

What’s on the Resources Page?

Trauma and grief recovery include A LOT of different categories. Plus, I specialize in PTSD and CPTSD recovery and remediation, which includes even more research, knowledge, specialists, and wisdom.

While I have used this page to catalog some of my own interviews and articles, there’s so much more out there that I will never get to. Even though I might want to learn everything, there simply isn’t enough time, and that’s what community is for.

Currently, the categories on the Resource page include:

PTSD
CPTSD
Trauma Recovery
Depression
Anxiety
Relationships
Attachment Styles
Grief
ACES (Adverse Childhood Experiences Study and Quiz)
Emotions & Feelings
Suicide Prevention

And more…

Do You Have a Resource to Contribute?

Seriously, do you? YES, PLEASE! Send it my way. You can find my email information and the contact form right here.

That reminds me, BOOKMARK the Resources page. As I find things that are helpful, I will be updating it often!

Try Trauma Recovery & Grief Recovery Coaching

Four Truths About Thriving in Trauma Recovery | Map Your Healing Journey

Sign up here to get a free copy of Five Things Every Trauma Survivor Needs to Know AND

61 Tips About the Grief Experience.

Find out more about Trauma and Grief Recovery Coaching

I offer one-on-one sessions, groups, PTSD Remediation, and classes. Appointments are offered in-person and online.

Try Trauma Recovery and Grief Recovery Coaching for Free! Book a free 30-minute discovery call and find out more!

Healing is No Joke

kellywilsonwrites

I wrote this entry about healing on my Facebook page on February 28, 2020. I like to post stuff like this on my social media pages (along with other, lighter, more fun things) because they get organized into memories that remind me how far how I’ve come in this journey.

When I saw this in my Facebook memories, I wanted context for this. I thought it might be during my personal PTSD Remediation work, but this was long before that started. I thought it might be during the meaty part of the pandemic, but this was just before that started, as well.

There is no context. That’s not how trauma and PTSD and CPTSD work, anyway – they don’t care about context. THERE IS NO CONTEXT TO THE SYMPTOMS. And that’s part of what makes PTSD and CPTSD *terrible* to live with.

Before I did my PTSD Remediation work in July 2020, I was having upwards of two to three very large triggers a week. Granted, I was working through a ton of stuff – recent divorce from a toxic (to both of us) relationship, meeting my now-husband, moving jobs and homes. Grief that activated my trauma. Digging into the deepest parts of myself to heal.

If you are in this place of pain, it DOES get better. There is NO WAY EXCEPT THROUGH. You can do this.

The *great* part about reading this entry is – as I said earlier – seeing how far I’ve come. NO PTSD triggers. NO PTSD symptoms. This helps *A TON* with digging through the underlying trauma responses and past grief to integrate all of the parts of myself.

This is literally why I do what I do.

********

February 28, 2020

Healing is no joke.

Day 2 of Really Big Triggers. Weird dreams, emotional flashbacks. Feeling every age I’ve been, every hurt and heartbreak, feeling the pain course through my veins. I hit a wall with my fist – I’ve never done that before; I hit it with the meaty side of my fist, the side that looks like a footprint when dipped in paint and stamped onto paper, with little dots along the top for toes. I hit the wall as the rage filled me up, the rage that had nowhere to go for so long, not violence. Energy. I learned how to hit like that, with the meaty part of my hand, in a self-defense class. My instructor also had ptsd, and he said, “Make noise! Be LOUD!” as my fist pummeled the black vinyl.

broken ceramic white hand put back together with gold as with the kintsugi tradition

Today I stood in the hallway and hit the wall with the meaty side of my fist. I yelled and screamed and cried and almost threw up from the emotional pain. Then I laid in the fetal position, toes curled and fingers clenched in hands held over my heart.

Healing is no joke.

People like me don’t want to die. At least, I don’t. I don’t really want to die, but I think about dying sometimes. That is scary to say, to admit, to confess. One of those secrets we all share and know but don’t talk about.

I get so tired of the pain. I get tired of feeling pain and processing pain and managing pain. I get tired of feeling like a failure at doing all of that. I get tired of the shame and feelings of worthlessness and hopelessness. I get tired of never knowing when it will overtake me. I get tired of emotion that feels like it will drown me. I get tired of trying things that may work or kinda work or don’t work. I get tired of telling myself that I matter and fighting so hard to believe it on those days where that phrase feels like a lie.

Healing is no joke.

“Why were my parents so mean to me? Why did they yell at me all the time? Why did they hate me?”

That’s the thing about being a kid who is abused by her parents. That kid – that little girl who still is with me, in me – stored up all of those feelings that she couldn’t express and waited until they could come out. Kids don’t abuse themselves, but they blame themselves, to preserve the parent-child bond. For survival.

And those feelings store up like poison in the body while the brain says, “Just survive, babe” and makes all of these adjustments that, once the danger is truly gone, turn into a mindfuck.

Healing is no joke.

I read inspirational memes that talk about falling apart so that the pieces can come back together.

Nobody talks about the pain that comes from falling apart, of feeling the flesh of your heart rip so the poison can flow out, so it turns into energy that gathers in the meaty part of my fist that thuds into sheetrock, leaving only vibrations behind.

Healing is no joke.

Try Trauma Recovery & Grief Recovery Coaching

Four Truths About Thriving in Trauma Recovery | Map Your Healing Journey

Sign up here to get a free copy of Five Things Every Trauma Survivor Needs to Know AND

61 Tips About the Grief Experience.

Find out more about Trauma and Grief Recovery Coaching

I offer one-on-one sessions, groups, PTSD Remediation, and classes. Appointments are offered in-person and online.

Try Trauma Recovery and Grief Recovery Coaching for Free! Book a free 30-minute discovery call and find out more!